Fire Burns Differently In Space
New submitter black6host writes with this interesting snippet from Space.com: "NASA is playing with fire on the International Space Station — literally. Since March 2009, the space agency's Flame Extinguishment Experiment, or FLEX, has conducted more than 200 tests to better understand how fire behaves in microgravity, which is still not well understood. The research could lead to improved fire suppression systems aboard future spaceships, and it could also have practical benefits here on Earth, scientists said."
Oh my god what are you idiots d
DO open the window.
"Have you ever seen fire in zero gravity? It's beautiful. It's like liquid it... slides all over everything. Comes up in waves." I know it's not the same thing, but it reminded me of that film that I haven't watched in a while...
``Fireproof'' I think it was, in his collection _Space Lash (formerly published as _Small Changes_)_.
Looks like his theorization on the science was good (as it usually is).
That book, and The Mad Scientists Club books made a huge impact in my childhood.
Sphinx of black quartz, judge my vow.
Why does everything have to be some stupid ass acronym?
Screaming is different, too, from what I've heard. Or did I?
There is an increased risk of singed cheek hair on the members of the 200 Mile High Blue Flamer's Club.
but I'd be curious if anyone has any idea what the practical benefits of this experiment could be.
Without basic science, you don't get applied science.
I sure wish the know-nothing "hurr why study fruit flies? hurr!" idiots would fucking understand this.
But no. They get in their cars and drive, use computers, talk on cellphones, dance at the club to kilowatts of audio, eat, drink, and be merry and then decry the amount of money we spend on basic science to make all that possible.
Don't like money spent on basic science? Go live in a yurt.
--
BMO
We all know what to do if a fire breaks out in a spaceship or station. Didn't you people watch Red Planet?
You grab your fire extinguisher, point it at the fire, release the locking pin, pull the handle and get propelled across the room due to no gravity holding you in place and the fire retardant being ejected from the nozzle
Come on you geeks, get with the program!
We will bankrupt ourselves in the vain search for absolute security. -- Dwight D. Eisenhower
Because FLEE would have been too unfortunate for a Space Station.
I don't know if this is still part of it, but somewhere years back I read that NASA was planning on experimenting with different types of water spraying nozzels on the ISS, IIRC there was a micro-nozzle that sprayed a mist using substantially less water than a regular nozzle and the mist put out fires more effectively than gallons of water in a narrow stream.
Those interested can Google Fine Water Mist and Fire, they did some microgravity testing on a KC-135.
Don't like money spent on basic science? Go live in a yurt.
We all know what a yurt is, but the types that you are referring this question to will laugh at you thinking you can't live inside a yogurt...
If you're trapped in a free-falling elevator, whether it's on fire or not is probably the least (or briefest) of your worries.
If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
Thank your for the word of the day, "yurt". I will incorporate it into future posts, such as "May the tension bands of your yurt give way whilst you are standing beside them, such that you are struck in the face with great and unexpected force" and "May your yurt burn down and consume you as you sleep" and "Yo momma lives in a yurt".
One day sir, you may tax it. - Faraday's reply to William Gladstone, then British Chancellor of the Exchequer (minister of finance), when asked of the practical value of electricity (1850)
Puteulanus fenestra mortis
You do know that we went from the founding of this country to 1913 without an income tax, right? Contrary to the popular meme, taxes!=civilization, nor do they buy it. Indeed, the great Khans, who were the opposite of civilized, loved taxes. Apropos to the yurt comment.
They needed a study to figure this out? Likely, our tax dollars will be spent to figure out the rotational force produced by a sneeze. Didn't anyone think of this in the past 30 years of space travel? o.0
yeah they forgot what they did 10 years ago there..
world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
you are making me so angry for opposing my ignorant ideology that i am forced to rant in reply to you using this microprocesser based computer which will transmit the information over fiber optics which will appear on your lcd screen. god gave us those things, you evil sorcerer
intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
TFA indicates that the heptane fuel continues to combust after the flames are extinguished. That seems pretty inconsistent with at least my understanding of "combustion" and a pretty good start for some basic research with potential application. eg: if you can burn a lump of coal without a flame - convert the carbons to carbon dioxide without mucking with the sulfur, thorium, and other elements in the coal, coal would be a much more attractive fuel.
Which, if you read the fucking summary, is exactly what is being asked.
For large sets, this will be our guide even unto death, for the LORD will work for each type of data it is applied to...
If the DoD was involved they could just launch a decommissioned space shuttle and set it ablaze... Then when it falls back to earth market it as a chance to win a piece of the shuttle! Talk about a great PR move!
I see, so you are saying that the United States was only civilized during the Civil War, and somewhat in 1894 (when the top 10% of earners was taxed at 2 whole percent), and then descended back into barbarism in 1895 when the tax was found to be unconstitutional? You know, where there were no other income taxes other than those two?
