2484: H-alpha

Explain xkcd: It's 'cause you're dumb.
Revision as of 20:10, 10 July 2021 by 162.158.134.100 (talk) (The solar filter in 1828 is surely not a hydrogen-alpha filter.)
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H-alpha
"All the companies whose blimps I shot fireworks at are mad, but MetLife is especially miffed because I dressed up as the Red Baron."
Title text: "All the companies whose blimps I shot fireworks at are mad, but MetLife is especially miffed because I dressed up as the Red Baron."

Explanation

Black Hat has acquired an H-alpha filter. This is a special kind of optical filter used for scientific observations of the Sun's chromosphere. It is different from an ordinary solar filter, which is used to protect one's eyes or camera, as looking at the Sun bare-eyed will do damage to one's eyes. A camera using an ordinary (not H-alpha) solar filter was seen in 1828: ISS Solar Transit, and the consequences of not using such a filter were explored in 2227: Transit of Mercury.

Black Hat points out that the filter can also be used to look at nebulae, but doesn't see much further use for it; since the filter only transmits a very narrow bandwidth of light, one generated by hot hydrogen, it is not useful for looking at much else. This gives him an idea, and he leaves.

WARNING!!! A deep sky nebula H-alpha filter has a wider bandwidth than a solar H-alpha filter and WILL hurt the eyes if used to observe the sun!

Upon returning, he casually shares with Cueball three seemingly unrelated observations which suggest what he was up to in the meantime: that most modern blimps use helium to keep them aloft, that their household is out of fireworks, and that an advertising company (or several, going by the title text) is upset. Early in the 20th century, most airships such as blimps and zeppelins used hydrogen as the lifting gas. There were several incidents in which this gas ignited while the ships were in flight, resulting in spectacular and catastrophic fireballs, most famously the Hindenburg disaster. Taken together, the implication is that Black Hat tried to set someone's advertising blimp alight using fireworks; so he could use his H-alpha filter to look at the burning hydrogen.

In modern times, one of the most well-known uses of airships is blimps for advertising, as they are an unusual and hence attention-getting sight in the sky, offer a large surface area that can be used to show a slogan or logo, and can stay aloft for a long time at comparatively little cost. Modern blimps almost exclusively use helium as a lifting gas. While helium is significantly more expensive than hydrogen (and a non-renewable resource), it has similar weight and therefore similar lifting power to hydrogen, but is not flammable. (In fact, as a noble gas, helium is totally non-reactive under normal conditions). Any attempt to cause a hydrogen fireball would, therefore, be doomed to failure. Nonetheless, if Black Hat managed to set off sufficiently powerful fireworks near the blimp, it could potentially damage the skin, risking a loss of helium and possibly putting people in danger, which is likely why the advertising company is "real mad". The joke is that Black Hat would do something as destructive as attempting a destroy a blimp in flight, potentially killing people aboard or on the ground, merely to have the opportunity to use his H-alpha filter.

Cueball "responds" by holding whatever he's reading closer to his face, apparently hoping to avoid further conversation (or consequences).

The title text references the insurance company MetLife, which until 2016 used the cartoon character Snoopy as an advertising mascot. In the Peanuts comics, Snoopy would frequently imagine himself as a fighter pilot in World War I in an aerial battle with the Red Baron, a battle he would frequently lose. The detail that Black Hat "dressed up as the Red Baron" might help explain another point: advertising blimps typically fly higher than the effective range of most fireworks. It would be entirely consistent with Black Hat's history to somehow acquire a traditional biplane and modify it to allow him to launch fireworks from the air, in mockery of an old-fashioned dogfight.

This comic was published shortly before Independence Day 2021, a US holiday that is often commemorated with fireworks. This may explain why Black Hat and Cueball originally had some fireworks around.

Transcript

[In a slim panel Black Hat is seen holding a small black device up in his left hand.]
Black Hat: I got an H-Alpha filter for looking at the sun.
[In a broad frame-less panel Black Hat, holding the device down in his left hand while standing behind Cueball who is sitting in an armchair reading on his tablet.]
Black Hat: It also works for nebulae. But that's about it. There just aren't that many hot blobs of hydrogen to look at, I guess.
[Back to a slim panel, Black Hat is seen holding his left hand to his chin, while he holds the device down in his right hand.]
Black Hat: ...Unless...
[Another two slim panels follows. In the first Black Hat turns around and leaves, his head already partly outside the panel already, and he no longer holds the device in his hands. And then follows an empty beat panel.]
[In a broad panel Black Hat re-enters with the device held down in his hand. He is walking towards Cueball in his armchair. His black hat is somewhat out of shape. Cueball is still reading but is now hunched further forward and he has lifted his tablet so it is very close to his face.]
Black Hat: Huh, did you know blimps all use helium now? You learn something new every day! By the way, we're out of fireworks.
Black Hat: And some advertising company is real mad.


