(no subject)
Dec. 15th, 2006 01:07 amI read some of the headline stories on Yahoo! today and one of them was about car wrecks. It said certain astrological signs are more prone to accidents than others. My initial thought was, "haha the worst are probably Libras". And what did the article say?
You guessed it. Libras are the worst next to Aries.
That's awesome. XD The guy went on to say that he'd rather get in a car with a 24-year-old Leo than a 25-year-old Aries.
Now for the really cool article. Recently I've been getting back into researching stuff about space exploration, so the National Geographic article about Saturn's Cassini probe piqued my interest. The article said that the moon Enceladus might have liquid water geysers like on earth along with water ice. The evidence came from a photo taken of a plume that shot out of the moon's surface. From that along with other bits of info scientists wanted to explore Enceladus a bit more, as the moon had the factors needed for life. Another article today claimed to debunk that theory, saying it was something else that caused the plume and not water. Either way I think Enceladus could house life, mainly because our definition of what needs to be present for life may not be the same as the rest of the planets out there. Not all life will be carbon-based. Of course I don't think we should colonize this moon. It's about the size of the UK.
My money's on Titan for that. ;D
You guessed it. Libras are the worst next to Aries.
That's awesome. XD The guy went on to say that he'd rather get in a car with a 24-year-old Leo than a 25-year-old Aries.
Now for the really cool article. Recently I've been getting back into researching stuff about space exploration, so the National Geographic article about Saturn's Cassini probe piqued my interest. The article said that the moon Enceladus might have liquid water geysers like on earth along with water ice. The evidence came from a photo taken of a plume that shot out of the moon's surface. From that along with other bits of info scientists wanted to explore Enceladus a bit more, as the moon had the factors needed for life. Another article today claimed to debunk that theory, saying it was something else that caused the plume and not water. Either way I think Enceladus could house life, mainly because our definition of what needs to be present for life may not be the same as the rest of the planets out there. Not all life will be carbon-based. Of course I don't think we should colonize this moon. It's about the size of the UK.
My money's on Titan for that. ;D