Does he fart a lot?My neighbor has a wood furnace in his garage and I just love the smell when I go outside.....
Does he fart a lot?My neighbor has a wood furnace in his garage and I just love the smell when I go outside.....
Wait till he chucks in some cottonwood. lolMy neighbor has a wood furnace in his garage and I just love the smell when I go outside.....
No such animal around here.....Birch is what most people around hear use, burns longer,throws more heat or BTUs if you want to get technical:wink: per cord....Wait till he chucks in some cottonwood. lol
MELTDOWN MYTH: Antarctic ice growing is just the first EVIDENCE global warming is NOT REAL | Nature | News | Daily Express
Alarmists are very mad that these facts are being released ahead of the Paris Love In.
North Pole has been ice free since 2013
Humans will have been loooooong extinct by then lolI figure in the long run it's not going to matter much ````````````````any global warming that happens will be offset as the Sun cools as it approaches its demise.![]()
You've never been to Greek Week at UVA.You cannot just expect 25 million cubic kilometers of ice to just disappear over a weekend or whatever and it would not do that even if there was no new ice forming.
Humans will have been loooooong extinct by then lol
And no, as the sun approaches it's demise it's going to get hot, really really hot. As it expands it will engulf the planet, completely sterilizing it and leaving behind a burnt chunk of rock before it goes nova or turns into a brown dwarf. And if the sun goes nova, that burnt chunk of rock will likely end up as a roving planet. Permanently lifeless and unviable. Fated to roam the freezing emptiness of space until the last days of the universe.
Kind'a makes the bullsh*t during our blink of an eye existence seem pretty unimportant.
North Pole has been ice free since 2013
Has it been that long? I wonder where that thread is.
Ahh. Birch is good. We have silver birch here. Burns when wet and it even smells nice. We also burn larch, fir, spruce, and usually use red cedar and white pine for kindling or when a fire is nice but do not need a LOT of heat.No such animal around here.....Birch is what most people around hear use, burns longer,throws more heat or BTUs if you want to get technical:wink: per cord....
No, I have not.You've never been to Greek Week at UVA.
Red giant, red dwarf, white dwarf, nova, then possibly neutron star. The red giant phase will be about 4.5 billion years from now.Humans will have been loooooong extinct by then lol
And no, as the sun approaches it's demise it's going to get hot, really really hot. As it expands it will engulf the planet, completely sterilizing it and leaving behind a burnt chunk of rock before it goes nova or turns into a brown dwarf. And if the sun goes nova, that burnt chunk of rock will likely end up as a roving planet. Permanently lifeless and unviable. Fated to roam the freezing emptiness of space until the last days of the universe.
Kind'a makes the bullsh*t during our blink of an eye existence seem pretty unimportant.
Them frat rats can get through 25 million cubic kilometres of ice before sunrise.No, I have not.
My astronomy's a mite rusty, but I thought it was white dwarf (now), nova, red giant, red dwarf, and then neutron star.Red giant, red dwarf, white dwarf, nova, then possibly neutron star. The red giant phase will be about 4.5 billion years from now.
I could spray you with Rustoff if you like.Them frat rats can get through 25 million cubic kilometres of ice before sunrise.
My astronomy's a mite rusty, but I thought it was white dwarf (now), nova, red giant, red dwarf, and then neutron star.
I could spray you with Rustoff if you like.
Thank you kindly.
It won't be a red dwarf, it's too big. The red giant phase ends with the sudden loss of internal radiation pressure as nuclear reactions run out of fuel, and gravitational collapse, which produces much heat in the core and it blows up in a nova. That'll produce the debris ring of the planetary nebula, as your graphic illustrates, which gradually dissipates out into interstellar space. It'll never be a neutron star either, it's too small. It'll stay a white dwarf until all its residual heat dissipates and it winks out.Red giant, red dwarf, white dwarf, nova, then possibly neutron star. The red giant phase will be about 4.5 billion years from now.
Ahh. Birch is good. We have silver birch here. Burns when wet and it even smells nice. We also burn larch, fir, spruce, and usually use red cedar and white pine for kindling or when a fire is nice but do not need a LOT of heat.
Willow stinks, too, as does the balsam poplar. hehe
In the evenings the breeze would be coming down the hill and there was this neighbour below us that had a very noisy basset hound. It would bay all day long. Se we would throw a couple rounds of stinky wood into the stove. And then one day a cat grabbed the hound. I could hear it yelping halfway up the hill and then the cougar went for the throat hold and there was finally silence from the dog. Hubby cheered when I told him.
No, I have not.
Red giant, red dwarf, white dwarf, nova, then possibly neutron star. The red giant phase will be about 4.5 billion years from now.
It won't be a red dwarf, it's too big. The red giant phase ends with the sudden loss of internal radiation pressure as nuclear reactions run out of fuel, and gravitational collapse, which produces much heat in the core and it blows up in a nova. That'll produce the debris ring of the planetary nebula, as your graphic illustrates, which gradually dissipates out into interstellar space. It'll never be a neutron star either, it's too small. It'll stay a white dwarf until all its residual heat dissipates and it winks out.