Hey! I've created a little poll down below, and I'm hoping a few of you can help me out by answering it. I'm counting on you to not turn this into a mess. Thank you! https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1wT1UL6ahrCXq2-jUFT7IgjSthOlXxhAKUVnSGHYi368/edit
I feel like at least 2 of these questions technically had 2 correct answers. I don't remember the first but one of them was about expansion and contraction of matter via heating and cooling yes but also technically the faster and slower movement of the particles within as a result of said heating and cooling. Maybe I'm overthinking it.
Mars doesn't have rings but it will in the future (million+ years future) when one of its moons is pulled too close and destroyed.
I put down the big bang theory theorist guy as the question/answer to add to the test. It seemed like you wanted interesting facts that people SHOULD know, but nobody really knows him. Apparently most people think it was Edwin Hubble...
Could it be argued that Earth has a man-made ring of satellites? Or would that be more like a cloud...
"I felt a great disturbance in the Forms, as if thousands of voices suddenly cried out in terror and were suddenly silenced. I fear something terrible has happened." (The server is restarting) Well the atmosphere couldn't be a ring it's more or so a force field, keeping us from being cooked bacon. And yeah, you see it in Wall-e there's rings of space debris, such of satellites and broken rocket ships, with some collections of metal fragments and other broken space objects.
> Be me > Hunter Gatherer > Man attempt teach science > Bash skull in with big rock > Unga Bunga Alpha as f***
Thank you everyone for putting your time in and answering my poll. In a few days, I'll start posting the stats and whatnot! Thank you both for bringing this up. It's my first poll, and I honestly need as much constructive criticism as I can get. If you noticed anything else, bring it up in a PM, yes?
I would like to state, that gravity (on earth) is also affected by location: https://gyazo.com/832dbb9fb1de18788b1db230e60d25fb
That was the one! Gravity has more of an effect with masses in close proximity to eachother. Almost like a magnet. But not.