The dedicated Science/Space thread!

The dedicated Science/Space thread!

Author
Discussion

anonymous-user

Original Poster:

56 months

Monday 12th December 2011
quotequote all
Seeing as we don't have one...
First things first then, what do you know about Space?

I don't know THAT much but I'm really interested in general science and space as a topic so let this begin.

GroundEffect

13,864 posts

158 months

Monday 12th December 2011
quotequote all
I know calculating orbits sucks.

Use Psychology

11,327 posts

194 months

Monday 12th December 2011
quotequote all
Space. There's a lot of it.

anonymous-user

Original Poster:

56 months

Monday 12th December 2011
quotequote all
Moved already.
Damn.

y2blade

56,189 posts

217 months

Monday 12th December 2011
quotequote all
it has been moved frown


Fearless Egbert

3,146 posts

220 months

Monday 12th December 2011
quotequote all
Space is really, really big.

And mostly empty.

davido140

9,614 posts

228 months

Monday 12th December 2011
quotequote all
Boats, planes and trains in space?

anonymous-user

Original Poster:

56 months

Monday 12th December 2011
quotequote all
davido140 said:
Boats, planes and trains in space?
Well, techically have planes I guess.

This was supposed to be in the lounge though.

Mike Rob

1,017 posts

193 months

Monday 12th December 2011
quotequote all
Really good article in the Times yesterday re the universe, especially Kepler 22B.

Good idea you have there - send it over to the powers that be and see what they say.

anonymous-user

Original Poster:

56 months

Monday 12th December 2011
quotequote all
Mike Rob said:
Really good article in the Times yesterday re the universe, especially Kepler 22B.

Good idea you have there - send it over to the powers that be and see what they say.
I prefer discovery news for my geeky stuff in the morning.
Was reading this http://news.discovery.com/space/mars-life-habitabi...

Usually some good reads get thrown up on there daily.

Jandywa

1,062 posts

153 months

Monday 12th December 2011
quotequote all
Gravity is a pathetic force!

You need something as massive as the earth to give a force of approximately 10 newtons.


Eric Mc

122,332 posts

267 months

Monday 12th December 2011
quotequote all
There is more space on a space forum than a space thread.

If only we had one smile

Big Al.

68,983 posts

260 months

Monday 12th December 2011
quotequote all
It will happen just as soon as the revamped classifieds is out of the way. smile

central

16,744 posts

219 months

Monday 12th December 2011
quotequote all
thumbup

NismoGT

1,634 posts

192 months

Monday 12th December 2011
quotequote all
Is this a place to post geeky facts/theory?

callyman

3,154 posts

214 months

Monday 12th December 2011
quotequote all
Jandywa said:
Gravity is a pathetic force!

You need something as massive as the earth to give a force of approximately 10 newtons.
10 newtons on what?
It's not the same for everything.
the 10 (9.81) newtons is per Kilogram.

HowMuchLonger

3,007 posts

195 months

Monday 12th December 2011
quotequote all
Is there an equation for multibody gravity (more than two bodies)?

tank slapper

7,949 posts

285 months

Monday 12th December 2011
quotequote all
HowMuchLonger said:
Is there an equation for multibody gravity (more than two bodies)?
Yes, it's called the n-body problem, and it involves a lot of maths.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/N-body_problem

Jandywa

1,062 posts

153 months

Monday 12th December 2011
quotequote all
callyman said:
Jandywa said:
Gravity is a pathetic force!

You need something as massive as the earth to give a force of approximately 10 newtons.
10 newtons on what?
It's not the same for everything.
the 10 (9.81) newtons is per Kilogram.
I assumed that would be obvious.

erdnase

1,963 posts

203 months

Monday 12th December 2011
quotequote all
Jandywa said:
Gravity is a pathetic force!

You need something as massive as the earth to give a force of approximately 10 newtons.
The way I heard it described is that a gravitational pull from something the size of the earth can be counteracted by the electromagnetic bonds of a bit of ground.

IE, imagine falling out a window. You're being accelerated due to the gravitational pull of the (huge) earth, yet the electromagnetic bonds between the concrete on the ground stops you almost instantly (and painfully).