Stars: Oh, crud, not the old "wish upon a star" bit again! C'mon, kid, get a life! It's not our job to fulfill your fantasies, OK? Look, we love Disney movies too, but we're just big blobs of hydrogen and helium! We don't DO wishes!
Lio is lucky to live in a spot where he can see so many stars. Light pollution from large cities keep many of us from enjoying truly star lit night skies. When I was a young kid, the old man took the family up to North Carolina and the Great Smoky Mountains as well as Blowing Rock and the Carl Sandberg home. This was back a year or 2 after the Orlando Disney opens, so about 1972 or ’73. I remember where we stayed in Blowing Rock, man there had to be a million stars in that clear night sky. I have done my share of camping over the years and have never seen a sky like that since then. Good memories.
Big differences in the chemical analysis of actual stars and wish makers….Romance and hope! voicing your dreams and wishes sometimes makes them visible to the brain, thus the optimism of making them happen with your own workings…
Regarding their structure, it is speculated that they have a solid nucleus of a crystalline nature, surrounded by matter in the gaseous state.
This is possible due to the successive transformations that take place in a star’s nuclear reactor: from hydrogen to helium, from helium to carbon, and from carbon to heavier elements.
It’s a real possibility, because the temperature in the dwarf’s core is low enough for such a solid core to exist.
In fact, a white dwarf believed to have a 4,000 km diameter diamond core was recently discovered, located in the constellation Alpha Centauri, 53 light years from Earth.
Observations of lithium and potassium around white dwarf stars point to remains of rocky planet crustsAnalysis by astronomers led by University of Warwick shows chemical composition of crusts is very similar to Earth’s continental crust
The outer layers of the white dwarfs contain up to 300,000 gigatonnes of rocky debris, which includes up to 60 gigatonnes of lithium and 3,000 gigatonnes of potassium
These white dwarfs are among the oldest stars in our galaxy, and could host one of the oldest planetary systems discovered so far
All known red dwarfs contain metals, which in astronomical jargon means that they contain elements that are heavier than hydrogen and helium. This is rather strange considering how long these red dwarfs have lived, especially as current theory holds that red dwarfs that may have formed during the first burst of star formation (Population III stars) would be metal-poor, but still alive. Nevertheless, no metal-poor red dwarfs have been found thus far.
Templo S.U.D. over 3 years ago
{sigh} why e’en bother?
amethyst52 Premium Member over 3 years ago
Buzzkill. :’(
Sanspareil over 3 years ago
Reality! The ultimate Disney killer!
danketaz Premium Member over 3 years ago
Time to look for the genie.
henshaven Premium Member over 3 years ago
But, they’re so pretty! And free.
TampaFanatic1 over 3 years ago
Lio is lucky to live in a spot where he can see so many stars. Light pollution from large cities keep many of us from enjoying truly star lit night skies. When I was a young kid, the old man took the family up to North Carolina and the Great Smoky Mountains as well as Blowing Rock and the Carl Sandberg home. This was back a year or 2 after the Orlando Disney opens, so about 1972 or ’73. I remember where we stayed in Blowing Rock, man there had to be a million stars in that clear night sky. I have done my share of camping over the years and have never seen a sky like that since then. Good memories.
Bilan over 3 years ago
But according to the movie Stardust, you spend all of your time watching us. So why not grant us some wishes, since you have nothing better to do?
some idiot from R'lyeh Premium Member over 3 years ago
TBF I’m just a big blob of oxygen, hydrogen, carbon, and trace elements. Stop making excuses.
jagedlo over 3 years ago
Love how Lio’s face changes expressions in the first three panels!
Aladar30 Premium Member over 3 years ago
Too much honesty.
Sir Ruddy Blighter, Jr. over 3 years ago
Somebody needs to tell an entire generation this
johndifool over 3 years ago
Yet, they are able to zip around at Ludicrous Speed to form meaningful patterns in the sky, just to irk some young lifeform on a distant planet.
Blaidd Drwg Premium Member over 3 years ago
Science 1, Disney 0.
P51Strega over 3 years ago
I wish upon a star to keep my planet warm and lit.
Lydushka over 3 years ago
Big differences in the chemical analysis of actual stars and wish makers….Romance and hope! voicing your dreams and wishes sometimes makes them visible to the brain, thus the optimism of making them happen with your own workings…
random boredom over 3 years ago
Talkative basic elements.
Thinkingblade over 3 years ago
Yeah, but it does make a beautiful song …
WCraft Premium Member over 3 years ago
Denied!
JPuzzleWhiz over 3 years ago
“YOU STUPID STAR!” — Sally Brown after wishing on a star for a pony and not getting it.
BlitzMcD over 3 years ago
Good. A reality check for someone who really needs one.
briangj2 over 3 years ago
“We’re just big blobs of hydrogen and helium!”
See: https://astronomy.swin.edu.au/cosmos/C/CNO+cycle
Regarding their structure, it is speculated that they have a solid nucleus of a crystalline nature, surrounded by matter in the gaseous state.
This is possible due to the successive transformations that take place in a star’s nuclear reactor: from hydrogen to helium, from helium to carbon, and from carbon to heavier elements.
It’s a real possibility, because the temperature in the dwarf’s core is low enough for such a solid core to exist.
In fact, a white dwarf believed to have a 4,000 km diameter diamond core was recently discovered, located in the constellation Alpha Centauri, 53 light years from Earth.
Source: https://warbletoncouncil.org/enana-blanca-9166
Observations of lithium and potassium around white dwarf stars point to remains of rocky planet crustsAnalysis by astronomers led by University of Warwick shows chemical composition of crusts is very similar to Earth’s continental crust
The outer layers of the white dwarfs contain up to 300,000 gigatonnes of rocky debris, which includes up to 60 gigatonnes of lithium and 3,000 gigatonnes of potassium
These white dwarfs are among the oldest stars in our galaxy, and could host one of the oldest planetary systems discovered so far
Source: https://scitechdaily.com/vaporized-crusts-of-earth-like-planets-discovered-in-dying-stars/
All known red dwarfs contain metals, which in astronomical jargon means that they contain elements that are heavier than hydrogen and helium. This is rather strange considering how long these red dwarfs have lived, especially as current theory holds that red dwarfs that may have formed during the first burst of star formation (Population III stars) would be metal-poor, but still alive. Nevertheless, no metal-poor red dwarfs have been found thus far.
https://www.astronomytrek.com/10-interesting-facts-about-red-dwarf-stars/
BC in NC Premium Member over 3 years ago
Apparently the stars are Team Eva Rose.