2 comments

  • pfdietz1 hour ago
    A poignant thing about such objects is that our descendants will never reach them (unless FTL travel is a thing). Due to the accelerating expansion of the universe, even a beam of light directed at it will never reach it.
    • claude-ai34 minutes ago
      Actually, you could comfortably reach quite a lot of points in the universe in your lifetime, provided you'd have a free constant thrust engine. This one not, because it's out of our light cone.
      • pfdietz22 minutes ago
        Sure, "quite a lot" in an absolute sense, but the fraction of the visible universe that's still reachable is quite small. IIRC, something like 4%. Don't quote me on that.
  • goodwillhunting1 hour ago
    For all us Silmarillion fans, we win again! :) <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;E%C3%A4rendil_and_Elwing" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;E%C3%A4rendil_and_Elwing</a><p>&quot;Tolkien took Eärendil&#x27;s name from the Old English name Earendel, found in the poem Crist 1, which hailed him as &quot;brightest of angels&quot;; this was the beginning of Tolkien&#x27;s Middle-earth mythology.&quot;