What is the Universe expanding into..

Do you think there was anything before the big bang?

  • I don't think there was anything before the Big Bang

    Votes: 56 12.5%
  • I think something existed before the Big Bang

    Votes: 200 44.7%
  • I don't think the big bang happened

    Votes: 54 12.1%
  • I think the universe is part of a mutiverse

    Votes: 201 45.0%

  • Total voters
    447
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Verrry interesting…but Shtupit!
I see how they work. First of all, 10db is not useful to the demographic that
typically enquires about sound deadening. But the main deterrent is the fact the head stays proud of the surface and exposed. We already have systems at very reasonable cost fara bette superior. This is definitely not a better mouse trap. :whazzat
 
Verrry interesting…but Shtupit!
I see how they work. First of all, 10db is not useful to the demographic that
typically enquires about sound deadening. But the main deterrent is the fact the head stays proud of the surface and exposed. We already have systems at very reasonable cost fara bette superior. This is definitely not a better mouse trap. :whazzat
so I’ll eat a bit of crow here. I thought there was a spacer below the top of the screw but it’s actually constructed like a drywall laminating
screw. However though it may be somewhat effective, it renders the drywall very fragile since it’s not held securely against the substrate. I definitely would not use it on a ceiling.
 
Nuclear-powered spaceships for fast trips to Mars may now be one step closer to reality.

NASA, DOE fund three nuclear thermal space propulsion concepts | Space

Nuclear thermal propulsion systems "would transfer the heat generated by a nuclear reactor to a liquid propellant such as hydrogen, which would then transition to the gas phase, expand and be funneled through a nozzle, creating thrust."

Not to be confused with the nuclear pulse propulsion of NASA's Project Orion in the 1950s which proposed propelling a spacecraft by detonating a series of atomic bombs behind the vehicle
 

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Nuclear-powered spaceships for fast trips to Mars may now be one step closer to reality.

NASA, DOE fund three nuclear thermal space propulsion concepts | Space

Nuclear thermal propulsion systems "would transfer the heat generated by a nuclear reactor to a liquid propellant such as hydrogen, which would then transition to the gas phase, expand and be funneled through a nozzle, creating thrust."

Not to be confused with the nuclear pulse propulsion of NASA's Project Orion in the 1950s which proposed propelling a spacecraft by detonating a series of atomic bombs behind the vehicle


This was proposed in a novel I read in the early '90s. Been awhile, so I'm fuzzy on the author's name. Crawford Kilian maybe?
 
I think it was Gryphon.
The main character's "steamship" certainly fits the nuclear thermal propulsion profile.
Young Alexander Macintosh is steering his steamship, Wuthering Heights, toward Earth orbit to attend a party at his father’s cloudcastle. The term “steamship,” while it at first seems archaic, refers to an interplanetary ship that uses superheated water as a reaction mass.
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SF Adventure With a Bit of Everything: Gryphon by Crawford Kilian | Tor.com
 
Or, you could launch yourself from the 37m high ceiling of the world's largest vacuum chamber and enjoy 2.75s of zero gravity!

You don't need vacuum for zero gravity.
I even heard some reporter say: "they went up to 50 miles, high enough to experience zero gravity.". Lots of people have trouble to unravel vacuum, gravity, free fall and high altitude apparently.

Jan
 
Mega comet Bernardinelli-Bernstein has become active at the incredible distance of 19 astronomical units from the Sun - roughly double the orbital radius of Saturn.

At the end of June, astronomers in New Zealand were the first to spot a coma, or zone of gas and dust, spreading around the mega comet.

Bernardinelli-Bernstein is truly of gargantuan size. It may have 1,000 times the mass of a typical comet and, at around 100km in diameter, it is three times as large as the next-known largest comet nucleus - that of Comet Hale-Bopp, the famous naked-eye comet that passed by Earth in 1998.

However, there's no need to worry about this monster coming dangerously close to Earth, as its distance of closest approach will still be beyond Saturn in January 2031.

Astronomers spot first activity on giant megacomet beyond Saturn | Space

C/2014 UN271 (Bernardinelli-Bernstein) - the largest comet ever discovered
 

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You don't need vacuum for zero gravity.
That's correct, but I was up for a bit of fun! 😀

We've all experienced free-fall for that brief instant when the lift (elevator) starts its downward descent and the floor seems to fall away from under our feet.

Just pray the lift cable doesn't break or your period of weightlessness will be unhappily extended! :yikes:
 

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I had read a little about this giant comet in 2031. As big as a asteroid. But it won't be very bright. We won't be able to see it.

Bonsai's list of the 10 deepest mines rung a bell on Sudbury, Canada. I used to work for International Nickel. It's the remains of a giant 10-15km meteorite. The second biggest impact crater at 130km. in the last 2Bn years. Presumably Cupro-Nickel.

Most of the world's gold production comes from deep mines in South Africa. Again a meteorite, but probably deep crust thrown to the surface by the largest impact crater at 160km.

The second biggest meteorite was 66M years ago off Mexico. Wiped out the dinosaurs.
List of impact craters on Earth - Wikipedia

You could say Meteorites have considerable Economic Impact in the Mining Game...
Impact crater - Wikipedia
 
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