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There are microbes called endoliths that live deep inside rocks ? miles beneath Earth's surface ? surviving without sunlight or oxygen, sometimes for millions of years in almost complete metabolic stasis. Essentially, they're nature's ultimate slow sleepers, challenging our ideas of how long life can persist in extreme conditions!
....and .. did you also know that those atoms have been around since the dawn of time?
There are more possible positions in a game of chess than there are atoms in the entire observable universe? Seriously. Here's the breakdown: Estimated number of atoms in the observable universe: ~1080i] Estimated number of legal, unique chess positions: ~10120 That number is so massive it's called the Shannon number, after Claude Shannon (the father of information theory). And that's just positions ? the number of possible games is even more absurd: 10??⁰⁰ or more.
I'm going to comment on several of these great tidbits. Kindly forgive me putting on my picky-hat on some of them.
All life up to about 2.5 billion years ago found oxygen and sunlight toxic, so it was everywhere. The oxygenation catastrophe (the first time (of two)) that a life form caused a massive extinction event, forced all these early life forms into hiding, in paces like the bottom of the dead sea, which is hardly dead since it is almost pure biomass. Yes, the metabolism of these life forms is slow, so 'sleepers' is not a bad description. They'd never have evolved into anything with sufficient energy to become say some sort of 'animal'.Picky-hat going on now. The following comments also constitute interesting
The protons might have been around since pretty close to the dawn of time, but atoms are nuclei and electrons, and nuclei swap electrons like swingers swap wives, making them technically not the same atom anymore.
Secondly, most molecules (water in this case) contain neutrons, and those certainly have not been around since the dawn of time, but need to be manufactured in stars, probably the one that blew up and made the dust cloud from which our secondary solar system was formed. So the oxygen nuclei in water is at best around half the age of the universe.Quote from: neilep on 02/07/2025 19:18:47There are more possible positions in a game of chess than there are atoms in the entire observable universe? Seriously. Here's the breakdown: Estimated number of atoms in the observable universe: ~1080i] Estimated number of legal, unique chess positions: ~10120 That number is so massive it's called the Shannon number, after Claude Shannon (the father of information theory). And that's just positions ? the number of possible games is even more absurd: 10??⁰⁰ or more.[/l][/l][/l][/l]I am going to contest this.Shannon number is indeed that value (10120 - 10130) but that's the number of possible games, which presumes some rules are followed like the 50-move rule and 3-repeat rule are followed, without which the number would not be finite.But the number of positions can't be that. I counted about a trillion legal pawn setups. Add in the other pieces and it goes up to about 1036. All the legal games are just ordering that small number of positions into different legal orders. No, I did not try to count those to verify Shannon.[/q]
There are more possible positions in a game of chess than there are atoms in the entire observable universe? Seriously. Here's the breakdown: Estimated number of atoms in the observable universe: ~1080i] Estimated number of legal, unique chess positions: ~10120 That number is so massive it's called the Shannon number, after Claude Shannon (the father of information theory). And that's just positions ? the number of possible games is even more absurd: 10??⁰⁰ or more.[/l][/l][/l][/l]
Ewe are gambolling with your position on this subforum. Any more erroneous material and Halc will dispatch you to the bold corner, ie the new theories subforum!!