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Originally posted by Phage
Originally posted by Manasseh
reply to post by Phage
OK smarty pants, then you tell me. What is the burning of the rocket fuel pushing against to move the space shuttle.
[edit on 13-8-2008 by Manasseh]
You know, you may be on to something. They are lying! There must actually be air in space.
So true or false: if two people are right next to each other floating freely in a vacuum, and push each other away, they will both move away from each other?
Physics 101: All mass has gravity, only the smaller the object, the further away from Earths gravitational field you have to be in order to measure the gravity of the object in question.
The solar wind is a stream of charged particles—a plasma—that are ejected from the upper atmosphere of the sun. It consists mostly of electrons and protons with energies of about 1 keV. These particles are able to escape the sun's gravity, in part because of the high temperature of the corona, but also because of high kinetic energy that particles gain through a process that is not well-understood at this time.
Many phenomena are directly related to the solar wind, including geomagnetic storms that can knock out power grids on Earth, the aurorae such as the Northern Lights, and the plasma tails of comets that always point away from the sun. While early models of the solar wind used primarily thermal energy to accelerate the material, by the 1960s it was clear that thermal acceleration alone cannot account for the high speed of solar wind. An additional unknown acceleration mechanism is required, and likely relates to magnetic fields in the solar atmosphere.
In physics and cosmology, dark matter is matter that does not interact with the electromagnetic force, but whose presence can be inferred from gravitational effects on visible matter. According to present observations of structures larger than galaxies, as well as Big Bang cosmology, dark matter accounts for the vast majority of mass in the observable universe.
It would seem that this thread has run its course. All the necessary answers were given. People are only trolling and insulting at this stage.
This is one of the worst thread I have ever read.
Originally posted by russ1969
And i also agree that this post is not worthy due to the fact that it takes 2 minutes to google the question and get the correct answer.
Originally posted by enigmania
reply to post by truthquest
So true or false: if two people are right next to each other floating freely in a vacuum, and push each other away, they will both move away from each other?
Another example that's incorrect.
This is a different situation, because in your example, you have two bodies of mass in a vacuum, pushing against each other, whereas in the OP's question, you have one body of mass, pushing against nothing.
To answer your example, I think those two people floating in space would only be able to push each other as far as there arms are, they would not be launched from each other.
[edit on 14/8/08 by enigmania]
Originally posted by Manasseh
Would the wrench be sent to the other guy (or gal), or would the astronaut
move away from the wrench, sending him away from his buddy?
Originally posted by Manasseh
Let's say two space shuttle astronauts take a float outside the shuttle.
One tries to toss a wrench to the other by pushing it away from his body.
Would the wrench be sent to the other guy (or gal), or would the astronaut
move away from the wrench, sending him away from his buddy?