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Reply to: Duck and Cover day
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Previously on "Duck and Cover day"
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I'm off down to ladbrokes to bet it lands in that hole in Cornwall. Should get astronomical odds.
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It's the atmosphere that complicates things and no supercomputer can work out what that's doingOriginally posted by AtW View PostWhat surprises me most is that NASA still can't accurately say where it will fall - you'd think long notice and observation plus fast super computers would allow them to do that.
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Ah but didn't they say ' Not over the continental USA'?
... so that's ok then....
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What surprises me most is that NASA still can't accurately say where it will fall - you'd think long notice and observation plus fast super computers would allow them to do that.
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I was more interested in the gold coated mylar reflective sheets. You can have the rims.
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Was it put up there by space gypsies? It'd fit in nicely at Dale Farm.Originally posted by RSoles View PostNow this will have been done before:-
BBC News - Who, What, Why: Can you dodge a falling satellite?
"The debris will include three batteries, four wheel rims and four fuel tanks, and their speed when they hit the ground or the ocean will vary. "
It's a satellite, why does it have wheels?
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In case aliens capture it and need to wheel it around their spaceship.Originally posted by RSoles View PostNow this will have been done before:-
BBC News - Who, What, Why: Can you dodge a falling satellite?
"The debris will include three batteries, four wheel rims and four fuel tanks, and their speed when they hit the ground or the ocean will vary. "
It's a satellite, why does it have wheels?
Duh.
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Duck and Cover day
Now this will have been done before:-
BBC News - Who, What, Why: Can you dodge a falling satellite?
"The debris will include three batteries, four wheel rims and four fuel tanks, and their speed when they hit the ground or the ocean will vary. "
It's a satellite, why does it have wheels?Tags: None
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crash land
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