Recent comments in /f/space
Aakaash_from_India t1_je7wffh wrote
If the particle horizon is already vast enough beyond our capabilities, imagine if there is another civilisation far away (beyond our horizons) and they have another particle horizon and they assume that that is the universe while we assume our particle horizon to be the entire universe... 🫥 How huge would the entire universe be now?? 😭
[deleted] t1_je7vxdy wrote
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notmoffat t1_je7vn0g wrote
Reply to comment by EarthExile in Fast radio burst linked with gravitational waves for the first time by spsheridan
Thats what i was thinking. It would explain everything from the paranormal to inspiration.
[deleted] t1_je7vfb9 wrote
Reply to We Need to Get Back to the Moon by Guy_PCS
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robotical712 t1_je7vc2b wrote
Reply to comment by bigcitydreaming in Damaged Russian Soyuz Capsule Returns to Earth — Roscosmos by Newgripper1221
If they hadn’t had so many other incidents in recent years, I might give them the benefit of the doubt. In light of everything else, serious quality issues are more likely.
TonyMc3515 t1_je7upte wrote
Very similar actually..i find it reassuring in a way
[deleted] t1_je7rjzg wrote
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old-dirty-olorin t1_je7qfly wrote
From a perspective the universe seems to be in the business of taking the very basic and building ever more complex states.
bigcitydreaming t1_je7pyp8 wrote
Reply to comment by robotical712 in Damaged Russian Soyuz Capsule Returns to Earth — Roscosmos by Newgripper1221
Two isn't too large a sample size though so it's difficult to say. Unlikely but firmly within the realm of possibility. We'll see how it continues, 3 or 4 occurances would be incredibly suspicious and damning
flyingbuttressesfly t1_je7pli3 wrote
Yes. The universe is mind-boggling and it’s becoming conscious of itself. That blows my mind.
ErikGoesBoomski t1_je7piju wrote
Reply to comment by afraid_of_zombies in More Water Found on Moon, Locked in Tiny Glass Beads by LanceOhio
Seriously guy? Go ahead and deploy them. Prove me wrong.
PrairiePepper t1_je7p41r wrote
Reply to comment by SaxyOmega90125 in Frank Rubio's first spaceflight will turn into the longest mission by a US astronaut by gordon22
It takes a huge toll on your body too, especially muscle and bone density.
[deleted] t1_je7p1ta wrote
thawingSumTendies OP t1_je7o604 wrote
Reply to comment by very_humble in NASA delays flight of Boeing’s Starliner again, this time for parachutes by thawingSumTendies
Engineering companies should always have an engineer at the helm, having MBAs they’ll just try to cut costs
SaxyOmega90125 t1_je7kem2 wrote
Reply to Frank Rubio's first spaceflight will turn into the longest mission by a US astronaut by gordon22
I wonder if he minds.
On the one hand, you get to stay in space for a really long time which is pretty freaking cool and obviously something he was interested in to even sign up. On the other hand, you have to go an extra six months without seeing your family and friends in-person.
very_humble t1_je7j535 wrote
Reply to comment by manicdee33 in NASA delays flight of Boeing’s Starliner again, this time for parachutes by thawingSumTendies
It's Boeing, they are going to hire 100 more MBAs to analyze the problem
manicdee33 t1_je7ivln wrote
Reply to NASA delays flight of Boeing’s Starliner again, this time for parachutes by thawingSumTendies
Dragon had problems with parachutes too. I wonder if the main difference between SpaceX and Boeing is turnaround time between design and test (and subsequent post-test review and updates to designs)?
Where to spend the money: the paper review, or fabricating a new test object to test an incremental change?
robotical712 t1_je7ifcl wrote
Reply to NASA delays flight of Boeing’s Starliner again, this time for parachutes by thawingSumTendies
At this rate, Starliner’s first manned mission will reach orbit just in time to watch the ISS reenter.
afraid_of_zombies t1_je7h86n wrote
Reply to comment by ErikGoesBoomski in More Water Found on Moon, Locked in Tiny Glass Beads by LanceOhio
I cant see the goalposts you have moved them so far.
Continue to scream on the internet, tomorrow I will go to work and make the world that much cleaner.
Oh, and air scrubbers as well as ground water remediation. To answer your flippant question.
__Raptor__ t1_je7gf8o wrote
Reply to comment by Postnificent in Scientists discover supermassive black hole that now faces Earth by x3Smiley
That is not how stars are made. A black hole is a star corpse.
janlaureys9 t1_je7eqtn wrote
Girl are you a Jupiter-like exoplanet cause you’re so hot you defy all expectations ?
On a more serious note I’m so happy this telescope is doing it’s thing. From all the different kids of discoveries it does I feel like it must constantly be flipping around looking at different directions.
gravitonbomb t1_je7c2ev wrote
Reply to comment by bookers555 in We Need to Get Back to the Moon by Guy_PCS
Lunar observatory, yes.
Privatized lunar industry, no.
NoYouAreABot t1_je7brol wrote
Someone call Douglas Voght of the Diehold Institute. Sounds like a micronova to me.
DanFlashesSales t1_je7b62y wrote
Reply to comment by TheBigNook in As an avid lover of the cosmos, is it realistic to expect space tourism and a mars and moon resort before I die? by EarthInteresting9781
>They absolutely do produce soot
How? Hydrogen and Oxygen yield water. Where does the soot come from?
[deleted] t1_je7wtmz wrote
Reply to comment by Hvarfa-Bragi in This is what 7 minutes of exposure time looks like on a dark, moonless night at Zabriskie Point, Death Valley (USA)! by peeweekid
I know he did. But he didn’t say single exposure. He didn’t give the full picture, that’s not lying. This isn’t high school.