Though that assumes extremelly rapid heat transfer across the ball; I guess with such short pulses it might as well largely melt at most / with some plasma forming on the side of impact? With longer it becomes harder to track, also because it gets what is essentially a powerful and not fully predictable delta-v.
As of now there is a serious debate as to whether or not Kessler Syndrome threshold density has already been reached in some orbital bands. Even if there is a certain level of exaggeration, that's a very preferred side of the "error" (wouldn't be the first and only present example of actually underestimating the consequences though)
At least non-fuel-dependant methods wouldn't be abused so much in current climate... and overall might be cheaper when it comes to launch mass (assuming the same mission duration and fairly certain , fairly quick deorbiting, even if it wouldn't be precise at all with, say, a drag sail)
I'm not sure, butter seems to have been somewhat absolved recently. Should help it how it's a lightly processed fat known & used for millenia vs. the thing promoted in its place for just a few generations; processed in a new way, for our organisms, and if anything coinciding with a rapid uptake of the ailments it was supposed to help with...
Which accidentally aren't at all an epidemic among the French.
Or maybe people just wised up a bit, generally. Forwarding chains "back" would only so-so help with that, I guess (isn't that almost a confirmation?) - I usually provided a link to a particular specimen (extremelly quick & easy to find) on a site cataloguing chainmails, together with short explanation of carbon and blind carbon copy... (while using them of course - roughly speaking, everybody was seeing only their email & the one of forwarders in my direction)
Seemed to work fine, often also with "angry at myself" apologies.
BTW, nice thing about labels is that they allow for easy exclusion of large part of emails while searching; so I still try to use them despite not being very disciplined, too.
Though the effects are in full swing quite a bit before "the moment an object crosses from subsonic to supersonic velocity"; the "barrier" is marked by entry into transonic flight, around 0.2 Mach below the speed of sound.
If we could only see such "why you should know them" in future TFS, instead of..."they're in an iPhone" (c'mon, something representing ~1% of its category as an example?)
Well, the idea was to be a bit "funny"; it does get insightful here sometimes... (most memorable one: when I described how to, essentially, accept being bullied by older employees / start acting, by yourself, in a way an office bully would want; in one "ask slashdot" about what to remember in new job environment or smth)
BTW, Linux usage in education seems to pick up steam also in the "west" - at least in some parts of it. And about those people asking "silly" questions - apart from "that's what you get after wanting hard for you language to become lingua franca", it's probably largely a selection bias; you notice & remember more easily people who can be round up mentally into one distant culture (nvm how many of them would object / would consider themselves mortal enemies). Throw in some amount of colonial mentality mixed with greater admiration of authorities.
You are, too. We all are, that's the point. Look around you, at that fairly civilisied, industrialised society you live in is; in large part, a product of not too many completelly uneducated & unsocialised people running around.
"Excessive" is when given level of control would be somewhat unwarranted, not stemming from clear & decently negotiated rules. Why given authority eveb is one.
Unix idiosyncrasies will get really fun with the Barycentric Coordinate Time. At some point humanity will probably use it (or something close) more and more; and in an environment where high levels of precision can be often a matter of life and death...
Y axis & not strictly pleasant places from that graph doesn't even have much to do with the issue...certainly can be ignored for the needs of this discussion. There are plenty points there with very comparable standard of living to the most wasteful, while claiming between 2 to 3 times less resources.
'Green most industrialized places' is sort of bullshit; but some more than the other and generally in reality in a bit different rank than people would think / hope for.
Though that assumes extremelly rapid heat transfer across the ball; I guess with such short pulses it might as well largely melt at most / with some plasma forming on the side of impact? With longer it becomes harder to track, also because it gets what is essentially a powerful and not fully predictable delta-v.
As of now there is a serious debate as to whether or not Kessler Syndrome threshold density has already been reached in some orbital bands. Even if there is a certain level of exaggeration, that's a very preferred side of the "error" (wouldn't be the first and only present example of actually underestimating the consequences though)
...or produce more of the debris. An why even a mention of "pilot-able", what for?
