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"Mark McIntyre" wrote in message
On Mon, 11 Sep 2006 18:23:53 +0000 (UTC), in uk.sci.astronomy , "Brad Guth" wrote: the usual twaddle. I pity your doctors. "There is a huge force of gravity between the earth and moon - some 70 million trillion pounds (that's 70 with another 18 zeroes after it), or 30,000 trillion tonnes (that's 30 with 15 zeroes)." Euh, firstly gravity isn't measured in pounds or tonnes, and secondly quoting humongous numbers is a classical kook trick to trick ordinary folks into believing them. "Gosh the numbers are so huge / tiny / boggling it must be true / untrue / whatever". Ever bothered to work out the weight of the earth in grammes? Or the number of atoms in a pinhead? Or the number of angels that can dance on a kooks brain? that which currently represents an absolutely horrific amount of ongoing applied energy, A few terajoules is NOT a horrific amount of energy. Try thunderstorms. Obviously I'm being sufficiently right, as otherwise you could have so easily impressed the living hell out of us village idiots with all of your vast wizardly expertise, and thereby having those supposed much better numbers, and of being so kind as to sharing in whatever's in support of such numbers. Otherwise, your calling a continuous application of an extra 254 gigajoules per second or merely 914 tj/hr of recession energy as being so much less impressive than a few wussy milliseconds worth of lightning strikes is certainly offering us a new and improved mainstream weirdness as all get out science, and so much more so impressive if those lightning storms are overtaking the continuous 2e20 joules/sec of what the entire lunar orbital worth of energy has to offer, as representing the sort of wag-thy-dogs to death of what your superior conditional laws of physics as extracted from whatever's scripted within your NASA koran of nifty infomercial-science, as supposedly representing the orbital mechanics of our moon as somehow being something that's so gosh darn insignificant. Silly me, I honestly didn't know that 2e20 joules/sec of a continuous applied force was so gosh darn wussy by our NASA's "so what's the difference" policy of infomercial-science standards. I'll be sure to past that one along, so that other Village idiots don't mistake such big numbers as having any meaning whatsoever. I obviously can't hardly speak for others, but I must say that your new and improved form of topic naysayism on a stick is all together a whole lot more impressive than any houcs-pocus Alan Guth form of BIG-BANG expansion, or even that of our rad-hard astronauts merely walking moonsuit butt-naked upon our nearly atmospherically naked anticathode lethal moon. Perhaps you can further explain to us how a nearly 30% inert GLOW rocket can manage to deploy it's nearly 50 tonne payload into orbiting our moon, as having done so within such a short amount of travel time and thereby having accomplished each of those round trip NASA/Apollo missions with merely a 60:1 ratio worth of rocket per payload. While you're at it, please inform us as to where's Venus as of Apollo 11, 14 and 16. As to such rocket-science and w/o a prototype fly-by-rocket lander none the less, I'm certainly impressed as all get out, as is Russia, India, ESA and China, and so I'm thinking; why the heck should you not continue as to impress us some more? - Brad Guth -- Posted via Mailgate.ORG Server - http://www.Mailgate.ORG |
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