Using comparative astrography between this map and a cool 3D universe computer model (as well as context clues from the show itself), I think Iâve figured out the real-life map of the Galra Empire.

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@scientificalnonsense
Using comparative astrography between this map and a cool 3D universe computer model (as well as context clues from the show itself), I think Iâve figured out the real-life map of the Galra Empire.

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The Galra Are Idiots
Okay, this oneâs for you, Voltron fandom. I do enjoy the new Voltron: Legendary Defender series. Really, I do. But as a scientist, there are a few things that really bug me. This is one of the biggest of those things. Today, Iâm going to prove conclusively that the Galra and their leader are total numskulls and Iâm going to do it mathematically.
The Galra Empire controls presumably the entire galaxy (even though itâs referred to as spanning the entire known universe, thereâs evidence from the show that the known universe is just our Milky Way galaxy and possibly our nearest neighboring star clusters). But we have never seen evidence that they use Dyson structures (or anything else, even just solar arrays) to harness the power of stars. Rather, theyâre still entirely dependent on planetary resources. To use the resources of one entire planet would make a civilization Type I on the Kardashev scale, with a maximum power output of 100 petawatts (1e+16 watts). Multiply that by the estimated number of planets in the galaxy (~350 billion) and you get a maximum total power output for the entire empire as 35 trillion petawatts, better expressed as 350,000 yottawatts or 3.5e+29 watts. The luminosity of our sun, which is a small dim star in comparison with many other stars in the galaxy, is roughly 384.6 yottawatts. One thousand Sun-like stars put out a total of about 384,600 YW. MORE THAN ALL THE PLANETS IN THE GALAXY. The estimated total luminosity for the entire Milky Way galaxy is five trillion YW (5e+39 W). The Galra Empire would up their power output roughly 14.3 MILLION TIMES if they just switched to using god damn stars instead of planets.
The only possible conclusion here is that the Galra are absolute brainless morons and never ONCE considered using stars as a power source rather than planets. Zarkon and his entire empire are, mathematically, utter fucking washed muffins.
REBLOGGING BECAUSE I WAS WRONG; DONâT REBLOG WITHOUT THIS EDIT
This post and the associated mathematics was based on conclusions I drew based on the information we had in Seasons 1 and 2. At the time I assumed quintessence was a planetary resource akin to petroleum. But according to S3-5, however⌠itâs definitely not.
Based on the new information, quintessence is actually a form of the hypothetical energy source I like to call Ăther energy, which originates from the space between universes (the Ăther). Since the Ăther is infinite, so is its energy! This also explains why the lions and other quintessence-powered ships in the Voltron universe can travel at or above the speed of light in real space:
The theory of general relativity presents the concept that as an object with rest mass approaches the speed of light (c) it increases in mass, which in turn requires increased energy to continue acceleration. That object will âtheoreticallyâ attain infinite mass at the speed of light, resulting in infinite energy required to move at the speed of light. In normal Einsteinian-Newtonian physics where infinite energy and infinite mass are merely theoretical concepts, acceleration of a massive body relative to the speed of light (c) is a hyperbolic curve with an asymptote at c (youâll get closer and closer but you will never attain c velocity). But with literal infinite energy (Ăther energy/quintessence), you can actually achieve c and above with a massive body⌠like the lions do.
TL;DR: My initial calculations were wrong because of new information about the nature of quintessence, and thanks to that, FTL in Voltron canon is easily explained.
What if extraterrestrials learned our language from studying our internet culture at the surface level alone...?
Alien, stepping off their spacecraft and making the Live-Long-And-Prosper gesture as best they can: "Ayy lmao! Whomst'd've is your đ ąď¸eter?" ~~~ Humans: "It was a pleasure conducting this meeting, Ambassador Blarghargh." Aliens: "Indeed. Hashtag that moment when you are making great progress with the humans and will return tomorrow. Don't forget to like and subscribe!" Humans: "....excuse me??" ~~~ Alien, examining a treaty document: "oh-whoa what's this?" Humans: "did this guy just verbally pronounce the cat face?"
