That took me too long.
Please explain…
Am I missing a very obvious joke, besides the wildly false claim?
Edit: I just read it below. I’m dumb.
Nothing false about it.
How many stars are there in the solar system?
Yeah, I know. Hence my edit.
H2O …so, 2 hydrogen atoms in one water molecule.
How many stars in the entire solar system ? Well, the answer is one 😋Can confirm. When I look up all I see is a single star and it hurts my eyes real bad when I look at it.
Hey guys, look at this big dumb dumb. He’s never seen the moon before! There’s obviously two stars in the sky
But the moon and the sun can’t be in the sky at the same time. Otherwise it would be night time in the day!
Actually, if it’s a new moon, they can.
never heard of private jets before? I hear lot’s of stars own one.
So there’s this giant floating orb in the sky and we’re not supposed to look directly at it yet no one questions this‽
I wish people would stop pretending like we live on a ball orbiting a star. We live on a disc, and Australia is on the tails side, and we each have a star, like a sexy flaming-ball-of-gas Sandwich…
÷
Exactly!
Good, good, that the best test for star identification
theydidthemath
theydidthemonstermath
The monster math?!
It was a classroom smash.
You could argue that it’s based on semantics, though. If you go by a different definition of star, more colloquially, planets like Venus and Mars are visible as “stars” in our solar system.
Dihydrogen Monoxide should be banned.
And hydric acid too!
deleted by creator
!Hydro [email protected] is coming for you
The funniest part is nobody officially recognizes this as a name.
Define nobody. I’ve heard this joke from at least high school and I’m over 40. My teacher pulled it on my class, and probably every class he had.
Go to any institution and scientific journal. You will never see this name. Nobody uses it aside from like you just said jokes and whatnot officially its never used. It’s scientific name is water. Good luck finding this in anything published for peer review.
Ah, I didn’t realize you meant it that way. I have no argument against that, nor do I desire to have one.
Ignoring the joke.
A metric cup is 250 ml.
250 ml = 250 g (the density of water is intentionally 1.000 g / ml)
Water ~= 18 g/mol ( H 1.008 g/mol, O 16.something g/mol)
250 g / 18 g/mol = 13.8 mol
13.8 mol * 6 * 10^23 atoms/mol = 8.33 * 10^24 molecules of water
And there are two atoms of H in one molecule of water, so 1.66*10^25 atoms of hydrogen in a glass of water.
That’s a lot
The craziness thing about all of this is that there is actually such a thing as “a metric cup”
It’s crazy how much stuff is out there. https://www.universetoday.com/36302/atoms-in-the-universe/
Bullshit.
Hydrogen atoms per water molecules: 2
Stars in the solar system: Sol, Neil Patrick Harris, Justin Timberlake, possibly even more…
God damn it
At least twice as much!
There are more reposts of this meme than there are stars in the entire Solar System.
There’s also more hydrogen in a glass of water than oxygen.
Only if you’re counting atoms. There’s more oxygen by weight.
Don’t mol shame.
Well, that’s true in our solar system.
Ours is the only Solar System, named after our star Sol. Others are generically called star systems or stellar systems.
Who else counted the fingers before reading the text? I save you the hassle, it’s 5.
Toyota hydrogen V8 for the win !!!
Did they read “a mole” and misinterpret it as “molecule” when writing the headline?
The solar system only has 1 star, so it’s accurate
I get the joke, but from the earth looking out, the other planets are all stars as well.
Not exactly. Stars twinkle; planets don’t. That’s the easiest way to tell if you’re looking at a star (other than our own of course) or a planet reflecting light.
Might depend on language also. Being a weeb, my example is going to be Japanese, where Hoshi(星) can mean both star and planet.
Looking in wiktionary, sometimes this can be translated more to “heavenly body” but the source seems to have been about twinkling things in the sky. Still, I’ve definitely heard what would translate to “this star” being used for the planet the speaker lives on.
Edit: also, the first time I spotted Jupiter with my telescope I thought it was a bright star with 2 dimmer stars around it. I changed my zoom, took pictures, and zoomed in before I realized it was Jupiter and it’s largest two moons. People with worse tech wouldn’t have thought " oh, that one doesn’t twinkle".