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Review: Leatherstocking Golf Course (Part 1)

Most people who visit Cooperstown, New York, are going to see the National Baseball Hall of Fame. It is the obvious reason to visit the town...

Sunday, August 11, 2019

Beer of the Week

The beer: Breakfast Stout

Brewed by: Founders Brewing Company, Grand Rapids, Michigan

Description (from the website): "The coffee lover’s consummate beer. Brewed with an abundance of flaked oats, bitter and imported chocolates, and two types of coffee, this stout has an intense fresh-roasted java nose topped with a frothy, cinnamon-colored head that goes forever.

Would I buy it again?: I've been wanting to try this particular beer for a while, I've heard a lot of good things. It has a score of 100 on BeerAdvocate, which is as high as you can get. Is it the best beer ever? Well, I didn't think so, but it was definitely pretty good. I'd definitely get it again, but not in the summer. A thick stout filled with coffee is not the greatest idea on a hot summer day.

Wednesday, August 7, 2019

Alpha Centauri Can't Hide Its Planets Forever

We've discovered extrasolar planets hundreds, even thousands of light-years away. However, we have yet to confirm the existence (or lack thereof) of exoplanets in our closest stellar neighbor. And Alpha Centauri is a tempting target beyond its proximity: The star system contains not one, but two stars that are similar to the Sun. Alpha Centauri A is virtually identical to the Sun, and Alpha Centauri B is a bit smaller. But they're both main sequence stars, and that should mean they're both hospitable places for friendly, Earth-like planets to develop. But we don't know yet if there are planets there.

There's hope that things will change, though. Our astronomical abilities improve every day, and there are multiple concerted efforts to observe Alpha Centauri for exoplanets. It's tough to do, considering the two main stars reached their closest approach in 2016. All we know is that A has no planets bigger than 50 Earth masses and that B has no planets bigger than 8 Earth masses. There's plenty of room for an Earth analog to be hanging out around either star. It may be that neither star has what we're looking for. But we have to find out for sure. And soon, we will.