so you see, humans evolved to be bipedal on account of how our ancestors transitioned from the forest environment to the savannah environment, and in the savannah environment bipedalism was more adaptive because it provides better thermoregulation and allows you to carry things, but most of all because bipedal locomotion is highly energy efficient and energy efficient locomotion would have been very strongly selected for on account of how time budgets are a limiting factor on home range which is a limiting factor on diet quality and breadth which is really quite important
my lecturers have been very clear and very insistent that bipedalism evolved first and then allowed tool use, tool use did not spur a transition to bipedalism, the fossil record is Clear On This Point
and what I do not understand is: if bipedalism is so completely wonderfully energy-efficient and optimal, why are there so few bipedal things? How come lions and gazelles and giraffes and buffalo arenât bipedal? Why arenât other savannah species selected for energy-efficient locomotion too?
I am sure there is a good explanation for this but my lecturers have still not provided it and I must know please god just somebody explain this to me or I will die of curiosity
Reasons Why We Have Bipedal Apes, But Not Bipedal Lions, According To My Biological Anthropology Supervisor:
You know when creationists talk about how an eye couldnât possibly evolve gradually, because half an eye is useless and a waste of resources and worse than no eye at all?
Theyâre wrong about eyes; a single photoreceptor cell (usually just an evolutionary âtweakâ away from a regular epidermal cell with biochemistry that happened to be photosensitive) is actually useful and great, and more is better. If you imagine breaking a modern wing in half and attaching it to a bird, âhalf a wing is uselessâ sounds true, but it stops sounding true when you realise that halfway to a wing doesnât look like a modern bird wing but broken in half, it looks like a slightly enlarged membrane between a limb and your body that gives you just an extra half second of glide time when you jump.
But there *are* adaptations in this class of things, where itâs great if you have full-blown X but shitty to have half-baked X. As you might imagine, they are quite rare, because as the creationists correctly observe, if half-X is maladaptive there is no path to arrive at X through gradual adaptation to an environment. And yet bipedalism is of this class. How?
Well, you wanna know what it looks like to have enough bipedal foot structure that you decide to go adventuring around in the savannah on two feet, but you havenât got the pelvic structure to make it efficient yet? YOU CANâT RUN. You are literally incapable of moving faster than a kind of slow awkward lope. Your back kills all the time because your bones are all pointed the wrong way and your back muscles are trying to keep you upright. Your ankle and leg bones take far more pounding than they were ever optimised before and occasionally shatter. Youâre unbalanced and ungainly and frankly sort of pathetic, and at very high risk from predators (to repeat: RUN AWAY IS NOT AN AVAILABLE STRATEGY).
Why would anything go through a long gradual process of getting much shittier and then eventually getting better, since evolution canât plan or foresee? WRONG QUESTION. Whoever told you evolution was a slow gradual constant drift was a dirty rotten liar, just like all your other teachers from when you were twelve. More commonly, evolution involves long periods of relative stability where the organism is pretty much as adapted to its niche as itâs going to get, and then something changes and thereâs a very rapid response. Or it involves successful populations dispersing widely over a landscape, then becoming distinct reproducing populations which lost genetic contact with each other and diverging, and then thereâs an environmental change and they reconnect and sometimes they happily interbreed and sometimes one of the divergent branches drives the others extinct and disperses itself widely and rinse and repeat.
What happened was, basically:
Hi weâre early hominins and we just love hanging around in trees and weâre proud to say weâve been hanging around in trees now for a couple million years and we havenât changed a bit, slightly bigger skulls aside, weâre basically just per- what the fuck? WHAT THE FUCK? WHERE DID THE TREES GO?? WHY IS IT SUDDENLY SO DRY???? oh my God I can see nothing but grass and I am having to walk around on my hind legs all the FUCKING time and FUCK FUCK FUCK THATâS A LION FUCK PANIC RED ALERT oh okay weâre bipedal now I guess, that was quick, oh well, all fine, carry on
Somehow we survived when a change in environment pushed us into a new ecological niche. The selection pressure was strong enough to make us acquire a really quite extensive range of mods to make bipedalism work, but not strong enough to make us dead.
