Estimated User #239
1 fiction conversations
over 3 days
(Mar 13, 2024 – Mar 17, 2024)
61% prompt uniqueness
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Mar 13, 2024
Mar 17, 2024
All conversations
Conversation Clusters (35)
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C0
Write encounter: Scientists on Earth encountered anomaly is fucky satellite, act
5 conv.
C1
Describe Earth were dominated by corrupt biome from Terraria
4 conv.
C2
Describe hex color #020204
3 conv.
C3
Describe hot land-sea planet, ocean is not made of water
3 conv.
C4
Generate star system of 10 planets (Planet number ID/Orbital radius AU/Radius km
3 conv.
C5
Describe binary system of two rogue planets, brown dwarf devouring mass of gas g
2 conv.
C6
Describe humans were evolved to regulate plastic
2 conv.
C7
Describe humans were evolved to consume plastic
2 conv.
C8
Describe Earth timeline 1: Today
2 conv.
C9
Describe our universe named Nebadon
2 conv.
C10
Describe serial killer worse than Ted Bundy (political edition)
2 conv.
C11
Idea for extremely retard stuff
2 conv.
C12
Describe gas giant with color-chemistry class Enstatian. Composition is Fe, FeO,
2 conv.
C13
Describe gas giant with color-chemistry class Aithalian. Composition is C. Color
2 conv.
C14
Describe novel nightmarish character named Marvight, lives in scariest, darkest,
1 conv.
C15
Do planets have own asteroid belts?
×
1 conv.
C16
Autography of Selfcentis Person/consciousness named Selfcentis, a most important
1 conv.
C17
1. Neptunian (Cryo-Azurian): No tropospheric clouds and only faint hazes. (Color
1 conv.
C18
Describe rogue gas giant was born from accretion disk of black hole
1 conv.
C19
Most hateful country
1 conv.
C20
Idea for uncanniest empire, including name
1 conv.
C21
Idea for nightmare empire, including name
1 conv.
C22
I went to planet with spaceship
1 conv.
C23
Classification of dominant (primary) clouds on planets: 1. Hydrogenic: Primarily
1 conv.
C24
Describe land-sea planet with asteroid belt from collision of two destroyed moon
1 conv.
C25
Describe science reality version of corrupt biome from Terraria
1 conv.
C26
Describe Venusian land-sea planet, infected forests resemble corrupt biome from
1 conv.
C27
Idea for extremely accurate exoplanet (It's gas giant with random color, chemist
1 conv.
C28
Describe website called aletheianschool.com, it has full of truths, it's dark we
1 conv.
C29
Describe ejected gas giant named Erebus. Color and chemistry resembles TrES-2b.
1 conv.
C30
Describe strange planet from gas giant
1 conv.
C31
Describe shrinking planet but mass stay same
1 conv.
C32
Can pi be different?
1 conv.
C33
Write encounter: Scientists on Earth encountered fuckiest satellite, it is jokin
1 conv.
C34
Describe gas giant with color-chemistry class Melanoazurian
1 conv.
1 conversation in cluster Cluster 15× “Do planets have own asteroid belts?” over less than a minute (Mar 14, 2024 – Mar 14, 2024), oldest first.
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USER: Do planets have own asteroid belts?
CHATBOT: Yes, some planets in our solar system have their own asteroid belts. For example, the asteroid belt located between Mars and Jupiter is often referred to as the main asteroid belt and contains thousands of rocky objects in orbit around the Sun. Additionally, the dwarf planet Pluto has its own asteroid belt known as the Kuiper Belt, which is made up of icy objects beyond the orbit of Neptune.
USER: Describe binary system of two rogue planets, brown dwarf devouring mass of gas giant
CHATBOT: A binary system of two rogue planets with a brown dwarf devouring a mass of a gas giant would be a very unique and fascinating astronomical scenario. Here is a description of how such a system might function: 1. Rogue planets: Rogue planets are planets that do not orbit any star and instead drift freely through interstellar space. In this binary system, there are two rogue planets of similar size orbiting each other. These planets would likely have no source of light or heat other than what is generated internally, making them cold and inhospitable. 2. Brown dwarf: A brown dwarf is a substellar object that is larger than a planet but smaller than a star. In this scenario, the brown dwarf is orbiting the binary pair of rogue planets in a complex dance of gravitational forces. The brown dwarf is actively pulling in material from one of the rogue planets, essentially devouring it over time. 3. Gas giant: The gas giant in this system is being consumed by the brown dwarf, as its mass is slowly being drawn in by the powerful gravitational forces of the brown dwarf. The gas giant would likely be in a chaotic orbit, with its outer layers being stripped away by the brown dwarf. Overall, this binary system of two rogue planets with a brown dwarf devouring a gas giant would be a dynamic and volatile system, with intense gravitational interactions shaping the movement and evolution of the objects involved. It would be a fascinating and rare sight in the vastness of space.