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GoPro Footage Gives You A Rocket's-Eye View Of Spaceflight (gizmag.com)

Eloking quotes a report from Gizmag: Action cameras have been strapped to dogs, chainsaw-wielding drones and everything in between, but there's a new benchmark for homegrown heroes and their action-cam videos courtesy of UP Aerospace. Having strapped a GoPro HERO 4 to the outside of its SpaceLoft-10 sounding rocket, the company launched it into the thermosphere, gathering some footage that's simply out of this world along the way. The footage is incredible and begs the question: how did they fasten the cameras to a rocket traveling at 3,796 mph? You can watch the footage here on YouTube.

3 of 80 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Really? by kkoo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Not floating but falling together on a ballistic trajectory, and since none of the sections have engines running nor any significant aerodynamic drag there's no reason for them to move quickly apart. Plus there are lots of cameras on the vehicle so they will pick up good views, and you're only seeing selected good bits not the many, many minutes of video where the cameras show nothing interesting.

  2. Re: "begs the question"...-5 style points by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    Incorrect. Language is not some static concept etched in stone, forever unchanging. It morphs to whatever the vernacular says it to be. This is a saying who's vernacular meaning has changed, and no matter how much your pedantic self wants it to be, doesn't change that fact. I get annoyed how people use "literally", but alas, the meaning has changed to mean either "literally" or "figuratively" depending on context. If you can't learn to deal with such things, you're going to have a very rough time in this life.

  3. Re: "begs the question"...-5 style points by Rei · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Except nowadays everyone simply refers to the concept as "circular reasoning". Which is a much easier to parse, grammatically, than the phrase "begging the question".

    --
    "I know you have questions." "That would be why I just asked them."