Greg

3.6K posts

Greg

Greg

@Psitech

Laughter and Music are Healing! Infosec, Audio Engineer, Tesla/SpaceX enthusiast, Troy Trojans Football, Disney parks, All things Tech/Science. Bit of a Nerd!

Entrou em Temmuz 2008
182 Seguindo336 Seguidores
Greg
Greg@Psitech·
@kthalps Oh No! CNN isn't covering up your trash. I'm so sorry this is happening to you!
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Katie Halper
Katie Halper@kthalps·
Dana you haven’t spoken ONCE about the documented on video and reported on by Israeli media sexual abuse and rape committed by Israel against Palestinians. You’re a rape-excusing propagandist. Not a journalist.
Bobby LaValley@Bobby_LaVallley

CNN's @DanaBashCNN: "Hasan Piker is excusing sexual violence by Hamas terrorists. He also claims Hamas is, quote, 'a thousand times better than Israel.' Hamas is a designated terror organization, not just by the U.S., but by the EU, Canada, Australia, New Zealand."

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Greg
Greg@Psitech·
@ryangrim Oh no! The propaganda arm of the DNC isn't hiding your depravity! What ever will you do?!?
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Ryan Grim
Ryan Grim@ryangrim·
The wheels are coming off at CNN. What are they doing?
Bobby LaValley@Bobby_LaVallley

CNN's @DanaBashCNN: "Hasan Piker is excusing sexual violence by Hamas terrorists. He also claims Hamas is, quote, 'a thousand times better than Israel.' Hamas is a designated terror organization, not just by the U.S., but by the EU, Canada, Australia, New Zealand."

