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Published: 2019-03-15 16:15:23 +0000 UTC; Views: 13526; Favourites: 447; Downloads: 0
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Description
For five years I'm working for All About Space magazine. I somehow haven't shared anything here yet... so here we go. This image is the cover for Issue 88 and it's supposed to show what happened to early Uranus.
More information: here
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Comments: 59
dpcdpc11 [2021-05-25 10:19:34 +0000 UTC]
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UncleBuddha513 [2020-11-29 04:49:32 +0000 UTC]
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ChrisY-DA [2020-07-09 06:38:06 +0000 UTC]
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JoLLY-RoG3R-7 [2019-05-29 01:17:33 +0000 UTC]
"No Not My Anus!!!!" Sorry I had to. Looks really amazing. Makes you wonder if there was anything alive on early Uranus at that point before it all went boom.
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Touch-Not-This-Cat In reply to JoLLY-RoG3R-7 [2019-10-12 20:59:13 +0000 UTC]
βThe Devilβs Butt Plugβ shall be its unofficial retroactive name.
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JoLLY-RoG3R-7 In reply to Touch-Not-This-Cat [2019-10-13 05:52:14 +0000 UTC]
Must be a 'pain in the ass' to live on a planet with that sort of retroactive name haha
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Touch-Not-This-Cat In reply to JoLLY-RoG3R-7 [2019-10-13 06:45:16 +0000 UTC]
I mean the colliding planet, like how the one that impacted the earth to make the moon is called βnemesisβ.
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212y768934015278670q In reply to Touch-Not-This-Cat [2023-01-10 19:43:34 +0000 UTC]
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JoLLY-RoG3R-7 In reply to Touch-Not-This-Cat [2019-10-13 07:55:12 +0000 UTC]
I heard of that one. That one sounds like a badass lol. I'm thinking the big guy from resident evil now
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cannonfodder14 [2019-03-20 04:44:13 +0000 UTC]
I love the scale of the event that is excellently depicted. The flare of the impacting body and the ripple of the atmosphere. The power of this impact is incalculable to me and would be awe inspiring.
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DJKiran [2019-03-17 23:07:52 +0000 UTC]
Should tag this NSFW
Anyway, I like the ripple of from the impact! and the cracks in the rocky body
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PrinceOfFire [2019-03-17 04:15:48 +0000 UTC]
So many jokes could be made about this.
However, I will just say amazing piece. Lovely colours and details. Very cool.
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Touch-Not-This-Cat In reply to PrinceOfFire [2019-10-12 20:57:22 +0000 UTC]
Bad suppository jokes mostly.
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PrinceOfFire In reply to TobiasRoetsch [2019-03-22 18:56:54 +0000 UTC]
You're very welcome.
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elzataerinn [2019-03-16 13:41:30 +0000 UTC]
You know.... seeing this suddenly makes wonder about one thing.
If a space object collided with Uranus and caused its axis to tilt like that, what actually stopped it from continuously spinning, as in what finally stopped its axis from tilting further? Gravity from its siblings? Some kind of fluid inertia (due to it being a gas planet)? Another collision? Or perhaps we haven't observed it long enough and the axis is currently still turning?
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TobiasRoetsch In reply to elzataerinn [2019-03-16 18:37:02 +0000 UTC]
well maybe it was spinning for long time (and maybe still is)... but just slowed down. we're observing space for thousands of years and Uranus was discovered in 1781. that's like nothing compared to the age of the universe and our solar system.
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elzataerinn In reply to TobiasRoetsch [2019-03-17 07:33:52 +0000 UTC]
True. And not to mention that when we discovered Uranus back in 18th century, there was no space probe, so there was no telling how tilted it was when they found out about the planet.
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foureyes [2019-03-16 01:47:18 +0000 UTC]
Powerful intensity in his image, stunning creation Tobias ................Β
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Chromattix [2019-03-15 23:42:18 +0000 UTC]
Now THAT is a unique impact scene. The way the gas "ripples" around the outer edge of the impact is so well done I can easily imagine how this would move if animated. I can't help but wonder though that that's a big-ass rocky planet however. But maybe Uranus was smaller before the impact added extra material to it. It's cool how heavenly this still looks thanks to Uranus's colour scheme and light airy nature.
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TobiasRoetsch In reply to Chromattix [2019-03-16 18:33:38 +0000 UTC]
it's somewhat based on that simulation: icc.dur.ac.uk/giant_impacts/urβ¦
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Chromattix In reply to TobiasRoetsch [2019-03-17 02:58:08 +0000 UTC]
That looked messy. I wonder what the "cloud" of matter would have looked like when it was all blown out like that. Probably like a mini but really dense nebula I bet. Hard to imagine it was a planet.
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TobiasRoetsch In reply to Chromattix [2019-03-17 08:55:00 +0000 UTC]
yeah crazy...but maybe that theory is shit and something different happened
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Chromattix In reply to TobiasRoetsch [2019-03-18 00:53:20 +0000 UTC]
Yeah it strikes me as far-fetched. Could be as simple as the cloud of gas and debris was spinning a different way (maybe interrupted by something else passing by) and it coalesced into whatever direction it was spinning in. Though it won't explain why the planet spins sideways but the magnetic field is more upright
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DocWolph [2019-03-15 21:29:52 +0000 UTC]
The size of that planet... Good Lord! Earth would be the moon to that rock's Earth.
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Danarogon-AP [2019-03-15 21:01:02 +0000 UTC]
Oddly satisfying, like throwing a rock at a lake.
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Justforvisit [2019-03-15 18:26:35 +0000 UTC]
No...noooo....nooo....I will NOT make an immature joke about the title....no no no no......
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MugenSeiRyuu In reply to Justforvisit [2019-03-16 00:55:51 +0000 UTC]
Right into Uranus!
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TobiasRoetsch In reply to Justforvisit [2019-03-15 18:54:03 +0000 UTC]
Even not if it was a very deep impact?
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lapis-lazuri [2019-03-15 17:42:10 +0000 UTC]
Hmmm that's interesting. Didn't know something had crashed into Uranus. However, why does it have rings then? If there was a crash, I would have expected that the rings are a leftover precisely from that impact.
Other than that, great depiction. I like how fluid Uranus feels and the swirly clouds around the impact site.
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TobiasRoetsch In reply to lapis-lazuri [2019-03-15 18:53:28 +0000 UTC]
Because the magazine's editors wanted rings
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Deadbolt0612 In reply to lapis-lazuri [2019-03-15 18:40:54 +0000 UTC]
It did have ring from leftover material before impact "I think"
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lapis-lazuri In reply to Deadbolt0612 [2019-03-15 21:16:58 +0000 UTC]
Leftover from what? And the artist actually answered.
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Kaedrys [2019-03-15 16:43:51 +0000 UTC]
Damn, very cool! I love the scale of the two planets colliding--I feel so small!
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