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#1
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Everybody seems to get excited about this event. I wonder if anyone
ever think that it may be a "pandora box"? Are there any precautions to make sure that it does not contain toxic stuff or virus, or even a black hole? What happens when they open it and it sucks everything on earth? |
#2
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![]() wrote What happens when they open it and it sucks everything on earth? You won't feel a thing. |
#3
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#5
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![]() "Cruithne3753" wrote in message . .. wrote: Everybody seems to get excited about this event. I wonder if anyone ever think that it may be a "pandora box"? Are there any precautions to make sure that it does not contain toxic stuff or virus, or even a black hole? What happens when they open it and it sucks everything on earth? Pretty much anyone who lives nearby will have their blood fatally turned to a dry, sandy powder. Only elderly alcoholics and babies with indigestion will survive. But if you hyperventate real hard, the acidosis will neutralize it. s |
#6
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If the Stardust samples are retrieved successfully, would a mission
like this old proposal be worth a second look? http://www.astrobiology.com:16080/eu...e.clipper.html It sounds like a cross between Stardust and Deep Impact, but with Europa as the subject body. It might be a viable alternative for Europa given the past difficulty developing a mission to orbit Europa. It sounds like it could work for getting close flyby pictures and samples returned from asteroids, moons, etc. However, I'm not an spacecraft engineer, so these are just my amateur impressions. I have to agree that the Pluto mission probably has more appeal to the public than Stardust. The public likes pictures (I think - at least I do), and Stardust took its pictures a long time ago. Stardust@home might generate more public involvement and interest with the mission after the actual landing, depending on how many people participate: http://stardustathome.ssl.berkeley.edu/ Hmmmmm, reality TV, or stardust@home ....... they may have a better chance at getting lots of participation than one might think ... red |
#7
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In article .com,
wrote: Everybody seems to get excited about this event. I wonder if anyone ever think that it may be a "pandora box"? Are there any precautions to make sure that it does not contain toxic stuff or virus... Remember that Earth has passed through the tails of comets many times. If there was anything hazardous in such materials in general, it would have gotten here long ago. This issue *has* been looked at; the general conclusion is that the risks of this sort of mission are negligible. or even a black hole? If so, why has it neither (a) swallowed the spacecraft nor (b) parted company with the spacecraft during course corrections? -- spsystems.net is temporarily off the air; | Henry Spencer mail to henry at zoo.utoronto.ca instead. | |
#8
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![]() Anyway, if the impossible does happen and Stardust returns a naked singularity, then you just have to remember one thing... Never stick your finger into a singularity. ;-] ROLF, I've got to remember that one Kelly McDonald |
#9
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On 14 Jan 2006 12:30:22 -0800, wrote:
What happens when they open it and it sucks everything on earth? It'd spoil everyone's day. -- Christopher |
#10
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On 14 Jan 2006 12:30:22 -0800, wrote:
What happens when they open it and it sucks everything on earth? The Democrats will blame it on Bush. Brin |
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