Originally posted by gingerjedi
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Reply to: Red Bull doesn't give you brains!
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Previously on "Red Bull doesn't give you brains!"
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Originally posted by d000hg View PostQuite right. However slowing down fast enough before you hit the atmosphere would be key.
imagine stepping from a train doing 100 mph, onto another doing 100 mph.
if there is no lateral movement there is no increase in air pressure which means there is no heating
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Originally posted by EternalOptimist View Postsinging is modulated sound waves transmitted by a medium, usually air.
there is no air in space, so what is the medium ?
It's a bit like saying an electron is a particle - it's not but it's a reasonable way to paint a picture.
If you want to be overly pedantic then I could counter that at the scales we're talking, space isn't empty anyway but a seething quantum froth. But I doubt you do.
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Originally posted by EternalOptimist View Postif you can match the rotation speed, there would be no atmospheric heating.
what is it ? 24k miles an hour or summat
Originally posted by zeitghostI thought they used two tin cans & a bit of string.
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Originally posted by d000hg View PostActually, subatomic particles 'singing to each other' is probably as good a way as any to describe how forces are propagated
Far less weird than philotics.
there is no air in space, so what is the medium ?
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if you can match the rotation speed, there would be no atmospheric heating.
what is it ? 24k miles an hour or summat
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Originally posted by zeitghostEr, yes.
I'm aware of that.
You need a de-orbit burn so that you are going slow enough to re-enter the atmosphere.
Otherwise you have to rely on what little atmospheric drag exists at 100 miles up or so.
Which ain't much.
Just think about all that cosmic radiation... (Note for MF: Pixie Dust).
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Originally posted by zeitghostI wonder who'll be the first to do it from orbit.
I guess it's possible but you'd need a miniature space-shuttle?
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Originally posted by gingerjedi View PostImagine a big marble resting on a sheet of elastic, when you put a smaller marble on the the same sheet it will roll towards the depression caused by the first, if you put a bigger marble on the sheet the first marble will roll towards that.
Its a bit like how doughnuts are drawn towards lardies, it's not their fault nor their genes it's gravity.
If you put a marble on a sheet of elastic it makes a depression. But the thing that causes the depression is exactly the thing you are trying to explain.
This is known as a circular argument.
It also has a hole in it, so I see where your doughnut comes from.
What would happen if you were in space and you put a marble on a sheet of elastic ??
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Originally posted by gingerjedi View PostImagine a big marble resting on a sheet of elastic, when you put a smaller marble on the the same sheet it will roll towards the depression caused by the first, if you put a bigger marble on the sheet the first marble will roll towards that.
Its a bit like how doughnuts are drawn towards lardies, it's not their fault nor their genes it's gravity.
As in replies on the 12 April 2011 and subsequent answers in June 2006, all things in the universe contain pixie dust. When the great pixie created the universe 10000 years ago he fused magic dust into all of the things that he created. He then put the remaining pixie dust in bags at the centre of the Earth and gave the earth a little spin. The magic pixie dust then sings a song to all the other bits of magic dust in the universe and they are drawn slowly towards it. That's how all things are drawn to the earth. And for a final joke the pixie wrote a book called the Bible and made references to a fantasy figure called God.
HTH
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Originally posted by EternalOptimist View Post
seriously though, why do things fall ?
I have heard about the third law, and some dodgy explanations and some people say 'well things just do. live with it'
Personally, I would not jump out of a capsule 23 miles high and make the assumption that something was going to just work, that nobody can explain
Its a bit like how doughnuts are drawn towards lardies, it's not their fault nor their genes it's gravity.
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Originally posted by hyperD View PostFTFY
seriously though, why do things fall ?
I have heard about the third law, and some dodgy explanations and some people say 'well things just do. live with it'
Personally, I would not jump out of a capsule 23 miles high and make the assumption that something was going to just work, that nobody can explain
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