\"Writing.Com
*Magnify*
SPONSORED LINKS
Printed from https://shop.writing.com/main/profile/blog/cathartes02/day/12-24-2024
Image Protector
Rated: 18+ · Book · Personal · #1196512
Not for the faint of art.
Complex Numbers

A complex number is expressed in the standard form a + bi, where a and b are real numbers and i is defined by i^2 = -1 (that is, i is the square root of -1). For example, 3 + 2i is a complex number.

The bi term is often referred to as an imaginary number (though this may be misleading, as it is no more "imaginary" than the symbolic abstractions we know as the "real" numbers). Thus, every complex number has a real part, a, and an imaginary part, bi.

Complex numbers are often represented on a graph known as the "complex plane," where the horizontal axis represents the infinity of real numbers, and the vertical axis represents the infinity of imaginary numbers. Thus, each complex number has a unique representation on the complex plane: some closer to real; others, more imaginary. If a = b, the number is equal parts real and imaginary.

Very simple transformations applied to numbers in the complex plane can lead to fractal structures of enormous intricacy and astonishing beauty.




Merit Badge in Quill Award
[Click For More Info]

Congratulations on winning Best Blog in the 2021 edition of  [Link To Item #quills] !
Merit Badge in Quill Award
[Click For More Info]

Congratulations on winning the 2019 Quill Award for Best Blog for  [Link To Item #1196512] . This award is proudly sponsored by the blogging consortium including  [Link To Item #30dbc] ,  [Link To Item #blogcity] ,  [Link To Item #bcof]  and  [Link To Item #1953629] . *^*Delight*^* For more information, see  [Link To Item #quills] . Merit Badge in Quill Award
[Click For More Info]

Congratulations on winning the 2020 Quill Award for Best Blog for  [Link To Item #1196512] .  *^*Smile*^*  This award is sponsored by the blogging consortium including  [Link To Item #30dbc] ,  [Link To Item #blogcity] ,  [Link To Item #bcof]  and  [Link To Item #1953629] .  For more information, see  [Link To Item #quills] .
Merit Badge in Quill Award 2
[Click For More Info]

    2022 Quill Award - Best Blog -  [Link To Item #1196512] . Congratulations!!!    Merit Badge in Quill Award 2
[Click For More Info]

Congratulations! 2022 Quill Award Winner - Best in Genre: Opinion *^*Trophyg*^*  [Link To Item #1196512] Merit Badge in Quill Award 2
[Click For More Info]

   Congratulations!! 2023 Quill Award Winner - Best in Genre - Opinion  *^*Trophyg*^*  [Link To Item #1196512]
Merit Badge in 30DBC Winner
[Click For More Info]

Congratulations on winning the Jan. 2019  [Link To Item #30dbc] !! Merit Badge in 30DBC Winner
[Click For More Info]

Congratulations on taking First Place in the May 2019 edition of the  [Link To Item #30DBC] ! Thanks for entertaining us all month long! Merit Badge in 30DBC Winner
[Click For More Info]

Congratulations on winning the September 2019 round of the  [Link To Item #30dbc] !!
Merit Badge in 30DBC Winner
[Click For More Info]

Congratulations on winning the September 2020 round of the  [Link To Item #30dbc] !! Fine job! Merit Badge in 30DBC Winner
[Click For More Info]

Congrats on winning 1st Place in the January 2021  [Link To Item #30dbc] !! Well done! Merit Badge in 30DBC Winner
[Click For More Info]

Congratulations on winning the May 2021  [Link To Item #30DBC] !! Well done! Merit Badge in 30DBC Winner
[Click For More Info]

Congrats on winning the November 2021  [Link To Item #30dbc] !! Great job!
Merit Badge in Blogging
[Click For More Info]

Congratulations on winning an honorable mention for Best Blog at the 2018 Quill Awards for  [Link To Item #1196512] . *^*Smile*^* This award was sponsored by the blogging consortium including  [Link To Item #30dbc] ,  [Link To Item #blogcity] ,  [Link To Item #bcof]  and  [Link To Item #1953629] . For more details, see  [Link To Item #quills] . Merit Badge in Blogging
[Click For More Info]

Congratulations on your Second Place win in the January 2020 Round of the  [Link To Item #30dbc] ! Blog On! *^*Quill*^* Merit Badge in Blogging
[Click For More Info]

Congratulations on your second place win in the May 2020 Official Round of the  [Link To Item #30dbc] ! Blog on! Merit Badge in Blogging
[Click For More Info]

Congratulations on your second place win in the July 2020  [Link To Item #30dbc] ! Merit Badge in Blogging
[Click For More Info]

Congratulations on your Second Place win in the Official November 2020 round of the  [Link To Item #30dbc] !
Merit Badge in Highly Recommended
[Click For More Info]

I highly recommend your blog. Merit Badge in Opinion
[Click For More Info]

For diving into the prompts for Journalistic Intentions- thanks for joining the fun! Merit Badge in High Five
[Click For More Info]

For your inventive entries in  [Link To Item #2213121] ! Thanks for the great read! Merit Badge in Enlightening
[Click For More Info]

For winning 3rd Place in  [Link To Item #2213121] . Congratulations!
Merit Badge in Quarks Bar
[Click For More Info]

    For your awesome Klingon Bloodwine recipe from [Link to Book Entry #1016079] that deserves to be on the topmost shelf at Quark's.
Signature for Honorable Mentions in 2018 Quill AwardsA signature for exclusive use of winners at the 2019 Quill AwardsSignature for those who have won a Quill Award at the 2020 Quill Awards
For quill 2021 winnersQuill Winner Signature 20222023 Quill Winner

December 24, 2024 at 2:28am
December 24, 2024 at 2:28am
#1081447
Posting early today because, like many people, I have stuff to do later. In my case, though, the stuff is completely unrelated to tomorrow's holiday.

