zeeblecroid
zeeblecroid t1_izg5ow2 wrote
Reply to comment by IvanAfterAll in 'Compromise' NDAA boosts Space Force budget, but keeps tight reins on policy decisions by Corbulo2526
That and the servicemember terms.
"Guardians?" Come on.
zeeblecroid t1_iy9m4xv wrote
Reply to comment by usrdef in I have finally completed the Solar System! No telescope and no equatorial mount. Just DSLRs, a fixed tripod, stacking and patience! by andrea_g_amato_art
Not without being enormous, unfortunately. The only solution to the diffraction limit is larger apertures.
zeeblecroid t1_ivvipra wrote
Reply to comment by chiphappened in Hubble captured a supernova as it exploded by Shiny-Tie-126
Hubble has produced a lot of data for researchers to parse. If it vanished tomorrow this year's stuff alone would probably be able to keep astronomers going for years.
zeeblecroid t1_iv7f90w wrote
Reply to comment by shawnaeatscats in A total lunar eclipse 'blood moon' will be visible around the world on Tuesday by IslandChillin
No, it's a replacement term for "lunar eclipse" which journalists started pushing some years back because it sounded scarier and less science-y, and thus gets more clicks. Purely dumbing things down for advertising purposes.
zeeblecroid t1_iv6gbsr wrote
Reply to comment by kms2547 in A total lunar eclipse 'blood moon' will be visible around the world on Tuesday by IslandChillin
Seriously. It's gotten people thinking that eclipses and "blood moons" are separate things.
At least they didn't slap another three random adjectives onto this one like they've started doing for every full moon for some reason..
zeeblecroid t1_iv3oohu wrote
Reply to comment by cabalavatar in Blood moon lunar eclipse expected on election day, last one for three years by deron666
It's a Fox News article. Of course they're that insular.
zeeblecroid t1_iutmv29 wrote
Reply to comment by Gswindle76 in China’s mystery spaceplane releases object into orbit by ye_olde_astronaut
Amateurs have (barely) imaged spacewalking astronauts from the surface, so sooner or later someone's going to get at least enough of an image of this thing to get a shape or the like.
zeeblecroid t1_iut7euv wrote
Reply to comment by StayYou61 in The ALMA space telescope in the Chilean Andes suffered a cyberattack over the weekend that has downed its website and suspended its work, the observatory announced by DoremusJessup
It was probably a typical someone-opened-the-wrong-email ransomware attack rather than something targetted.
zeeblecroid t1_iujmv2e wrote
Reply to comment by FloodMoose in Scientists Find Potentially Hazardous Asteroid Hiding in the Sun’s Glare | At nearly 1.5 kilometers wide, it's the largest such asteroid discovered in eight years. by chrisdh79
And it will be the most consistently-buried part of every single article about this for the next week or two, I'll bet.
zeeblecroid t1_iuio6td wrote
Reply to comment by The_Swedish in The Pillars of Creation by Webb’s mid-infrared instrument (MIRI) by MistWeaver80
There probably isn't. MIRI's a much lower-resolution instrument than NIRCam both in general and because of the wavelengths it's looking at, so it's always going to produce smaller images.
zeeblecroid t1_iu996z8 wrote
Reply to comment by mynextthroway in James Webb Space Telescope snaps new, super-spooky image of Pillars of Creation by OkOrdinary5299
That specific site's been uselessly bad for awhile. At this point they're basically mirroring/rephrasing other, better sites' articles, so there's nothing really lost by not going there.
zeeblecroid t1_iu6zaxy wrote
Reply to comment by frone in Haunting Portrait: NASA’s Webb Reveals Dust, Structure in Pillars of Creation by meowcat93
To the naked eye the Pillars - and the whole Eagle Nebula - would be invisibly small. Think less "1mm square at arm's length" and more "1mm square at the other end of the street."
zeeblecroid t1_iu4zduj wrote
Reply to comment by diydave86 in Huge HAARP antenna array is bouncing radio signals off Jupiter by digitalmascot
> Have we not learned from pretty much ALL alien movies?
I learned some time ago that most movies are fictional.
zeeblecroid t1_it5k4s2 wrote
Reply to comment by audigex in China looked at putting a monitoring satellite in retrograde geostationary orbit via the moon by OkOrdinary5299
You already said the scenario is a "we stop existing or they stop existing" war between superpowers. If you think that wouldn't go nuclear I don't know what to tell you.
zeeblecroid t1_it5irln wrote
Reply to comment by audigex in China looked at putting a monitoring satellite in retrograde geostationary orbit via the moon by OkOrdinary5299
Handwringy what-ifs over applying the conduct of genocidal superpower wars to other situations is silly.
If things got to that point, nothing they could do would confer any advantages because the nukes would be flying anyway. If things didn't get to that point, scenarios like "how about we destroy global telecommunications and meteorology, because that totally won't completely screw us too" aren't going to come up.
zeeblecroid t1_it5i5tm wrote
Reply to comment by drewbagel423 in China looked at putting a monitoring satellite in retrograde geostationary orbit via the moon by OkOrdinary5299
I know that We^TM are always intrinsically sane and They^TM are always intrinsically not, but no, Russia would not destroy most of its capability to communicate internally in the event of a war with the west because that would simply hasten their already-assured defeat.
China definitely isn't going to do it out of the blue like people panicking over this story seem to assume.
zeeblecroid t1_it5c0pe wrote
Reply to comment by audigex in China looked at putting a monitoring satellite in retrograde geostationary orbit via the moon by OkOrdinary5299
Nobody - not even the Inscrutable Unfettered Evil Yellow Peril - is going to wipe out the entire planet's telecommunications, including their own, in an attempt to "level the playing field" against the United States. The scenario is entirely ridiculous.
zeeblecroid t1_it4x54u wrote
Reply to comment by aecarol1 in China looked at putting a monitoring satellite in retrograde geostationary orbit via the moon by OkOrdinary5299
> The idea is that a nation that did not depend on geosynchronous orbit could "level the playing field" against a nation that did make use of that.
The Venn diagram of "countries that don't need geosynchronous orbit" and "countries capable of launching spacecraft" contains no overlap whatsoever, even before getting into the fact that a country which took out the planet's geosynch satellite network wouldn't level the playing field as much as get leveled by everyone else on it.
zeeblecroid t1_iroxgo3 wrote
Reply to comment by astro_pettit in Many people have asked me if deep space photos can be captured from the ISS. This image I took aboard of the Large Magellanic Cloud shows how! More details in comments. by astro_pettit
> This was taken when Space Station was flying XPOP attitude, a solar inertial attitude that allowed the solar panels to point towards the sun without tracking. Essentially, the station itself was the tracking mechanism.
... Well, this is me, never again complaining about how much a tracking equatorial mount costs.
zeeblecroid t1_j0mr1h7 wrote
Reply to comment by darkmauveshore in NASA's DART asteroid smash flung 2 million pounds of rock into space by shellystarzz
Jurassic Park is not a documentary.