Youria_Tv_Officiel
Youria_Tv_Officiel t1_j4z5zrz wrote
Reply to comment by PowerfulLine5057 in If you could hear sound in space, would the earth as a whole give off a sound? by [deleted]
Yes, and if whatever noise the earth produces isn't audible at ground level there is no reason it'd become so once in space
Youria_Tv_Officiel t1_j4z2a47 wrote
Reply to If you could hear sound in space, would the earth as a whole give off a sound? by [deleted]
You'd think you'd hear that from earth wouldn't you...
Youria_Tv_Officiel t1_j2acy2v wrote
Can't think of many, maaaayyyybe dyson sphere program but I did not hear much from it.
Space Engineers, while straying off from the realistic space simulator (still good though) can support space elevators, no dyson sphere though.
Youria_Tv_Officiel t1_j23gusc wrote
Reply to Lunar Gateway for Dummies? by Significant_Youth_73
I lack info on it, but I assumed it was supposed to work with a moon based fuek production facility or something like thay
Youria_Tv_Officiel t1_j1dmmhb wrote
Are you high or a an early teen with a speech-to-text ?
Youria_Tv_Officiel t1_iy3nu28 wrote
Reply to What if Jupiter was 2 times bigger? by papen_
What, in mass, diameter or volume ?
At 10 times the mass it would be fat enough to ignite, if that's what you wanted to know. For the rest I have no idea because of the required mass
Youria_Tv_Officiel t1_iu7b4uh wrote
It looks nothing like the moon, since unlike on earth, our satelite has not atmosphere or oceans to form sedimentary layers that it could have then eroded, though mars kinda looks like that.
Youria_Tv_Officiel t1_jdzecnl wrote
Reply to Hello everyone . I am very interested in space megastructure. such as mckendree cylinder or bishop rings. But suppose we built it. How can a spacecraft dock with it ? Knowing that these huge structures rotate at huge speeds to generate a gravitaty similar to Earth's by Dizzy_Ad3353
Either have a docking arm on both sides that align with the axis of rotation, or have a counter rotating docking ring with ports at regular intervals.