Where does space really begin? Chinese spy balloon highlights legal fuzziness of ‘near space’
grid.newsSubmitted by HarpuasGhost t3_114s21e in space
Submitted by HarpuasGhost t3_114s21e in space
Reply to comment by AvcalmQ in Where does space really begin? Chinese spy balloon highlights legal fuzziness of ‘near space’ by HarpuasGhost
>The kármán line isn't even in space
Earth's exosphere extends out past the moon. Any definition of "space" will be squishy. Satellites in low Earth orbit experience drag, too. Objects at 100km can complete multiple orbits around the Earth before drag pulls them down into the atmosphere. I'd be willing to call that space if someone wanted to argue about it.
I'm an old coot ,I remember before we had space ( well except for people like Von Braun) but if you can get there in a balloon it's not space.
What about a balloon with rocket boosters attached to it?
It's the rocets that go not the balloon. I could just see a rocket dragging a balloon behind it.
It's the defined transition, you'd be arguing with the wrong guy on that.
I maybe should've said "up to 100km isn't space" but that's not an argument I thought I'd have had to have, tbh.
The US considers anything past 50 miles in altitude to be space, and, in a manner of definition, they're not necessarily wrong. You can do more than one orbit at this altitude. "Space" is a human construct, so any definition is really going to fit human needs. In any case, 60,000 feet is not "space" by any reasonable definition.
Viewing a single comment thread. View all comments