Of course, âstrong pressure to adapt somehowâ doesnât necessarily mean âstrong pressure to adapt in this specific way we know is really goodâ. Early hominins who lived before the forest shrinkage have been shown to have a few bipedal adaptations. We werenât sure what the hell they were doing with them, so we looked at chimps. Turns out chimps display short-distance carrying behavior - as in, picking up an object and carrying it. They donât carry tools and canât move far bipedally, but what they do do is pick up a valuable resource like a choice bit of prey and haul it off with them, away from the group of moneys fighting over the rest of the prey. So before the forests collapsed, there was a mild selection pressure to be able to use only your hind legs for a short stretch so that you could carry something in your arms, and when they collapsed, individuals good at that behavior were better at surviving the savannah and evolution just slammed its foot on the gas pedal until you get obligate bipeds.
So, a species that wasnât forced into a rapid niche change like that, wouldnât evolve an initially-painful thing like bipedalism. What about all the other species that made the same change as the same time as us? Eh, many went extinct, that happens a lot with ecological change, but the ones who survived didnât do bipedalism.
Points to those who said it was about evolution having different starting points to build on, y'all were correct. No matter how awesome and efficient and optimal bipedalism is, evolution only cares about whether the next tiny step in some random direction increases or decreases how many offspring are produced. Evolution âlooksâ for the NEAREST solution that counts as a solution, not the best solution.
For a species of monkeys that were forced to spend less time in the forest and range wider and already had some variable locomotion abilities, evolution went for bipedalism. Bipedalism may have enabled the future awesomeness of humans with its efficiency and head stability and what have you, but evolution made it happen just because it was the local maxima - its awesomeness is a lucky side effect.
But where monkeys used short bursts of bipedal movements to carry things, another species might use something more convenient for them - say, a lion might pick up and carry things in its mouth, and if there was a selection pressure to be better at carrying the lions might end up with bigger mouths, but âbecome bipedalâ is very unlikely because half bipedal is worse than no bipedal at all.
Basically, monkeys had the preconditions for bipedalism, nothing else did. (Note that this does not make monkeys special - the ancestor of any species with an unusual adaptation, from giraffesâ long necks to penguinsâ Arctic-water-proofing feathers, was a thing that had the preconditions for that adaptation when nothing else did.)
Bipedalism didnât happen because it was awesome, it became awesome because the range of adaptations it supports turned out to be a package that turned into, well, us.
âŚNotice that we are not actually the only bipedal species. Notice what they mean when they say things like, âBipedalism leads to the ability to carry things leads to tool use leads to bigger brainsâ. On a naive reading, it means âbipedalism is a part of the tech tree and once youâve bought it you can get hands optimised for holding toolsâ, and if it says this then you are right to be confused as to why perfectly good bipedal emus do not also have spears and control of fire.
When you realise that evolutionary studies is so full of ridiculously many caveats and preconditions that lecturers just omit them and assume you know theyâre there, you start interpreting what they say more like, âIn a species that already dabbled in just a tiny bit of bipedalism, bipedalism was the only way to go when the niche changed, it was way better for the new niche then the old way of locomotion, and given the likely presence of some proto-tool-like behaviors like throwing rocks or poking things with sticks, it created an adaptive opportunity to better fit this particular environment by improving on the tool behaviours using the new physiological advantages.â
Also god I learned a lot in that hour. Why does time spent *not* talking to biological anthropologists have to be a thing? Talking to biological anthropologists is the BEST.
Epistemic status: my recollection of a conversation an hour ago between me and an academic in this field, any misunderstandings are because Iâm an undergrad who didnât get what he was trying to say.
THIS IS SO COOL
(Why do I not live on a university campus D:)
SO YES and also, Iâm going to pull out my Vaclav Smil* for a second here.
Human locomotion is not particularly energy efficient! It takes us more energy to walk or run than it does for most mammalian quadrupeds, but our energy use curves look pretty different from theirs.Â
If a horse goes for a trot, its trot (like all its gaits) has a U-shaped energy curve. It costs more to trot at slower speeds, goes down to a most-efficient pace, and then comes back up. At a certain point, it crosses over the energy curve for the horseâs next gait, and the horse will (left to its own devices) start to canter or gallop.
