Floating oceans & raining diamonds! Hello, universe! 🀯

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Anyway, I came across an article today and I'm reading about it, and apparently some child asks an astronomer, could we stand on the surface of Jupiter? And you would think that was just a sort of a superficial question and maybe there wasn't much there, but it couldn't be further from the truth. So I already knew that Jupiter had a thick atmosphere, lots of clouds, lots of atmospheric pressure and strong gravity. But what I didn't know much about was Jupiter's oceans

πŸ‘©β€πŸš€ https://s.swell.life/STguS8Ecwvval0i β˜‚οΈπŸ’Ž https://www.space.com/23135-diamond-rain-jupiter-saturn.html πŸ“· Courtesy of NASA's Juno spacecraft.

@SeekingPlumb

Oops!

Oops when I was talking about the temperature closer in on Neptune being plus 51 degrees Celsius. No, that's not what I meant. It's plus 5100. 5100 degrees Celsius. And again, that's something like plus 9200 and something odd degrees Fahrenheit
@HeyItsErica
Erica Jean
@HeyItsEricaΒ Β·Β 2:01
So I'm thinking about redownloading that because I never got to it, but I think it's called The Mysterious World of Jellyfish. I think they are very interesting underwater creatures. So just listening to you is making me want to go ahead and redownload that book and go through it because I was learning some very fascinating things about that world. But, yeah, everything that you're talking about is just amazing, especially the plant that mimics other plants
@SeekingPlumb

@SoulJourney1K βœ¨πŸ’© https://s.swell.life/STgvVB7baClxj8m Squid orbs: https://nautil.us/the-mystery-of-the-largest-light-in-the-sea-308189/

It's pretty cool. Our planet is so amazing, and there is so much to learn. Do you know, though, that I have found that when they learn more things out beyond our planet, it also tells some things about our own planet which I hadn't thought of before, because it sort of offers a way to figuratively look back on our own planet without actually being here. Do you know what I mean by comparing it to these other places is anyway, it's fascinating
article image placeholderFirst-ever video of a bloody-belly comb jelly pooping! | Into the Deep #deepsea #shorts
@Digitalpenz
Barbara πŸ˜ƒπŸ’™πŸŽ»πŸ₯
@DigitalpenzΒ Β·Β 4:32

@SeekingPlumb

And it just allowed me to reflect and remind myself how awesome the world is, how awesome the Earth is, specifically, how awesomely that we're made and the animals and the creepy Crawley things and the transformations that go on. In our lives day to day, that go on in the lives of different animals and creatures and what have you, and the different things that happen in the atmosphere and even in the solar system that we have yet to even begun to know. So thanks again. Bye
@Swell
Swell Team
@SwellΒ Β·Β 0:15

Welcome to Swell!

@SeekingPlumb

@Digitalpenz

I mean, even thinking that plants I have inside, I can water them too much or too little or what have you, but they continue to find ways to work with whatever it is they have access to or don't to. And I think, I don't know, the amazingness of resiliency and just all the different systems within systems that make up the world, the universe, and it's just mind blowing
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