If there is no oxygen in space how does the sun burn without oxygen? | |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 21313821 United States 12/27/2012 05:17 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | The earths atmosphere is not a blanket laying on it. It gets thinner the farther away you get from the ground because there is less gravity. Ever been on a mountain. I swear, you people are too stupid to actually come up with a decent conspiracy theory. Half of you are Xtians who think God did it because your too retarded to see the earth is round. |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 21313821 United States 12/27/2012 05:19 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Have you ever seen a movie, where a spaceship accidentally gets a fracture, a hole in the hull, and then all of a sudden the air from the inside, maybe along with screaming passengers and stuff, is "sucked" or ejected into the open space with a tremendous power. Well, not exactly sucked, it's because of the vacuum, but you know how it works. Quoting: qqqqqqq 30895998 Now, my question is: if all that vast space around the Earth is the empty vacuum, why the Earth's atmosphere does not get "sucked" off? You might say it's because of gravity, but gravity is not that powerful compared with the "force" of vacuum. E.g., you can easily jump up off the Earth, temporary overcoming the gravity at least for a few inches and then landing, but could you jump from the hole in the spaceship hull? Not a chance. Meanwhile, the air pressure and gravity force in the spaceship and on Earth is not very different, you can survive in both. So, where's the secret? What keeps the Earth's atmosphere from escaping from Earth? How did the lunar missions support combustion that required Oxygen? Better yet, if the law of Physics require that for every action there must be an opposite and equal reaction, how did the Apollo missions propel through space with nothing to thrust off of? Either there is a yet undefined fabric in space or the whole proposition was a fraud because it would be similar to a ship sitting in the doldrums with no wind in its sails. It's called pressure, the high pressure of the gas escaping into a lower pressure area (space is not a vacuum, it is just very low pressure, it is full of dust and gas) pushes the vehicle in the opposite direction. |
waterman (OP) User ID: 26724077 United States 12/27/2012 05:30 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | 103 minutes don't you know i barely have 7 minutes of free time per day. That would take me 14.71428 days to watch that...lol...maybe I'll skip my nap and watch it...thanks I'm 17 minutes into the video I found the plasma and filamentary discussion interesting. The universe is made up of twin filaments wrapped around each other with magnetic fields in the small to large scales. similar to dna..thanks for the video -Heed the warning or endure the mourning Favor ain't fair |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 30953105 United States 12/27/2012 05:30 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Dr crunch User ID: 16537138 United States 12/27/2012 06:44 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
biscuits and gravy User ID: 1072087 United States 12/27/2012 06:50 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 30480476 United States 12/27/2012 07:02 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Cat.Man.Deux User ID: 9142951 United States 12/27/2012 07:05 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | You can take 2 big chunks of ENRICHED uranium and encase them in lead balls. No air, no oxygen, put them in an oil bath if you like to make sure no air is present. When you bring them close to each other, they could actually get hot enough to melt the lead. This is sort of how the sun works. |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 30959793 United Kingdom 12/27/2012 07:08 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 2312772 United States 12/27/2012 09:40 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Have you ever seen a movie, where a spaceship accidentally gets a fracture, a hole in the hull, and then all of a sudden the air from the inside, maybe along with screaming passengers and stuff, is "sucked" or ejected into the open space with a tremendous power. Well, not exactly sucked, it's because of the vacuum, but you know how it works. Quoting: qqqqqqq 30895998 Now, my question is: if all that vast space around the Earth is the empty vacuum, why the Earth's atmosphere does not get "sucked" off? You might say it's because of gravity, but gravity is not that powerful compared with the "force" of vacuum. E.g., you can easily jump up off the Earth, temporary overcoming the gravity at least for a few inches and then landing, but could you jump from the hole in the spaceship hull? Not a chance. Meanwhile, the air pressure and gravity force in the spaceship and on Earth is not very different, you can survive in both. So, where's the secret? What keeps the Earth's atmosphere from escaping from Earth? How did the lunar missions support combustion that required Oxygen? Better yet, if the law of Physics require that for every action there must be an opposite and equal reaction, how did the Apollo missions propel through space with nothing to thrust off of? Either there is a yet undefined fabric in space or the whole proposition was a fraud because it would be similar to a ship sitting in the doldrums with no wind in its sails. It's called pressure, the high pressure of the gas escaping into a lower pressure area (space is not a vacuum, it is just very low pressure, it is full of dust and gas) pushes the vehicle in the opposite direction. OK, then explain the movement of a comet through space. Where do they come from and what is the driving force that does not make them subject to a planetary type orbit? So you are saying space has a composition? Of what? For there to even be a low pressure indicates there is a surrounding force or fabric in space to give it a pressure value, otherwise due to expansion no pressure could be maintained. Haven't we been told that it is essentially a vacuum thus far? |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 1497332 United States 12/27/2012 09:53 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
waterman (OP) User ID: 26724077 United States 12/27/2012 10:14 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | You're right!I. It does need oxygen, si it makes its own. During fusion, it combines nitrogen (15)with hydrogen (1) and makes oxygen (16). Learned that in third grade. Quoting: Dr crunch Genius alert! genius alert!......make room people we have a genius in our midst.....please feel free to ask him any secret of the universe he probably learned them all by the time he was in 5th grade....lol....I'm just jokin..thanks for sharing with us your 3rd grade education -Heed the warning or endure the mourning Favor ain't fair |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 5366990 United States 12/27/2012 10:56 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 5366990 United States 12/27/2012 11:00 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Did I ever tell you a story about a ball, let loose from the atmosphere of the a planet. How it bounced straight UP, breached the Phenon, and landed on the moon. I kept telling this soul, you need to stop in the middle, slow your roll, there is an inbetween. This ball took off and Stuck dead center, picture perfect moon crater. He waves, once in awhile. Quoting: Anonymous Coward 5366990 Then how would it get back to homebase? I suppose the bounce between here and say Mars would be a doozy. If I ponged onto another planert and had to wait for you to get me off, send me a husband. |