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How cool is VL2
Your Wikipedia koran that's actually more Jewish than not, as such
isn't actually the word of God, you know. - Brad Guth |
#112
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How cool is VL2
On Apr 13, 7:57 pm, The Ghost In The Machine
wrote: So OK then. Contract with the X-prize committee and design a POOF and a spacecraft to propel it. A few people will pay for that sort of thing. $100M per trip, even. Bigelow as done that one for us.. Russia or perhaps China will likely launch the first of those full scale Bigelow Aerospace / Nautilus (aka POOF). Too bad that it's all too complex for our NASA that has to expend most of its resources and talent on behalf of covering their butt. - Brad Guth |
#113
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How cool is VL2
wrote:
Instead of playing silly word games and of your having to continually exclude evidence, how about instead, why don't you just answer my questions. Such as, how many terratonnes of acidic clouds and somewhat less acidic haze does that toasty planet of Venus offer? As I'd often asked before, as from others such as yourself, to merely account for the 40 km to 100 km atmospheric realm that's obviously chuck full of something other than mostly CO2. Who are you replying to, Brad. Learn to post, cluebie. -- Supreme Leader of the Brainwashed Followers of Art Deco "Still suffering from reading comprehension problems, Deco? The section is clearly attributed to Art Deco, not to you, Deco." -- Dr. David Tholen "Who is "David Tholen", Daedalus? Still suffering from attribution problems?" -- Dr. David Tholen |
#114
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wrote:
On Apr 13, 7:57 pm, The Ghost In The Machine wrote: In sci.physics, wrote Most of Venus is hydrogen, and there's likely way more than a spare 100 teratonnes worth of easily accessible h2o within them thar acidic clouds. Sorry, as you obviously have to know basic physics and even more basic math for appreciating that one. Ah, of course. And the reason we haven't detected this hydrogen earthside is ...? Perhaps too much S8, or perhaps there's too much of science that's suggesting Venus simply isn't nearly as old as Earth. (that alone is more than worth WWIII in the Old Testament mindset) You could have just admitted you don't understand the question, Brad. -- Supreme Leader of the Brainwashed Followers of Art Deco "Still suffering from reading comprehension problems, Deco? The section is clearly attributed to Art Deco, not to you, Deco." -- Dr. David Tholen "Who is "David Tholen", Daedalus? Still suffering from attribution problems?" -- Dr. David Tholen |
#115
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wrote:
Your Wikipedia koran that's actually more Jewish than not, as such isn't actually the word of God, you know. Do you talk like this to people you meet on the street, Brad? -- Supreme Leader of the Brainwashed Followers of Art Deco "Still suffering from reading comprehension problems, Deco? The section is clearly attributed to Art Deco, not to you, Deco." -- Dr. David Tholen "Who is "David Tholen", Daedalus? Still suffering from attribution problems?" -- Dr. David Tholen |
#116
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How cool is VL2
In sci.physics, Art Deco
wrote on Sat, 14 Apr 2007 09:23:05 -0600 : wrote: Instead of playing silly word games and of your having to continually exclude evidence, how about instead, why don't you just answer my questions. Such as, how many terratonnes of acidic clouds and somewhat less acidic haze does that toasty planet of Venus offer? As I'd often asked before, as from others such as yourself, to merely account for the 40 km to 100 km atmospheric realm that's obviously chuck full of something other than mostly CO2. Who are you replying to, Brad. Learn to post, cluebie. He's replying to me. :-) However, he might be asking all of us. There *is* the possibility of sulfuric acid in the clouds of Venus. This is presumably a consequence of the combination of the 0.015% sulfur dioxide and 0.002% water vapor. I'm not entirely sure how to compute the amount of sulfuric acid, though a very naive model suggests 0.0000003%. Hydrogen chloride and hydrogen fluoride are indicated as traces. Assuming a scale height of 9 km (Google is being maddeningly unclear on the matter), I get 6.3 * 10^19 moles for the entire atmosphere. Sulfuric acid would then be 1.89 * 10^11 moles or 1.85 * 10^10 kg, again assuming the 0.0000003%. This is far too much handwaving for my liking, admittedly, and this acid would be distributed Venus-wide, making extraction of all of it difficult. -- #191, Useless C++ Programming Idea #12995733: bool f(bool g, bool h) { if(g) h = true; else h = false; return h;} -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
#117
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How cool is VL2
"Phineas T Puddleduck" wrote in message You get funnier with each post. But he will never be as "Funny" as you are, Gay Duck. HJ |
#118
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How cool is VL2
"Art Deco" wrote in message Do you talk like this to people you meet on the street, Brad? Do you talk to the teen boys you molest in the City Park, Pedo Deco? HJ |
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On Apr 14, 9:44 am, The Ghost In The Machine
wrote: This is far too much handwaving for my liking, admittedly, and this acid would be distributed Venus-wide, making extraction of all of it difficult. Basic laws of physics blows most of your "handwaving" out the window. It's roughly a 1 bar environment of most extensively S8 that's in the atmospheric realm of 50 km. S8 has a SG worth of 2 g/cm3, and as you continue upward it gets even cooler, and that ratio should become more worthy of Co2 that's clearly a less massive element than S8. Just a few km below the 50 km mark (especially if going by season of nighttime), there's a fairly robust layer of S8 to deal with. Of course h2o and S8 makes for a rather nasty acid, that's likely wet anywhere near or above the 50 km mark. John Ackerman offers a reasonably good interpretation of the best available science, thereby shares his honest review and subsequent analogy of what's available, and as such it's not nearly as slight as we've been informed. There's simply more of water to behold of what's likely within those acidic clouds and extensice haze, than is given credit by the likes of whatever's given by way of our NASA and of their mostly Jewish peer review stamp of approval. - Brad Guth |
#120
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How cool is VL2
wrote:
On Apr 14, 9:44 am, The Ghost In The Machine wrote: This is far too much handwaving for my liking, admittedly, and this acid would be distributed Venus-wide, making extraction of all of it difficult. Basic laws of physics blows most of your "handwaving" out the window. Which you know nothing about, despite all your reams of postering. -- Supreme Leader of the Brainwashed Followers of Art Deco "Still suffering from reading comprehension problems, Deco? The section is clearly attributed to Art Deco, not to you, Deco." -- Dr. David Tholen "Who is "David Tholen", Daedalus? Still suffering from attribution problems?" -- Dr. David Tholen |
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