I've written about Betelgeuse before, most recently here: "Betelgeuse 2Open in new Window.. This is, however, a different article, more recent, from Big Think.

    This is what weā€™ll see when Betelgeuse goes supernova  Open in new Window.
The closest known star that will soon undergo a core-collapse supernova is Betelgeuse, just 640 light-years away. Hereā€™s what weā€™ll observe.


And already I have Quibbles.

1: "what we'll see." It's extremely unlikely that anyone alive as I write this will see it happen. I'm a gambling man, and I wouldn't bet on it, not unless some bookie was offering billion-to-one odds and I could bet, like, a dollar. The headline uses the same value of "we" as people do when they talk about when "we" will colonize distant star systems (hopefully not Betelgeuse).

2. "will soon undergo." As with "we," they're using a variant value of "soon." Best estimate I've seen is within 100,000 years. That's soon in cosmic terms. It's not soon in human terms. Hell, 100,000 years ago, we'd (entirely different definition of "we" this time) barely started using fire.

3. "640 light-years away." Yeah... maybe. For whatever technical reason (it's been explained to me, but it's over my head), B's distance has been tricky to pin down. Wiki claims 400-600 light years, and that's a huge margin which doesn't even include 640.

I should reiterate here that even if it's at the low end of that scale, astronomers expect no ill effects for any life remaining on Earth when it happens. Of course, astronomers have been known to be wrong, from time to time.

But, okay. Issues with the headline don't always transfer to the actual text. It's just that it's the first thing we see, so getting it right is kinda a big deal. I'm not saying that it's clickbait, but it is a bit sensationalized.

The stars in the night sky, as we typically perceive them, are normally static and unchanging to our eyes. Sure, there are variable stars that brighten and fainten, but most of those do so periodically and regularly, with only a few exceptions. One of the most prominent exceptions is Betelgeuse, the red supergiant that makes up one of the ā€œshouldersā€ of the constellation Orion.

Hence the title of today's entry.

Over the past five years, not only has it been fluctuating in brightness, but its dimming in late 2019 and early 2020, followed by a strange brightening in 2023, indicates variation in a fashion never before witnessed by living humans.

It is necessary for a human to be living in order to witness anything (metaphysics and religion aside), but I think they mean it's weirder than it's been for the past 100 years or so.

Thereā€™s no scientific reason to believe that Betelgeuse is in any more danger of going supernova today than at any random day over the next ~100,000 years or so, but many of usā€Šā€”ā€Šincluding a great many professional and amateur astronomersā€Šā€”ā€Šare hoping to witness the first naked-eye supernova in our galaxy since 1604.

As unlikely as it might be, I've said before that it would be very, very cool if I got to see it. I'm just not betting on it.

Located approximately 640 light-years away, itā€™s more than 2,000 Ā°C cooler than our Sun, but also much larger, at approximately 900 times our Sunā€™s radius and occupying some 700,000,000 times our Sunā€™s volume. If you were to replace our Sun with Betelgeuse, it would engulf Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, the asteroid belt, and even Jupiter!

See, those numbers don't hit very well with people, including me. Even comparing the size to our solar system doesn't give us a visceral idea of just how fucking huge that star is (not to mention I'd question the Jupiter orbit thing, because red giants like that just don't have a well-defined surface in the way that we think of the Sun as having one).

This image  Open in new Window. might help with the size comparison.

Even when it transitions to the more advanced stages of life within its core, from carbon-burning to then neon and oxygen and eventually silicon fusion, we wonā€™t have any directly observable signatures of those events.

Dude, people are easily confused. I get that stars, like people or cats, have a birth, time of existence, and death. As far as we know, though, stars themselves don't harbor life. Yes, the universe is weird, and it's fun to speculate that maybe they do, but "life" in this case is a metaphor for how stars change over time. Calling it life just begs people to misunderstand, deliberately or not, what's meant.

The article goes on to describe what whoever's on Earth when it happens can expect to experience when the event finally occurs. Not going to quote more, but it's pretty interesting, in my opinion. Pay no mind to the "it really happened 640 [or whatever] years ago" thing, though; it's irrelevant except as a way to acknowledge that information has a maximum speed.

Naturally, being science, everything there is based on our best knowledge at this point in time. I'd also expect surprises. But those surprises will only serve to advance the science.

Unless, of course, they're wrong about the "it won't irradiate and sterilize the Earth" thing.

Sleep tight!


© Copyright 2024 Waltz Invictus (UN: cathartes02 at Writing.Com). All rights reserved.
Waltz Invictus has granted Writing.Com, its affiliates and its syndicates non-exclusive rights to display this work.

Printed from https://shop.writing.com/main/profile/blog/cathartes02/day/12-24-2024