Where was I? Ah, yes. Eta Carinae. It’s 8,000 light years away, 150 times more massive than the sun, and five million times as bright. It is, and I cannot tell you how proud I am of this pun, a stellar badass. In April 1843, astronomers noticed that this star had become really, really bright. Aboriginals in Australia said it was the wife of War. For a while it was the 2nd brightest star in the night sky in the Southern Hemisphere. That burst of brightness was because Eta Carinae had gone supernova. A supernova, to the uninitiated, is the single most powerful explosion that can ever happen. Think of it this way: If you take ALL the energy that the sun has ever released in its 4.6-billion-year lifespan, and release that energy in 1 second, you get a Supernova. If you like numbers, there's a nifty table for you.
Event: | Amount of energy released |
Sachin Tendulkar hitting a six | 100 J |
Tsar Bomba, the world’s most powerful thermonuclear weapon ever tested | 100,000,000,000,000,000 Joules |
A Supernova | 10,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000, |
Photography is a funny thing, and astronomical photography is not that dissimilar to terrestrial photography. One afternoon in New York City, Joel Brodsky was taking photographs of a rock group. After a few group shots, he started to take individual photographs. He knew that the group’s lead singer was going to be the focus of this, so Joel decided to save the individual shots of the singer for the end of the session, and was taking photos of the other guys instead. Bored, the singer began to drink. By the time it was his turn, the singer was plastered and Joel didn’t get as many photos as he would’ve liked. It didn’t matter though, because he took one photograph that would go on to define what it means to be a rock-star, and inspire me to grow my hair long when I was 15.
Like all the other great photo-shoots of human history, no one at the time knew that one of the photographs taken by the Hubble Space Telescope was going to be one of most defining images of human history, and has almost made me recant my atheism and start believing in God. It’s not the “landscape” photo of the Carina Nebula, which is an astonishing photograph in itself; you can’t look at it without Wagner’s ‘Ride of the Valkyries’ playing in your head.
THE picture (the one for which I've used nearly a thousand words, 3 photographs, a table, references to chemistry, rock music, photography, and -in my first draft- politics, to build up...) is a close-up of a portion of the Carina Nebula known as the Keyhole Nebula. This photograph has made me susceptible to believing in God again simply because it proves that the only way I feel it is possible to reconcile the reality of the universe we live in and the idea that it’s all the creation of an omnipotent deity is that the deity is apathetic. Or to put it mildly, it proves my belief that if God exists, he’s a fucking asshole.
Fantastic. Just fantastic... thanks for the chuckle.
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