Difference between revisions of "3212: Little Red Dots"

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(Explanation: added little red dots (Unicode 25CF: BLACK CIRCLE) in Jasper and Vermillion as examples)
(Remove baseless speculation about title text)
 
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{{incomplete|This page was created by a LITTLE RED BOT. Don't remove this notice too soon.}}
 
{{incomplete|This page was created by a LITTLE RED BOT. Don't remove this notice too soon.}}
  
Cueball asks researchers in different subjects to identify "little red dots" in an image from the {{w|James Webb Space Telescope}} (referred to in the caption as "JWST").
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The {{w|Little red dot (astronomical object)|little red dot}}s that the comic refers to are actually young black holes from 500-700 million years after the Big Bang observed by the JWST telescope. The comic purports to give the responses of several different experts in unrelated fields when asked to identify them:
 +
* According to the {{w|Entomology|entomologists}} (scientists who study insects and related arthropods), they are {{w|Clover mite | clover mites}} (''Bryobia praetiosa'') — very small red arachnids.
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* According to the {{w|Computer_science|computer scientists}}, they are {{w|defective pixel|stuck pixels}} — pixels that do not work properly, and are stuck to one single color (red in this case).
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* According to the {{w|Dermatology|dermatologists}} (doctors who specialize in skin disorders), they are {{w|Cherry angioma|cherry angiomas}} — harmless, non-cancerous skin growths made of clusters of dilated capillaries, appearing as bright red, smooth, or slightly raised spots.
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* According to the {{w|Graphic_design|graphic designers}}, they are colors of type [https://www.colorhexa.com/d73b3e Jasper] (<span style="color:#d73b3e">●</span> #d73b3e) and [https://www.colorhexa.com/e34234 Vermillion] (<span style="color:#e34234">●</span> #e34234, sometimes called Cinnabar).
  
The {{w|Little red dot (astronomical object)|little red dot}}s that the comic refers to are actually young black holes from 500-700 million years after the Big Bang in the JWST telescope, the comic instead jokingly asks several different experts their thoughts
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Part of the punchline is the shift in focus: instead of trying to identify the object, the designer is nitpicking the description of "red dot." Additionally, the graphic designer is also requesting [[Cueball]]'s {{w|Color_calibration|color settings}}, implying they believe the reason Cueball calls them "red" is due to poor display settings, and not due to using the common term for the color.
 
 
According to the Entomologist they are: {{w|Clover mite | Clover mites}} (Bryobia praetiosa) are very small [[Red Spiders]].
 
 
 
According to the Computer Scientist they are: {{w|Defective pixel|Stuck pixels}}, pixels that do not work properly, and are stuck to one single color.
 
 
 
According to the Dermatologist they are: {{w|Cherry angioma|Cherry angiomas}}, harmless, non-cancerous skin growths made of clusters of dilated capillaries, appearing as bright red, smooth, or slightly raised spots.
 
 
 
According to the Graphic Designer they are: Colors of type Jasper (<span style="color:#d73b3e">●</span> #d73b3e) and Vermillion (<span style="color:#e34234">●</span> #e34234, sometimes called Cinnabar). Part of the punchline is the shift in focus: instead of trying to identify the object, the designer is nitpicking the description of "red dot."
 
  
 
==Transcript==
 
==Transcript==
{{incomplete transcript|Don't remove this notice too soon.}}
 
 
 
:[Caption above all the panels:]
 
:[Caption above all the panels:]
 
:Astronomers asking researchers from different departments to help them identify the "little red dots" in JWST images:
 
:Astronomers asking researchers from different departments to help them identify the "little red dots" in JWST images:

Latest revision as of 12:15, 26 February 2026

Little Red Dots
After a lot of analysis, I've determined that they're actually big red dots; they're just very far away.
Title text: After a lot of analysis, I've determined that they're actually big red dots; they're just very far away.

Explanation[edit]

Ambox warning blue construction.png This is one of 69 incomplete explanations:
This page was created by a LITTLE RED BOT. Don't remove this notice too soon. If you can fix this issue, edit the page!

The little red dots that the comic refers to are actually young black holes from 500-700 million years after the Big Bang observed by the JWST telescope. The comic purports to give the responses of several different experts in unrelated fields when asked to identify them:

  • According to the entomologists (scientists who study insects and related arthropods), they are clover mites (Bryobia praetiosa) — very small red arachnids.
  • According to the computer scientists, they are stuck pixels — pixels that do not work properly, and are stuck to one single color (red in this case).
  • According to the dermatologists (doctors who specialize in skin disorders), they are cherry angiomas — harmless, non-cancerous skin growths made of clusters of dilated capillaries, appearing as bright red, smooth, or slightly raised spots.
  • According to the graphic designers, they are colors of type Jasper ( #d73b3e) and Vermillion ( #e34234, sometimes called Cinnabar).

Part of the punchline is the shift in focus: instead of trying to identify the object, the designer is nitpicking the description of "red dot." Additionally, the graphic designer is also requesting Cueball's color settings, implying they believe the reason Cueball calls them "red" is due to poor display settings, and not due to using the common term for the color.

Transcript[edit]

[Caption above all the panels:]
Astronomers asking researchers from different departments to help them identify the "little red dots" in JWST images:
[In each panel, Cueball stands at the left of an easel. The easel is shown each time as having a black image with three red dots on it. At the right of the easel in each panel is a different character looking at the image on the easel and commenting on it. At the top of each panel is a caption indicating the type of researcher commenting on the image.]
Caption: Entomologists
Megan: Clover mites.
Caption: Computer scientists
Knit Cap: Stuck pixels.
Caption: Dermatologists
Ponytail: Cherry angiomas.
Caption: Graphic designers
Hairy: No, those are vermillion, or maybe jasper.
Hairy: Can I see your color settings?

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Discussion

Everyone why is absolutely nothing here yet Ehogin (talk) 03:08, 26 February 2026 (UTC)

Because this comic came out like 2 hours ago. Xkdvd (talk) 04:17, 26 February 2026 (UTC)
Yeah by the amount of people who read xkcd you would think at least 100 people saw this and did not do anything for two hours Ehogin (talk) 04:45, 26 February 2026 (UTC)
Its not a question of how many people read xkcd, its how many people use explain xkcd, and edit, and know what to put here. EDIT: forgot my signature. oops. Xkdvd (talk) 04:51, 26 February 2026 (UTC)
OK, we want something here? I get Clover Mites a lot. On the patio table, on the deck chairs. On the car, but I fooled them this time: I got a cherry-red car. Maybe they got into the JWST? --PRR (talk) 05:32, 26 February 2026 (UTC)

Current title text explanation seems like a bit of a stretch to me; see 2359 for a more refined take on explaining a very a similar joke. 204.77.3.72 08:32, 26 February 2026 (UTC)

Sure, whatever you say Father Dougal. --2A10:D586:3E93:0:21B8:BB66:6F56:9A06 08:53, 26 February 2026 (UTC)

TV criminologists: a pattern centered on the killer's home. 194.75.188.171 11:15, 26 February 2026 (UTC)

I don't know if it is "nitpicking" per se (though admittedly that is a clever pun, even though nits are generally brown and are rarely red). It could be that the graphic designer is genuinely interested in helping identify the color. Cwallenpoole (talk) 12:41, 26 February 2026 (UTC)
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