User talk:Hurricane Devon/Laboratory

Latest comment: 17 years ago by Hurricane Devon in topic Plutonian moon naming lab
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Hurricane Devon's Lab. "Welcom to my Laboratory. I use this to test my wikiexperiments.

Signature lab (4/10/06) edit

HurricaneDevon @ 03:09, 10 April 2006 (UTC)Reply

Plutonian moon naming lab edit

Making up names for Pluto's new moons.

Names from User:Kwamikagami edit

Notes:
Data from Buie & Grundy
* Awaiting naming.
** Many astronomers use this idiosyncratic pronunciation, rather than the classical kair'-ən, but both are acceptable.
This information is from Talk:Pluto's natural satellites
Name (spheroidal moons in bold)

(Pronunciation key)

Mean diameter (km) Mass (×1021 kg) Semi-major
axis (km)
Orbital period (days) Eccentricity Inclination
(to Pluto's equator)
Discovery date
Pluto 2306 ± 20 13.05 ± 0.07 2390 6.387230 0 (1930)
Pluto I Charon shair'-ən** 1207 ± 3 1.52 ± 0.06 19 571 ± 4 6.387230 0 (0.000% ± 0.007%) 0.00° ± 0.014° 1978
Pluto II Orthrus* orrth-rus 44-130 < 0.005 48 675 ± 120 24.856 ± 0.001 ~0 (0.2% ± 0.2%) 0.04° ± 0.22° 2005
Pluto III Cerberus* sir-bir-us 44-130 < 0.005 64 780 ± 90 38.206 ± 0.001 0.5% ± 0.1% 0.22° ± 0.12° 2005

The Plutonian system with the possible names for S/2005 P1 & S/2005 P2. — HurricaneDevon @ 18:22, 23 February 2006 (UTC)Reply

Hi Devon,
Got the pronunciation of Cerberus wrong there. The OED has (ˈsɜːbərəs), and Webster's has \'sər-b(ə-)rəs\ --that is, like the OED but with ars, or two syllables as "surbrəs". — User:Kwamikagami

Names now confirmed edit

Notes:
Data from Buie & Grundy
Name (spheroidal moons in bold)

(Pronunciation key)

Mean diameter (km) Mass (×1021 kg) Semi-major
axis (km)
Orbital period (days) Eccentricity Inclination
(to Pluto's equator)
Discovery date
Pluto 2306 ± 20 13.05 ± 0.07 2390 6.387230 0 1930
Pluto I Charon shair'-ən[1] 1207 ± 3 1.52 ± 0.06 19 571 ± 4 6.387230 0 (0.000% ± 0.007%) 0.00° ± 0.014° 1978
Pluto II Nix 45 ? < 0.005 48 675 ± 120 24.856 ± 0.001 ~0 (0.2% ± 0.2%) 0.04° ± 0.22° 2005
Pluto III Hydra 45–60 ? < 0.005 64 780 ± 90 38.206 ± 0.001 0.5% ± 0.1% 0.22° ± 0.12° 2005

These are the new names givin to the moons of Pluto. [1]HurricaneDevon @ 21:49, 22 June 2006 (UTC)Reply

Fluorine planet lab edit

Florine planet
About
Florine planets are basicly like
Earth. Except instead of Water (H2O)
& Oxygen (O2) it's
Hydrofluoric acid (HF) & Fluorine (F2).
Surface

Crust
 
  • Silicon fluoride (SiF4)
  • hydroxyapatites
  • flurosilicates
  • thiosilicates
  • metal sulphates.
Atmosphere
 
Temperature
313 K (104°F)
Atmosphere
Silicon-bace life
that uses HF as a solvent.

[2] [3]

  • Venus: 866.93°F
  • Earth: 56°F
Arms & Bars
# Arm Notes
-II Centaurus arm Secondary arm
-I Sagittarius-Carina arm Main arm, comes of bar (Sgr bar)
0 Orion spur Minor arm
+I Perseus arm Secondary arm
+II Norma-Cygnus arm Main arm, comes of bar (Nor bar)

References

Tropical Cyclones edit

Saffir–Simpson scale, 1-minute maximum sustained winds
Category m/s knots mph km/h
5 ≥ 70 ≥ 137 ≥ 157 ≥ 252
4 58–70 113–136 130–156 209–251
3 50–58 96–112 111–129 178–208
2 43–49 83–95 96–110 154–177
1 33–42 64–82 74–95 119–153
TS 18–32 34–63 39–73 63–118
TD ≤ 17 ≤ 33 ≤ 38 ≤ 62
{{Saffir-Simpson-NWP}}
Australian Category[2] Maximum wind gusts (km/h) Maximum sustained winds (km/h)[3] Corresponding Beaufort Force[4]
1 ≤125 63-88 Gale (8-9)
2 125-169 89-117 Storm (10-11)
3 170-224 118-159 Hurricane (12)
4 225-279 160-199
5 ≥280 ≥200


  • Hurricane: northern atlantic & northern pacific before IDL (Major Hurricane)
  • Typhoon: northern pacific after IDL & northern Indian (Super Typhoon)
  • Cyclone: southern all (Severe Tropical Cyclone)
  1. ^ Many astronomers use this idiosyncratic pronunciation, rather than the classical kair'-ən, but both are acceptable.
  2. ^ http://www.bom.gov.au/info/cyclone/#severity
  3. ^ Comparison between strongest gust and suatained winds from Perth Tropical Cyclone Warning Center
  4. ^ Comparison between Cyclone Category System and Beaufort Scale from Brisbane Tropical Cyclone Warning Center