Science: Space: Monument
Diamond ring   (+1)  [vote for, against]
'cause she's worth it.

Okay so I've got an inkling of what is considered proper for a twenty fifth wedding anniversary gift, and the fiftieth anniversary is a given, even the seventy fifth and hundredth have some traditional gift, but face it we are living longer with each consecutive generation so what's a guy to do when the Tri or Centi-centenial rolls around?
Well just a mere fifty light years from here, [link], lies a diamond 2'500 miles across just begging for a solar sail tug to drag it back to this solar system where it could be gently nudged into Saturn's gravitational field.
This 10,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 carat natural gemstone could adorn the outer rings of Saturn, (without a clasp or anything), and overly romantic octogenarians could buy a piece of, or, (by the time it gets here), take a trip with their betrothed to the ultimate honeymoon rock.
-- 2 fries shy of a happy meal, Apr 25 2004

Girls best friend got huge since high school. http://www.universe..._diamond_space.html
[2 fries shy of a happy meal, Oct 04 2004, last modified Oct 21 2004]

Does 'Liz' Taylor know about this?
-- cromagnon, Apr 25 2004


F. Scott Fitzgerald
-- hippo, Apr 25 2004


That's interesting...and very cool.
I thought this was going to be drilling finger sized holes in large dimonds.
-- my-nep, Apr 25 2004


What a good idea but a dreadful article. I'm with R. Buckminster-Fuller.
-- gnomethang, Apr 25 2004


Of course, this is just a diamond in the rough. It needs to have a kilometer of graphite and crap scraped off (that the sellers forgot to mention), and it needs to be faceted. That’s going to be a bit of a job.
-- ldischler, Apr 25 2004


I'm doing the best I can to not type an MFD here... lots of bad science, magic, etc. etc...

I'm letting it slide for two reasons: 1) 'cause I thought the article was interesting. 2) I think this category is just gonna breed this stuff.
-- zigness, Apr 25 2004



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