Nashville's Spicy Hot Space trips
by: Steven k.
Get your Spicy Scorching Space Swings today.
This is a Main Sequence Star.
They are about 6000 degrees Celsius, which is average temperature for stars. Our sun is a main sequence star so it will only cost you about 1 million dollars. How about it?
This is a Red Giant.
If you didn't like main sequence stars I'm sure you'll like this one. Red Giants are about 3000 degrees Celsius. That is on the colder end of stars. The nearest one to earth is Gacrux. It is about 88 light years away. This one will cost you about 50 million dollars.
This is a Red Supergiant
They one of the biggest things in the universe. About 10 times the size of red giants. Betelgeuse is the closest supergaint at about 642.5 light years way and will cost you 100 millon dollars.
White Dwarf
This is a white dwarf. The closest white dwarf is Cirius B. White dwarfs are really hot but not that bright. This one only cost 50 million.
This is a black dwarf.
Black dwarfs are cooled white dwarfs that don't reflect light anymore. They aren't interesting so they only cost about a 100$.
This is a supernova.
This is the 3 stage of a massive star. Super giants explode, shooting there non-needed stuff out in space. The explosion is called a supernova. This is very hard to find so we offer these every billion years. They also cost 10 billion dollars.
Neutron Star
A neutron star is really small for its mass. They spin and sometimes flash energy at their poles and called pulsars. The closest one is called Calvera and is about 1000 light years away. The cost of this trip will be about 90 million dollars.
Black Hole
A black hole is a dense object that happens when a super massive super giant explodes. The only way to escape this is to travel over the speed of light and Our ship is the only one that can do that so these trips cost 10 billion dollars.
Globular cluster
Globular clusters are dense clusters of stars. The have old stars and are close together and most of these stars are born at the same time. This trip cost about 1 billion dollars for the amazing trip.
Open clusters
Open clusters contain young hot stars, that are born around the same time. Sometimes the clusters still have some nebula and their are very few of the stars in the cluster. This trip will also cost the amazing prize of 1 billion dollars.
Irregular Galaxy
An irregular nebula is the first stage of a galaxy and still has nebula around it and can be any shape or size. This trip cost 500 million dollars.
Spiral Galaxy
The Milky Way is a spiral galaxy. So you can see part of a spiral galaxy if you look outside. Spiral galaxies are the second stage of the galaxy process and the arms of the spiral galaxy are the youngest part. This only cost 100 thousand dollars to see the most of the Milky Way.
Elliptical Galaxy
An elliptical galaxy is the last process of a galaxy. They have old stars and they are all clumped together. The closest ellipitcal galxay is Sagittarius Dwarf Ellipitcal galaxy about 70,000 light years away. This cost a huge amount of gas so this cost 100 billion dollars.
Stellar Nebula
Stellar nebula have a high constraint of hydrogen and some helium to help form stars they are the being of all stars. Gravity gets destrbed in this nebula and stars are born. This trip will cost 100 million dollars.
Planitary Nebula
A plantary is a nebula that happends after a red giant explodes. It still has a core and that will turn into a white dwarf. The atmoshere despeses over a while. This is also very rare so we it will cost 1 billion dollars.
Quaser
A quaser is a object that produces a huge amont of energy. Sientist think that quasars happen by a black hole eating a massave star and shooting off it's energy. These are super far away so we will will charge 100 billion dollars.
Sources
- "Gacrux (Gamma Crucis): Closest Red Giant Star to Earth." Space.com. Space, 4 Oct. 2014. Web. 18 Mar. 2016. <http://www.space.com/23710-gacrux-gamma-crucis.html>.
"Betelgeuse Braces for a Collision." European Space Agency. ESA, May-June 2015. Web. 18 Mar. 2016. <http://www.esa.int/Our_Activities/Space_Science/Betelgeuse_braces_for_a_collision>.
- "National Aeronautics and Space Administration." The Cosmic Distance Scale. NASA, Jan.-Feb. 2012. Web. 18 Mar. 2016. <http://imagine.gsfc.nasa.gov/features/cosmic/nearest_galaxy_info.html>.
Picture Sources
- https://www.bestthinking.com/articles/science/stellar-evolution-4-of-6-the-main-sequence
- http://pics-about-space.com/red-giant-stars?p=1
- http://memorize.com/physics-star-formation/ball1st1cpengu1n
- http://cseligman.com/text/stars/planetary.htm
- http://pics-about-space.com/black-dwarf-nasa?p=1
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supernova
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ScZFq0p3O8k
- http://www.popsci.com/extract-info-black-hole-use-quantum-teleportation
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Globular_cluster
- http://stardome.org.nz/events/waitangi-day-closed/
- http://pichost.me/1822156/
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spiral_galaxy
- http://www.astro.cornell.edu/academics/courses/astro201/galaxies/types.htm
- http://www.wikiwand.com/en/Nebula
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helix_Nebula
- http://pics-about-space.com/astronomy-quasar?p=1