Humint Events Online: 33 of the Day: a Rare True Double 33

Saturday, June 27, 2015

33 of the Day: a Rare True Double 33

GJ 436b is so close to its parent star — 33 times as close as the Earth is to the sun — that its atmosphere is evaporating, creating a large cloud around the planet, said David Ehrenreich, an astrophysicist at the University of Geneva and one of the study’s authors.
“What we see is the planet kind of turning into an enormous monster much bigger than its star,” Dr. Ehrenreich said.
The star is much fainter than our sun, and the evaporating gases are not swept away. Instead, the star “allows the huge cloud to gather,” Dr. Ehrenreich said. He and his colleagues report their findings in the current issue of the journal Nature.
The researchers analyzed ultraviolet observations of the Neptune-mass exoplanet, located 33 light years from Earth. The planet orbits a small red dwarf star in the constellation Leo.

I've no idea why they used two 33's here, unless there is something significant about this planet or the star system.

1 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

OH, The evil PTB are behind this too. Isn't it obvious? They don't only mark their evil deeds here on Erf. They pull strings (no pun intended, Cosmologists)
throughout the universal ether, and the 33 is always a part of it.

7:19 PM  

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