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Our Moon as BattleStar



 
 
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  #12  
Old January 30th 04, 01:59 PM
DrPostman
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Default Our Moon as BattleStar

On Fri, 30 Jan 2004 08:52:13 GMT, (Rick Sobie)
wrote:

In article ,
mail says...

On Thu, 29 Jan 2004 20:47:19 -0700, "Carl R. Osterwald"
wrote:

In article W3jSb.332577$X%5.21232@pd7tw2no, Rick Sobie
wrote:

Rick Sobie has a web****e:

http://www.members.shaw.ca/rsobie/Mo..._Glactica.html


There ya go uncle...



"a star ship captain from the future"

Riiiiiiight.


Have you heard him?

Do you know him?

Then why are you sceptical?

Are you suggesting that a large rock, hit the earth, with blasted
another rock into space, and then it was pelted by asteroids
and became round?
Then why doesn't it rotate on its axis?

Where is the proof of your assertion or is this yet another case
of acedemia deluding itself?

At least I provide proof of my assertion.




I've seen your previous kooky posts. That's enough to know that
you are nothing but another kook spewing his imagination.




--
Dr.Postman USPS, MBMC, BsD; "Disgruntled, But Unarmed"
Member,Board of Directors of afa-b, SKEP-TI-CULT® member #15-51506-253.
You can email me at: TuriFake(at)hotmail.com

"Yes, there are thankfully no lights in my head, pest."
- Joseph Bartlo
  #13  
Old January 30th 04, 02:00 PM
DrPostman
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Default Our Moon as BattleStar

On Fri, 30 Jan 2004 11:08:36 GMT, "bookman"
wrote:


"Rick Sobie" wrote in message
news:1XoSb.337389$X%5.43855@pd7tw2no...

Then why doesn't it rotate on its axis?


"Tidal lock".
- http://www.physics.sfsu.edu/~lwillia...shm/sld023.htm

Ir you are going to assert things about planetary mechanics,
why don't you start by reading some elementary books on
the subject? Next you'll be claiming that you have to slow
down to move from a high geostationary orbit to a lower
geostationary orbit. Sheesh.


He's too busy talking to spaceship captains from the future.




--
Dr.Postman USPS, MBMC, BsD; "Disgruntled, But Unarmed"
Member,Board of Directors of afa-b, SKEP-TI-CULT® member #15-51506-253.
You can email me at: TuriFake(at)hotmail.com

"Yes, there are thankfully no lights in my head, pest."
- Joseph Bartlo
  #14  
Old January 30th 04, 02:27 PM
Richard Henry
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Default Our Moon as BattleStar


"Rick Sobie" wrote in message
news:1XoSb.337389$X%5.43855@pd7tw2no...

Are you suggesting that a large rock, hit the earth, with blasted
another rock into space, and then it was pelted by asteroids
and became round?
Then why doesn't it rotate on its axis?


The moon rotates on its axis approximately once per month.


  #15  
Old January 30th 04, 04:10 PM
Mark Martin
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Default Our Moon as BattleStar

"bookman" wrote in message ...
"Rick Sobie" wrote in message
news:1XoSb.337389$X%5.43855@pd7tw2no...

Then why doesn't it rotate on its axis?


"Tidal lock".
- http://www.physics.sfsu.edu/~lwillia...shm/sld023.htm

Ir you are going to assert things about planetary mechanics,
why don't you start by reading some elementary books on
the subject? Next you'll be claiming that you have to slow
down to move from a high geostationary orbit to a lower
geostationary orbit. Sheesh.


A couple of years ago a guy actually argued something like that
with me. He reasoned: The tangent speed of an orbiting satellite
becomes smaller with increasing altitude. Thus, by bleeding off speed,
the satellite will be induced to spontaneously rise!

But this thing about the Moon's rotation is interesting. So many
people come to the same misconception, that it doesn't rotate, because
it always shows the same face toward Earth. They're not looking at the
whole picture. If they were to ask what face the Moon shows to the
other planets, and the distant stars, and the near star, our Sun...
The fact that the Moon undergoes phases is itself a demonstration of
its rotation.

-Mark Martin
  #16  
Old January 30th 04, 06:03 PM
The Lord of the Rain\( Suresh __NoJunkMail kumar\)
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Default Our Moon as BattleStar

hey, the moon has craters to seclude, every animal from every other animal.
-suresh

"Rick Sobie" wrote in message
news:1YoSb.330011$JQ1.286938@pd7tw1no...
In article ,

says...

how about the Moon as Noah's Arch?
-suresh


Well it ain't no Von Neuman Probe.
It is much too big to be a nanobot.



  #17  
Old January 30th 04, 06:09 PM
*
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Default Our Moon as BattleStar

On Fri, 30 Jan 2004 13:03:32 -0500, "The Lord of the Rain\( Suresh
__NoJunkMail kumar\)" wrote:

The moon also a neat place to hide your ET saucer.

hey, the moon has craters to seclude, every animal from every other animal.
-suresh

"Rick Sobie" wrote in message
news:1YoSb.330011$JQ1.286938@pd7tw1no...
In article ,

says...

how about the Moon as Noah's Arch?
-suresh


Well it ain't no Von Neuman Probe.
It is much too big to be a nanobot.



  #19  
Old January 30th 04, 06:49 PM
Mike Combs
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Default Our Moon as BattleStar

"Rick Sobie" wrote in message
news:1YoSb.330011$JQ1.286938@pd7tw1no...

Well it ain't no Von Neuman Probe.


I've sometimes wondered how we would react, or what we could possibly do, if
a Von Neuman Probe came along and began converting our moon into a bunch
more Von Neuman Probes. Seems like there ought to be a SF story in there.

--


Regards,
Mike Combs
----------------------------------------------------------------------
We should ask, critically and with appeal to the numbers, whether the
best site for a growing advancing industrial society is Earth, the
Moon, Mars, some other planet, or somewhere else entirely.
Surprisingly, the answer will be inescapable - the best site is
"somewhere else entirely."

Gerard O'Neill - "The High Frontier"


  #20  
Old January 30th 04, 07:25 PM
The Lord of the Rain\( Suresh __NoJunkMail kumar\)
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Default Our Moon as BattleStar

If I am superhuman, definitely
-suresh

"*" wrote in message
...
On Fri, 30 Jan 2004 13:03:32 -0500, "The Lord of the Rain\( Suresh
__NoJunkMail kumar\)" wrote:

The moon also a neat place to hide your ET saucer.

hey, the moon has craters to seclude, every animal from every other

animal.
-suresh

"Rick Sobie" wrote in message
news:1YoSb.330011$JQ1.286938@pd7tw1no...
In article ,

says...

how about the Moon as Noah's Arch?
-suresh


Well it ain't no Von Neuman Probe.
It is much too big to be a nanobot.





 




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