Human WALKING has a U-shaped curve like that, but human RUNNING does not, and that is damned strange for a mammal. Our friend Smil says: âthe energetic cost of human running is relatively high, but humans are unique in virtually uncoupling this cost from speedâ. That particular aspect of things is a direct side-effect of bipedalism: we can vary our breathing in ways that quadrupedal animals (who have supporting legs all attached to their breathing apparatus) cannot. Basically, we are the evolutionary equivalent of cartoon characters who can spin their legs really fast. So we arenât as efficient at running as a horse who is going at its optimum pace, but we can speed up and slow down and it wonât cost us much, which is not true of the horse.
Not incidentally, this is why many humans practiced (or still practice) persistence hunting. If you are less efficient than that delicious antelope, but you can make it run at its least-efficient panic speed while you trundle along at a nice constant rate, you can exhaust it. Â
* Smil, Vaclav (2007-12-21). Energy in Nature and Society: General Energetics of Complex Systems (MIT Press). The MIT Press. Kindle Edition.Â
Iâm so glad OP came back and corrected themselves, I was sitting on my hands reading the first part! Omg those lecturers. I mean theyâre getting minimum wage but still. Bless their hearts.
The lecturers conflated tool use and tool making. Tool USE is observed throughout the animal kingdom. Tool MAKING is said to be primate-specific (we ignore corvids in this scenario.) note that this isnât hominid-specific, though. Tool MAKING is not a function of bipedalism; itâs a function of having your hands free. These are two very different things. Now, itâs certainly true that tool MAKING - in the form of shaped bones, flints and stones - postdates bipedalism in the fossil record, but we must note
1. A shaped blade of grass or a shaped branch counts as a tool, and does not reliably fossilise; 2. Behaviour is notoriously bad at fossilising; 3. Scientists must acknowledge the biases of the fossil record in geology and paleontology, so donât think that anthropologists are going to be allowed to get away with it.
So tool-making, like bipedalism, is something that popped up occasionally in our lineage and is still practiced by our living relatives. It became fixed in our lineage, and is distinctive to hominids, but it was not dropped on us by the Hand of God. Very very few things are.
We also note that birds are bipedal, and are something of the original biped. We are kind of hipsters in that sense. (BEHOLD! THE MAN!)
But, you see, birds generally donât have HANDS.
When youâre looking at something like bipedalism and asking yourself âwhat does this say about humans?â Then look at other animals, and see what theyâre doing. And then come at it from a different angle. sometimes the answer isnât the feet. Sometimes itâs the hands.
This is fascinating, but Iâve gotta admit that my major takeaway from it is that humans have bipedalism ultimately because it was adaptive for tree-dwelling proto-hominids to be able to pick stuff up and run off with it, presumably whooping like Dr. Zoidberg all the while.
iâm so glad persistence hunting came up. because that, to me, is the really interesting synergy between big brains and bipedalism.
carrying tools is nbd, modern chimps make and stash some wacky shit and have been known to wear a favorite termite stick behind their ear to keep it. a clever tool guy is going to find a way to do the clever tool thing no matter how comfortable it is for him to stand up.
but you combine that big brain with the slow but efficient swing gait of a walking human, and what you get is a predator who can mosey ominously after you until you just drop dead.
there is literally no animal on earth that can out-stubborn a human. and even a pretty average human with no special training can walk hours without dipping into their long-term energy reserves or experiencing significant fatigue. an experienced hunting team in peak health? theyâll go a week. nothing can survive that. hell, i recall myself as a 12-year-old kid, just some suburban rando who played a few team sports, and my dad the office worker with the weekend martial arts habit, easily separating, directing, and following a full-grown buck across maybe 20 miles of boreal forest, deliberately passing up several good opportunities for kill shots in favor of herding it closer to where we left the car. that wasnât the heroic effort of a whole tribe, that was a fun weekend for a couple joes with one decent bow between them. for early humans, organizing a perfect hunt was no doubt as fun and interesting as sports are to us now, and more invigorating than exhausting.
a hunting wolf, on the other hand, will drop a chase after a mile or so. just. welp. nevermind.
one mile.
so whichever evolved first, once you had âmoseyâ capability combined with âconcept of day after tomorrow and where i left my stuff yesterday morningâ, human survivability in every environment went through the roof.