What on Earth are you talking about? The Khans built a very impressive civilization with those taxes. They may not have been what we today call "civil", but neither were the Romans who couldn't manage the empire we modeled our nation after without their gladiators and slaves.
Besides the civil/civilization mix-up, you're also confused about the difference between taxation in general and the income tax as one of the many methods of collecting taxes. We've always had taxes. Remember that little Tea Party thing? That was about taxes collected to fund the British Empire. Now if you have a better way of building a civilization without the use of funds collected from private citizens or organizations, by all means, we're waiting.
Didn't we just have a story about how Ron Paul's supporters were the same kind of blind followers as Republicans and Democrats? Thanks for the wonderful example.
PS- be careful throwing that 'meme' word around as an insult when that's all you have to bring to a conversation.
But income tax != all taxes. America has always had taxes of some sort (remember, Ben Franklin said they were the only certain thing in life besides death) and civilization by most definitions would indeed be impossible without taxation.
One day sir, you may tax it.
Well! There goes the internet.
When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
one has to ask .. after all this time:"how many billions dollars does it need to extinguish a fire in zero gravity?"
sheesh, after discovering fire thousands of years ago after climbing down from trees, one would expect this would be
like .. duh .. the first experiment one would do in outerspace?
I think fire was discovered long before we climbed down from the trees. In fact, it may have been an impetus for climbing down from the tree.
When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
You do know that we went from the founding of this country to 1913 without an income tax, right?
There was no income tax, but there was taxation. My grandfather was 17 years old in 1913. Few know (as far as I can tell) that when the federal income tax was enacted, only the rich were taxed.
The tax was to pay for a war, which is pretty much where most of your federal income taxes go anyway.
Without income taxes you would not have the interstate highway system (which, incidentally, was built by a Republican administration). I was a little kid when they started building it, and I remember that getting from St Louis to Springfield was a three or four hour drive, vs the hour and a half (or less) on the interstate.
Without federal income taxes you would not have the hoover dam. Americans would not have landed on the moon. America wouldn't have been able to reap the financial winfall of rebuilding Europe after WWII.
The only downside to taxes is that you're a greedy selfish money grubber. Since you seem to be a tea party type, you probably consider yourself to be a Christian (hint: there are no Christians in the Tea Party, it is definitely against everything Jesus taught), you might want to open that bible you like to thump and read Matthew 22:21.
Free Martian Whores!
Read the final sentence of the post to which you are replying. You clearly didn't read it before posting, and you may find it educational.
Is 1563649 a prime number?
Our tax dollars hard at work, fostering galactic pyromaniacs. Where can I opt out my hard earned cash?
When one considers that less than 2% of the Sun is something other than Hydrogen and Helium, and Oxygen being only another chunk of that 2% with other elements having their chunks of that respective small percentage, that quote gives us considerable insight into why the Sun and other stars burn for as long as we believe they do.
Two problems with what you said. First, the sun has gravity. It has a lot of gravity, and so hot gases do rise due to convection, as they do on earth. That said, the sun doesn't burn. The heat is generated from nuclear fusion in its core, and that is the reason why stars last so long.
We hope your rules and wisdom choke you / Now we are one in everlasting peace
There was this inventor guy who proposed a new fire extinguisher for cars - it basically vaporized water into a fine mist that smothered flames by reducing the oxygen levels, rather than trying to cover every burning surface with a layer of water. Maybe that's where he ended up working.
Vintage computer adverts: http://www.vintageadbrowser.com/computers-and-software-ads
Am I the only one who had the immediate reaction of Man I cannot wait to see videos of THAT! when they heard fire in space?!
"Don't meddle in the affairs of a patent dragon, for thou art tasty and good with ketchup." ~ohcrapitssteve
Your spot on there - stars aren't "on fire". "Burn" is the incorrect word to use for stars, but can serve as a useful analogy for people. IANA physicist, but as mentioned above, the gravitational attraction of the star is enough to slam the lighter elements (hydrogen, helium) together to form heavier elements. The process generates a lot of heat and pressure, and continues while the gravitational and electro-magnetic forces keep each other in check (ie as long as there is light enough elements to fuse).
...no one can hear you scream.
Nope. I have done the research. Prior to 1913, the US government spent on average well under 5% of GDP (with the median around 2.5%, it was higher during wartime). Today it is 40%, and the lowest spending of any current nation other than stateless Somalia is something like 10%.
Don't think for a second that spending then was anywhere near what it was now, even adjusted for inflation.
While everything you just said may indeed be true, it says nothing about whether or not there was an income tax in the USA between 1776 and 1913.
You made a boo-boo and got called out on it. Take it like a man.
Is 1563649 a prime number?