https://www.engadget...out-of-the-sun/
NASA plans to use the sun as a telescope...
#1
Posted 20 March 2017 - 09:17 PM
- Icterus galbula likes this
"The only change is that baseball has turned Paige from a second-class citizen to a second-class immortal." - Satchel Paige
#2
Posted 21 March 2017 - 08:34 AM
Future ion engines may be able to provide constant thrust to accelerate something perpetually so that it won't take the 150+ years it'd take with conventional launch vehicles alone to go 550 AU. Would still likely take decades. And once you're there, it'll take a week to get every message to the vehicle and back and forth, so it would need to be nearly autonomous. Would need a pretty large amount of plutonium initially so that your RTG can still generate enough power after decades worth of decay.
#3
Posted 21 March 2017 - 08:46 AM
Future ion engines may be able to provide constant thrust to accelerate something perpetually so that it won't take the 150+ years it'd take with conventional launch vehicles alone to go 550 AU. Would still likely take decades. And once you're there, it'll take a week to get every message to the vehicle and back and forth, so it would need to be nearly autonomous. Would need a pretty large amount of plutonium initially so that your RTG can still generate enough power after decades worth of decay.
I agree with this completely.
- You Play to Win the Game likes this
There is baseball, and occasionally there are other things of note
"Now OPS sucks. Got it."
"Making his own olive brine is peak Mackus."
"I'm too hungover to watch a loss." - McNulty
@bopper33
#4
Posted 21 March 2017 - 08:56 AM
I agree with this completely.
Even the part about the RTG's requirements for plutonium payload? Are you sure about that?
"The only change is that baseball has turned Paige from a second-class citizen to a second-class immortal." - Satchel Paige
#5
Posted 21 March 2017 - 08:58 AM
I agree with this completely.
Odds Mackus could convince you the Earth is flat?
#6
Posted 21 March 2017 - 09:03 AM
The biggest problem with most interesting ideas for space exploration:
Space is big. Really big. You just won't believe how vastly, hugely, mind-bogglingly big it is. I mean, you may think it's a long way down the road to the chemist, but that's just peanuts to space.
#7
Posted 21 March 2017 - 10:23 AM
Even the part about the RTG's requirements for plutonium payload? Are you sure about that?
Yea I debated that one. But ya gotta have plutonium
There is baseball, and occasionally there are other things of note
"Now OPS sucks. Got it."
"Making his own olive brine is peak Mackus."
"I'm too hungover to watch a loss." - McNulty
@bopper33
#8
Posted 21 March 2017 - 10:28 AM
Odds Mackus could convince you the Earth is flat?
If he gives me a brisket recipe I'm all ears
There is baseball, and occasionally there are other things of note
"Now OPS sucks. Got it."
"Making his own olive brine is peak Mackus."
"I'm too hungover to watch a loss." - McNulty
@bopper33
#9
Posted 30 April 2017 - 02:47 PM
It's all a computer simulation. The sun isn't even real. And whatever we are living on is most certainly flat - you idiots keep believing the crap CGI pictures that NASA is feeding you.
#10
Posted 30 April 2017 - 07:49 PM
It's all a computer simulation. The sun isn't even real. And whatever we are living on is most certainly flat - you idiots keep believing the crap CGI pictures that NASA is feeding you.
Cha, wake up, sheeple!
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