Steve Sinton
28.8K posts

Steve Sinton
@ssinton
science enthusiast, photographer, husband, father. love my dogs, too.
가입일 Temmuz 2009
195 팔로잉835 팔로워

@TedLogan1010 Little known (by you, perhaps?): the space shuttle didn’t go to the moon. Didn’t even get close to the moon.
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@ojoalcielo_ So, I’m guessing your brilliant explanation for why those combined conditions are more present in the universe is: experiments god did before figuring it out?
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¿Cómo existen personas que no creen en Dios?
- Sol a la distancia ideal
- Gravedad adecuada
- Agua líquida
- Campo magnético
- Atmósfera protectora
- Presencia de la Luna
- Inclinación del eje de la Tierra
- Júpiter protegiendo la Tierra
Todo demasiado perfecto
para haber surgido de la nada.
Si crees que Dios es nuestro gran creador,
deja tu AMÉN.
❤️🌎
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@LindseyGrahamSC @realDonaldTrump I will ask same question of you: “what have you done (that’s actually useful to your constituents and Americans at large)?
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To those critiquing how the President is dealing with Iran: what have you done?
President @realDonaldTrump is the only man who has ever put action behind his words, and I’m with him 100%.
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@FlatEarthZone Here is something to think about. 5000 degrees to the ocean in 13 minutes, you'd think that thing would be hot for a while... I welded some steel earlier and it took 20 min to touch it... This thing was "half the temp of the sun"

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@Shawneeb54 @FlatEarthZone Life support tech in space flight is a well-developed field and very reliable. You should study it… lots to learn.
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@FlatEarthZone Where did they fit air to breathe for 4 freemasonaughts for 8 days. A scuba tank is 1 hr at most. Thats 200 scuba tanks. Apollo has their lss life support system, it has a small cylinder in it to breathe. Huh???
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@Galacticblue @FlatEarthZone @hunterlittleguy It’s very clear you haven’t a clue how the Orion capsule slowed from 25,000 to speed where chutes worked fine. The whole process is explained on NASA’s site. You might find it interesting.
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Didn’t see any air conditioners hanging out the sides.
Ridiculous.
Those parachutes were super funny. Slow down from 25000 mph?
They wouldn’t do a thing.
No cable could withstand that unimaginable speed and drag.
Think about the jolt.
The occupants would be turned to jelly. Depending on how they were seated the eyes would exit through the back of their heads.
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@FlatEarthZone Seems like you are implying ablative heat shields and insulation are fake things. If so, then maybe that label regarding you level of education is apt.
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@cohler Also “disjoint systems” is a just fancy way of saying “I don’t believe weather here has any relation to weather there.” Global warming, despite its name, has greatest impacts on local levels.
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@cohler Seems like you are just stating the obvious. Average temperatures might be problematic as a metric, but that doesn’t deter from the real impacts AGW might have.
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AGW Hypothesis FALSIFIED
Leading AI Confirms
Claude (Anthropic) just confirmed that the Anthropogenic Global Warming (AGW) hypothesis has been completely falsified.
❝
AGW is a conjecture built on physically meaningless constructs and a falsified model
❞
The whole article here:
claude.ai/public/artifac…

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@mdubowitz @EylonALevy So, instead you got trump and no deal, only lies, and a $200B bill for attempting (but failing miserably) to do even the smallest move toward a disarmed Iran.
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Reminder that under Obama’s Iran deal Iran would be on a pathway by 2031 to have nuclear-armed ICBMs, 10,000 ballistic missiles, a Chinese- and Russian-built military, a million attack drones, a fully operational terror network, and a trillion dollars to harden its economy.
Ben Rhodes@brhodes
Reminder that under Obama's Iran Deal the Iranians shipped 98 percent of their enriched uranium out of the country - without a pointless and devastating war.
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The biggest driver for life on Earth is the geo-dynamo, if the sun drove life as we know it then Venus and Mars would have life to. We have a Sun beneath our feet that reaches temperatures close to the Suns surface at 6000C. The Sun doesn't even control the temperature of Earth. The geo-dynamo releases electrons to the atmosphere that create our electromagnetic defence against the solar wind, the solar wind is deflected around Earth at the Bow Shock.
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@srigawntufahr @elonmusk Well, now, that’s a pretty bizarre (and wrong) analysis.
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@elonmusk Science totally misunderstands light. The only difference between a firefly and a sun is size. Our sun doesn’t generate light; it is a conduit for light. Science behaves like small child, regarding the sun as if it was a wall socket, believing it to be the source of electricity.
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@PepeDutch17 @elonmusk It is important. So are forests, prairies, mountains, beaches. Farmland requires energy to develop and manage, and that energy needs to be affordable and not so environmentally damaging it works against those other important places. Bottom line: farmland is not most important.
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@Synergycorpp @XFreeze Humanities “decision” to use fossils fuels harkens back to long, long, long before solar energy from photovoltaics existed. Hard to deny and move away from built up infrastructure for legacy energy materials.
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@XFreeze Imagine having the sun and still prioritizing fossil fuels as an energy distributor.
Sometimes I just sit back and watch and intentionally hurt my brain when I try to understand why humanity has decided to go down a "we must have a leader" path.
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The Sun is by far the biggest source of energy in our solar system
Even here on Earth, the Sun accounts for roughly 100% of all the energy we use - fossil fuels are just ancient sunlight stored in plants, while wind, hydro, biomass, and solar power are all driven by the Sun right now
Beyond Earth, the vast majority of spacecraft, satellites, and future Mars bases run entirely on solar energy
The Sun puts out 3.8 × 10²⁶ watts - more energy in a single second than all of humanity has ever used in its entire history
And just to put it in perspective: the Sun makes up 99.8% of the total mass of our entire solar system. Jupiter is only 0.1%. Everything else (Earth, Mars, asteroids, etc.) is basically miscellaneous
We’re finally learning how to use the only energy source that actually matters ☀️

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@Alex_Diaz_68 Answer to your first question: air drag. Won’t bother with the second one, since answer is in question.
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Se supone que la cápsula lunar tiene una velocidad de entrada en la atmósfera de 40.000 Km hora, se supone que pesa 9000 Kg. Si la lanzáramos de un avión a 9000 m. de altura antes de estrellarse iría a 600 Km/h
👉¿Alguien me puede explicar cómo se puede frenar con unos paracaídas a 600 Km/h?
👉 ¿Alguien puede explicar a qué velocidad iría a 20.000 m si es que viene del espacio?

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@TeamTrump47 Yes. My “anger” is selectively applied to the cause. Trying to hang blame on “bidenomics” (a word that means … what?) for current rise in gas prices solely due to trump’s war with Iran seems like a fool’s strategy.
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