At least non-fuel-dependant methods wouldn't be abused so much in current climate... and overall might be cheaper when it comes to launch mass (assuming the same mission duration and fairly certain , fairly quick deorbiting, even if it wouldn't be precise at all with, say, a drag sail)
I'm not sure, butter seems to have been somewhat absolved recently. Should help it how it's a lightly processed fat known & used for millenia vs. the thing promoted in its place for just a few generations; processed in a new way, for our organisms, and if anything coinciding with a rapid uptake of the ailments it was supposed to help with...
Which accidentally aren't at all an epidemic among the French.
Maybe it's not such a big problem?
Also, allow me to use this opportunity and point out how "frozen bags of astronaut urine" can bring a whole new meaning to "get pissed on"...
I think that's just the general thing with the "wife" cidea; doesn't tell about the quaility of specimens, which was on the table here.
Could you even know there were no fish byproducts in any of the typical modern sausages you have eaten?
Who doesn't live in one roughly like that? (I'm not asking for "but mine is obviously special!")
Ads with a king declaring "I declare Warner Cable for my entire kingdom"
Really? But he didn't say that with a straight face, right?
Or maybe people just wised up a bit, generally. Forwarding chains "back" would only so-so help with that, I guess (isn't that almost a confirmation?) - I usually provided a link to a particular specimen (extremelly quick & easy to find) on a site cataloguing chainmails, together with short explanation of carbon and blind carbon copy... (while using them of course - roughly speaking, everybody was seeing only their email & the one of forwarders in my direction)
Seemed to work fine, often also with "angry at myself" apologies.
BTW, nice thing about labels is that they allow for easy exclusion of large part of emails while searching; so I still try to use them despite not being very disciplined, too.
So...is that why you want more of them?
It's too bad WAMP seems to have the most interesting ring to it, as a name...
Though the effects are in full swing quite a bit before "the moment an object crosses from subsonic to supersonic velocity"; the "barrier" is marked by entry into transonic flight, around 0.2 Mach below the speed of sound.
Not quite, you can just buy Larab...oh, wait, it seems there were some problems with its goals...
If we could only see such "why you should know them" in future TFS, instead of..."they're in an iPhone" (c'mon, something representing ~1% of its category as an example?)
Well, the idea was to be a bit "funny"; it does get insightful here sometimes... (most memorable one: when I described how to, essentially, accept being bullied by older employees / start acting, by yourself, in a way an office bully would want; in one "ask slashdot" about what to remember in new job environment or smth)
BTW, Linux usage in education seems to pick up steam also in the "west" - at least in some parts of it. And about those people asking "silly" questions - apart from "that's what you get after wanting hard for you language to become lingua franca", it's probably largely a selection bias; you notice & remember more easily people who can be round up mentally into one distant culture (nvm how many of them would object / would consider themselves mortal enemies). Throw in some amount of colonial mentality mixed with greater admiration of authorities.
You are, too. We all are, that's the point. Look around you, at that fairly civilisied, industrialised society you live in is; in large part, a product of not too many completelly uneducated & unsocialised people running around.
"Excessive" is when given level of control would be somewhat unwarranted, not stemming from clear & decently negotiated rules. Why given authority eveb is one.
Unix idiosyncrasies will get really fun with the Barycentric Coordinate Time. At some point humanity will probably use it (or something close) more and more; and in an environment where high levels of precision can be often a matter of life and death...
...it could certainly help those of them that will become an outsorced workforce.
Yeah, this is kind of like the church releasing its guidelines for picking up hookers under Creative Commons.
Don't you mean "guidelines for running kindergartens"?
Y axis & not strictly pleasant places from that graph doesn't even have much to do with the issue...certainly can be ignored for the needs of this discussion. There are plenty points there with very comparable standard of living to the most wasteful, while claiming between 2 to 3 times less resources.
'Green most industrialized places' is sort of bullshit; but some more than the other and generally in reality in a bit different rank than people would think / hope for.
So, still, the release (if it's very accurate in its desciption) could also act as a guideline of what not to do? ;p
Many more pressures could just as well mean that the life arriving from another planet simply won't have a chance to adapt fast enough.