Reblogging because humans, man. Weâre weird.
Serious question.
Who exactly is gonna give it to me? Will X bear it? Or Uptown Funk? Both are claimed to be the ones planning to give it to me, but obviously only one can actually give it to me (the identity of âitâ notwithstanding). Are X and Uptown Funk both planning to give it to me without each otherâs knowledge? Because Iâm sure that will end in a fatal dance-off.
No, young one. you misunderstand.
The letter X is a placeholder symbol, standing in for a name which had yet to be revealed. The old song was a prophecy about the bearer of It; explaining the nature of the mission without disclosing the identity of the messenger. Now, the name of the one the prophets spoke of has been revealed. Surely this means It is already on Its way. At last, I shall have It.
Come, Uptown Funk. Give It to me.
I will be waiting.
What the fresh fuck
âŚareâŚ.are you okay buddy???

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Serious question.
Who exactly is gonna give it to me? Will X bear it? Or Uptown Funk? Both are claimed to be the ones planning to give it to me, but obviously only one can actually give it to me (the identity of âitâ notwithstanding). Are X and Uptown Funk both planning to give it to me without each otherâs knowledge? Because Iâm sure that will end in a fatal dance-off.
The Galra Are Idiots
Okay, this oneâs for you, Voltron fandom. I do enjoy the new Voltron: Legendary Defender series. Really, I do. But as a scientist, there are a few things that really bug me. This is one of the biggest of those things. Today, Iâm going to prove conclusively that the Galra and their leader are total numskulls and Iâm going to do it mathematically.
The Galra Empire controls presumably the entire galaxy (even though itâs referred to as spanning the entire known universe, thereâs evidence from the show that the known universe is just our Milky Way galaxy and possibly our nearest neighboring star clusters). But we have never seen evidence that they use Dyson structures (or anything else, even just solar arrays) to harness the power of stars. Rather, theyâre still entirely dependent on planetary resources. To use the resources of one entire planet would make a civilization Type I on the Kardashev scale, with a maximum power output of 100 petawatts (1e+16 watts). Multiply that by the estimated number of planets in the galaxy (~350 billion) and you get a maximum total power output for the entire empire as 35 trillion petawatts, better expressed as 350,000 yottawatts or 3.5e+29 watts. The luminosity of our sun, which is a small dim star in comparison with many other stars in the galaxy, is roughly 384.6 yottawatts. One thousand Sun-like stars put out a total of about 384,600 YW. MORE THAN ALL THE PLANETS IN THE GALAXY. The estimated total luminosity for the entire Milky Way galaxy is five trillion YW (5e+39 W). The Galra Empire would up their power output roughly 14.3 MILLION TIMES if they just switched to using god damn stars instead of planets.
The only possible conclusion here is that the Galra are absolute brainless morons and never ONCE considered using stars as a power source rather than planets. Zarkon and his entire empire are, mathematically, utter fucking washed muffins.
Math Problem
Is it impossible to text-shout i (â-1)??
Think about it: itâs already italicised and unless itâs lowercase no one will understand youâre yelling about the imaginary mathematical value for â-1 and not just yourself.
Well, i suppose you could always bold it.
Person: *notices me approaching door with hands totally full* Person: "do you need me to-" Me: *turns door handle with foot* "nah mate I'm an evolved ape I can handle this"
Living in the Past
Next time someone tells you to âstop living in the past,â tell them you canât.
â¨Why?â¨
Well, technically weâre all living a few milliseconds in the past! â¨The human brain takes a minimum of 13 milliseconds to process an image, and the other senses take a little longer than that. It takes an additional hundred or so milliseconds to then react to those stimuli.
â¨We arenât even aware of the present until itâs thirteen or more milliseconds in our past.

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Science-Colored Glasses 03: Names
Think about the idea of a name. No, really think about it. When you ask, âhey, whatâs your name?â youâre really asking, âhey, what complex sound should I make with my mouth to get your attention fastest and identify you with?â Isnât it kinda weird? Then again, isnât language itself weird? After all, any word you can think of is just a complex sound that weâve been conditioned to associate with a given thing, action, or state of being.
