What planet has a Hexagon on the north pole and a hurricane on the south pole?
@lookatdesktop (27156)
Dallas, Texas
March 22, 2016 7:33pm CST
If you guessed Saturn, you guessed right.
The planet Saturn has a moon called Titan, which has gases that, when hit by sunlight can create the basic building blocks of life.
So why don't we go to Saturn or to one of it's 62 moons?
And those rings. Aren't they beautiful and amazing? I can't get enough of these videos about Saturn and it's rings and moons. The fact that the rings are made largely of frozen ice water, makes me want to go get some of that ice and cool off the planet Earth and have a few cold frappuccinos.
Read This:
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to: navigation, search Saturn - North polar hexagon and vortex as well as rings (April 2, 2014). Time lapse of the polar hexagon as viewed by Cassini (10 November 2006). Saturn's hexagon is a persisting hexagonal
2 people like this
2 responses
@lookatdesktop (27156)
• Dallas, Texas
23 Mar 16
As on a Darkling Plain. THX 1138 .
1 person likes this
@OneOfMany (12150)
• United States
23 Mar 16
I feel like a lot of people write about mining the asteroid belt.
1 person likes this
@lookatdesktop (27156)
• Dallas, Texas
23 Mar 16
@OneOfMany This is a very good concept for both science fiction and real science. There is a lot of stuff out there in space we could use as raw materials for future cities in space and space ships. What is keeping us is from achieving our true goals is our lack of enthusiasm in general as a collective species. There are a few people who dream of going to other worlds but the general masses lack inspiration or vision to carry forth more real goals for getting out there and doing what we as a species are designed by. To inherit the stars, so to speak. At the rate we are going we might be back in the stone age before we ever get as far as Mars.
1 person likes this

@KuznVinny (768)
• United States
25 Mar 16
I don't read science fiction these days. Too many scientists are passing their science fiction off as science. So I say, "just read that."
1 person likes this