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Discussion

I think the first company that got really mad was Goodyear, because they're famous for using blimps.

- unsigned comment

Additional detail

A H(ydrogen)-Alpha filter is a special lens used for viewing the Hydrogen-Alpha wavelength of light through telescopic or photographic devices. It works by filtering out all wavelengths of light except the red spectral line associated with hydrogen. This is commonly used to see shape and structure of objects that emit said light (namely, our own sun, and various nebulae as mentioned in the text).

Many earlier designs for airships (including the ill-fated Hindenburg) used (highly flammable) hydrogen gas for lift due to both its lower cost and higher availability. After the Hindenburg disaster designers switched exclusively to helium or heated air for lift. I The Hindenberg was supposed to be using Helium, but the USA was the prime producer at that time and for some reason refused to supply Germany at the time. This forced the use of Hydrogen, with the regrettable result. Choice of exterior paint, the gas 'bag' design being too permeable and lack of earthing were also factors. RIIW - Ponder it (talk) 20:27, 3 July 2021 (UTC)

For some reason? Germany was ruled by nazis at the time. Danger Kitty (talk) 21:45, 3 October 2023 (UTC)
At that point, though, there wasn't really that much reason for America to refuse them just for being Nazis (indeed, people like Henry Ford were quite the fans of that regime for an embarressingly long time). If it had been after 1939 (and especially after 1941) then it would have been definitely more than the general politics (or possibly forsightedness?) that it was in the lead up to 1937.
To be exact, in fact, it was the Helium Act of 1925 that banned export (in order to supply the domestic naval vessels of the time, so pro-America rather than anti-Nazi, especially as the Nazi movement wasn't much more than a niche concept in one of various competing factions in that era). The designer had even hoped to get an exception (double-layer the lift-bladders, to use some helium and some hydrogen), but never got that. And then in 1938 there was bartered a deal (having sworn off hydrogen entirely, due to May '37s event) to allow export "only for peaceful purposes", which may have only stopped due to the annexing of Austria (and well before the general "Nazis bad!" message had become the on the ground leftpondian zeitgeist). 141.101.98.175 11:46, 4 October 2023 (UTC)

Metropolitan Life Insurance Company (AKA MetLife) is an insurance company that licensed the Peanuts characters, In particular, Snoopy in their advertising. They featured the Snoopy character in his alter-ego role of World War I Fighter Ace (which frequently fought with the Red Baron in the Charles Schulz comics) in both print and television ads between 1985 and 2016, and most notably pictured on some of their advertising blimps. 162.158.142.160 06:29, 3 July 2021 (UTC) Not the Red Baron

Many nebulae contain excited hydrogen atoms emitting the Hα wavelength, so a Hα filter is useful for removing other light such as light pollution, making nebulae stand out in photographs.

In most cases when a sun filter is mentioned, it's probably a white-light filter that only reduces the light intensity. A Hα filter is used to highlight the sun's chromosphere – the layer above the sun's apparent "surface", the photosphere.

I'm not sure whether the same filters are actually used for photographing both the sun and nebulae. 162.158.183.220 11:52, 3 July 2021 (UTC)

I think someone should edit the summary to detail two points: One, that blimps are not the same as zeppelins. The latter has a rigid body and tanks of gas, rather than the former's balloon body. And two, airships such as the Hindenburg were never designed to be flown using hydrogen; it would have continued to use helium on that one fateful flight if it had not been for a trade embargo on Germany for the gas from its largest supplier, the United States.

I don't believe blimps have really ever been flown with hydrogen, but someone who knows better should add it. 172.69.142.62 20:02, 4 July 2021 (UTC)

About the Warning: i don't think that a filter has the ability, to hurt anyone. Therefore it should be rephrased, that the remaining sunlight will still hurt you eyes. 172.68.110.116 13:10, 5 July 2021 (UTC)

The solar filter in 1828 is surely not a hydrogen-alpha filter. The picture of the sun in that strip doesn't show the deep red hydrogen-alpha color, and it doesn't make sense to set the white balance while using a narrow-band filter. 162.158.134.100 20:08, 10 July 2021 (UTC)