Science-Colored Glasses 02: Telephones
Hereâs something to blow your mind:
Phones allow sound to travel 900,000 times faster than the speed of sound.
General Biology: Does the thing take shits?
Genetics: Can we take this thing from that thing and put it into another thing so it does a specific thing?
Phylogenetic Zoology: Is the thing a Thingomorph or a Thingomorphoid?
Chemistry: Does the thing react with other things?
Thermochemistry: If we heat the thing up, does it become a different thing?
Engineering: Can we build the thing?
Programming: If the thing, then another thing. But if the thing is a thing, then a different thing altogether.
Astronomy: Is the thing in space?
Astronautics: Can we put the thing in space?
Astrobiology: Is the thing an alien? (The answer is usually no.)
Classical Physics: How does the thing move?
Quantum Physics: Is the thing even real?
Religious people: How can you not feel empty without some spirituality in your life??? Me: The fact that every single atom in my body has a unique story stretching back billions of years, beginning in the heart of a dying star, and has an infinite future in the cycle of nature is spiritual enough for me.
A scientists march on Washington is being planned
The responsible application of science to government
Twitter: @ScienceMarchDC Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/groups/1862739727343189/ Reddit: /r/scientistsmarch Get Email Updates To help: https://goo.gl/forms/zAdY02dBEz3Ykii42 Contact: [email protected]
We accept the following as provisionally true:
The Earth is becoming warmer due to human action.
The diversity of life arose by evolution.
An American government that ignores science to pursue ideological agendas threatens not only the environment of which humans are a part, but America itself.
Scientific research in the United States is underfunded.
Politicians who devalue expertise risk making decisions that do not reflect reality.
Who can participate:
Science is a methodology and a way of thinking. Anyone who uses and values these tools for understanding the world, not just professional scientists, may participate.
How can I help? Â
We are still in the very early stages of organizing this event. We need all the help we can get, especially from people with expertise in the following areas:
Web Design
Logo/Graphic design
Law, incorporation of a not-for-profit
Fundraising
Public relations and media relations
Social media management
Organizing large events
Acquiring permits in DC
Contacts with possible speakers
You donât need to be a professional scientist to participate!Â
SPREAD THE WORD!!!! March for Science! Save the world!!

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Weâre fucked.
Weâre not fucked if we take action now. This is the turning point. We change or we go extinct. Simple as that.
A required read from Michael Oman-Reagan.
This is all true. This all happened in Canada, and its very likely it will happen in the USA under Trump and be worse than Harperâs crackdown on Science ever was.
Links cited in this twitter essay:
The Big Chill: âScientists Canât Do the Job They Were Hired to Doâ
More than 1000 Jobs Lost, Climate Program Hit Hard in Coming Environment Canada Cuts
Leaked document says Canadian federal climate scientists being blocked from media contact
Harper Government Trashes Another Federal Science Library
Federal scientists closely monitored during polar conference
Science Silenced: US Scientist Caught in Canadian Muzzle Climate-change scientists feel âmuzzledâ by Ottawa: Documents
The Canadian War on Science: A long, unexaggerated, devastating chronological indictment
http://ourrighttoknow.ca/
http://write2know.ca/
https://evidencefordemocracy.ca
So important that we made a video on the topic:Â https://youtu.be/8e1XX-ngJcc
Trump even started doing this before he became president when his transition team requested the names of climate scientists who worked on Obamaâs climate change initiatives (and promptly backpedaled when he got backlash).
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/energy-environment/wp/2016/12/14/trump-transition-says-request-for-names-of-climate-scientists-was-not-authorized/?utm_term=.b82197a211f9
And scientists are already mobilizing to protect data that should be readily available to the general public.
https://www.wired.com/2017/01/rogue-scientists-race-save-climate-data-trump/
This is real.
We as the global scientific community must not bow to the oppressive reign of anti-intellectualism. Through the marvelous world of liberty that is the Internet, we'll keep our science not just alive and kicking, but thriving and Jackie Chan roundhousing! Science will win the day. Let's fuckin' do this.