
October 16th 20, 08:01 PM
posted to alt.atheism,alt.fan.rush-limbaugh,alt.politics.trump,alt.binaries.pictures.aviation,alt.politics.trump
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big brother (oops I mean twitter) has now locked down several
On 15 Oct 2020 14:03:09 -0700, Miloch
wrote:
In article , Ted
says...
On 15 Oct 2020 11:34:49 -0700, Miloch
wrote:
In article , BeamMeUpScotty
says...
On 10/15/20 12:50 PM, a322x1n wrote:
Jack **** wrote in
:
On Thu, 15 Oct 2020 07:42:50 -0700 (PDT), Automatic
wrote:
House GOP, trump campaign, and the press secretary.
And it looks like a video don re-tweeted has been deleted.
Because the real news about Joe and Hunter is out and they
want
to
hide it.
Oh, yes, like the real news about the Earth being flat and
the Moon being made of green cheese.
More like the CHINESE trying to hide the fact that a virus
escaped
their
BIO WEAPONS LAB.
To be more precise, Beamer...the Chinese hide it in the 'green
cheese'.
Impossible. The Chinese haven't been to the moon. If they were
there,
we'd know it.
FYI...
'Very high risk' defunct Russian satellite and Chinese rocket body
will collide
tonight: report
https://www.foxnews.com/science/very...f-space-junk-c
ould-collide-reports
Experts believe a defunct Russian satellite and a discarded Chinese
rocket could
smash into each other high above the earth on Thursday, according
to reports.
Satellite-tracking company LeoLabs on Wednesday said the defunct
objects could
come within 39 feet of each other and that there was a 10% chance
that they
could still collide around 8:56 p.m. ET. The company deemed the
potential crash
to be a "very high risk."
"This event continues to be very high risk and will likely stay
this way through
the time of closest approach," LeoLabs tweeted.
Jonathan McDowell, an astrophysicist at the Harvard-Smithsonian
Center for
Astrophysics, said the two objects were a defunct Soviet navigation
satellite
called Parus [Kosmos 2004] that launched in 1989 and a Chinese
rocket stage.
As of Tuesday, the objects -- with a mass of roughly three metric
tons -- were
in low-Earth orbit at an altitude of around 615 miles, LeoLabs said.
Because the objects are located high above the ground, they don't
pose a risk to
anyone on earth. However, a crash could cause more debris to orbit
the earth,
which could increase the risk of future collisions.
The debris could also threaten astronauts.
"If this turns into a collision, it's probably thousands to tens of
thousands of
new pieces of debris that is going to cause a headache for any
satellite that's
going out into upper low-Earth orbit, or even beyond," said Dan
Ceperley, the
CEO of LeoLabs, according to Business Insider. "It's maybe a much
bigger problem
than a lot of people realize."
As of February this year, there are 128 million debris objects in
orbit,
according to the European Space Agency. Roughly 34,000 of those
objects are
greater than 10 cm.
I see what you mean. Those satellites are close enough to the moon to
scrape some of the cheese off.
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