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Greg
Greg@Psitech·
Do you feel better about yourself for calling someone a moron? Of course photons travel in a straight line (unless bent by something like a black hole) from it's source until it collides with something that reflects it. My point is that they aren't out in the vastness of deep space. They are close to a source (the sun) and large objects (the earth and the moon) that will reflect those photons back to their eyes and equipment if their eyes or equipment are facing towards those objects.
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DefinitelyNotEvileconboy
DefinitelyNotEvileconboy@notEvileconboy·
Light pollution is the term astronomers use. Yeah, daytime is a terrible time for doing astronomy unless you're using a radio telescope or studying the sun. Photons travel line of sight, moron. In the vacuum of space they have nothing to bounce off. When you stare away toward cosmic darkness, all you see are stars which are extremely bright with no atmosphere to scatter and distort.
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Collin Rugg
Collin Rugg@CollinRugg·
The Artemis II crew explains to a young viewer why it can be hard to see stars in outer space. Question: "I wonder, do you still see stars in outer space?" Jeremy Hansen: "Yeah, I was actually just talking to my crewmates about that today. I've definitely seen stars in outer space, and I was saying I haven't as many as I thought I would. Reid?" Reid Wiseman: "We have so much illumination from the sun on the moon and the earth right now, it is hard at times to see stars, just like when you walk out in the daytime, you see a blue sky but no stars."
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John O'Neill
John O'Neill@JohnOneill180·
@DefiantLs Many whites don't understand why they sit/kneel. It's not their flag. They see the reason they don't know their real last name. Eagles, Apples, Burgers, Exploration, Founders ... None of it is "theirs", so why stand? Do whites hang pictures of GW Carver in their house? OFC not.
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Greg
Greg@Psitech·
Kindness costs nothing, but to some people, it's everything ! ❤️
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Greg
Greg@Psitech·
@HandyGingerGal @EdwardBrode What part of the moon do you think is illuminated during different phases, especially a New Moon? Or is this something you've never thought about?
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Ginger
Ginger@HandyGingerGal·
@EdwardBrode I always thought there was a dark side of the moon.
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Greg
Greg@Psitech·
First of all, "light pollution" is a horrible term. Do we call daytime "light pollution"? I'm sorry to inform you that even in the vacuum of space, photons can enter your eyes, either directly from a source (such as the Sun), or can be reflected into your eyes by any other object (like the Earth, the Moon, or even Orion itself). Hope this helps
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Greg
Greg@Psitech·
I assure you, those 4 are far smarter than I'll ever be, and they understand how the pupils in your eyes work and how an aperture on a camera works. This mission has just opened my eyes (so to speak) at how uneducated people are about such basic things. A lot of people are calling everything fake because..."where are the stars". Sorry, but ignorance annoys me.
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Madness
Madness@sanitycheck2000·
@Psitech @CollinRugg Settle down, astronaut Greg. Even the astronauts said they were surprised by how few stars they see. But you've been to space way more times than them, so you know better.
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Greg
Greg@Psitech·
@KenSmit59 @mchooyah You don't understand line of sight communication. This mission has shown the shocking number of low IQ people there are among us. It's both sad and scary.
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Amagaican Dad
Amagaican Dad@KenSmit59·
@mchooyah We do but it's classified, also communication wasn't lost they just switched to a classified low frequency. Never ever trust and believe the government.
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Robert J. O'Neill
Robert J. O'Neill@mchooyah·
I don’t give a rip what the friggin’ crew of the rocket is eating and if the toilet works. Why don’t we have a video of the dark side of the moon?
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Greg
Greg@Psitech·
@DanTheTemplar @Bertmussen @NASA @grok You do realize that you can go to a place with zero light pollution and see the exact same thing with your naked eyes, right?
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TemplarDan
TemplarDan@DanTheTemplar·
@Bertmussen @NASA @grok We’re living in biblical times that’s been repeating like a cycle. This is very likely an A.I/CGI image unfortunately. 🤣
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NASA
NASA@NASA·
Sky full of stars. Following a successful lunar flyby, the Artemis II astronauts captured this breathtaking photo of our galaxy, the Milky Way, on April 7, 2026.
NASA tweet media
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Greg
Greg@Psitech·
@thatguyyy43 @Billzilla5 @CuriosityonX It could be an issue with the lens in your telescope. Stars should never have different shapes. They can have different sizes, for sure, but not different shapes. However, lens distortion can cause all sorts of visual abnormalities.
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Curiosity
Curiosity@CuriosityonX·
The Artemis II crew explains why stars remain hidden in their mission views:
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Greg
Greg@Psitech·
@TeeGee_88 @TMZ Stay ignorant. You're doing a great job of it already. 😉
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TMZ
TMZ@TMZ·
President Donald Trump’s call with the Artemis II crew Monday night had a seriously awkward moment … when the crew seemingly decided they were done talking to him -- and the prez blamed it on a glitch! 😅 Credit: NASA
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Greg
Greg@Psitech·
Do you not understand conservation of momentum? In the vacuum of space, an object in Motion will stay in motion and will maintain its momentum forever until it encounters a force that disrupts that momentum. Orion didn't have to use its engines all the way to the moon, it essentially coasted the entire way.
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Mr. Jett
Mr. Jett@Slugger_1J·
@NickBJenkins @libsoftiktok @elonmusk So a ship, that can travel VASTLY greater distances than a tiny capsule, needs to refuel to get to the moon, but not the tiny space capsule……. Thats like saying my v8 triton wont need refueling before my dad’s diesel, driving side by side.
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Libs of TikTok
Libs of TikTok@libsoftiktok·
TRULY HISTORIC 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸
Libs of TikTok tweet media
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Greg
Greg@Psitech·
@Slugger_1J @libsoftiktok Are you trolling or just have a low IQ? During a launch, the acceleration builds gradually. They'll experience 3 to 4 g's tops. The deceleration upon reentry is more of a problem. They can experience up to 9 g's during splash down.
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Mr. Jett
Mr. Jett@Slugger_1J·
Absolutely fake. Its astonishing that grown adults believe astronauts are doing 10s of thousands of MPH, when combat pilots max out at 9 Gs and thats only for a few seconds at substantially lower speeds. Astronauts would be pancakes or disintegrate. You cannot leave earthz read the first page of the bible. The sun and moon are local.
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Jordan Crowder
Jordan Crowder@digijordan·
Not one star. 60 years of technological progress with cameras… And not one star. I’ve heard all the explanations for this… None make any sense.
Jordan Crowder tweet media
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Madness
Madness@sanitycheck2000·
@Psitech @CollinRugg It's reasonable for anyone who has not been to space to ask this question. It is counterintuitive.
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Greg
Greg@Psitech·
@Punkle89 @CuriosityonX There's no such thing as zero gravity. They, along with Orion, and everything within is basically in a constant state of free fall. Everything is moving at the same rate, so therefore everything's relative motion is the same. Hope that helps.
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Punkle
Punkle@Punkle89·
@CuriosityonX If they are in a shuttle with zero gravity,traveling through the vacuum of space , how are they staying perfectly still while the craft is moving? Wouldn’t they continue being nudged, or bumped, by the craft while they are moving? 🤔
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he
he@thatguyyy43·
@CuriosityonX Why do stars seen from earth have unique “twinkles”? The colors and shapes are vastly different.
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Greg
Greg@Psitech·
@allanpichardo @CollinRugg I totally get that. I'm just shocked that so many adults don't understand basic science. That's all I'm saying. Yes, it's good for anyone to seek out information that they don't already possess.
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Greg
Greg@Psitech·
I'm going to say this simply because I'm surprised at how many people don't understand how an aperture works. When you're in the dark, the pupils in your eyes (your eye's aperture) opens up to let more light in so that you can see things that are reflecting very little light back to your retinas. During the day, or when there is a lot of light present, your pupils will contract, so that your retinas aren't flooded with light, or the entire scene would be "blown out" and you'd just see nothing but white light. This is precisely why you can't see stars during the day, but you can at night. Starlight is very dim, so your eye's aperture has to be more open to see them. The darker the environment you're in, the more stars you'll see. This is exactly how an aperture on a camera works.
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