Richard Bullock

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Richard Bullock

Richard Bullock

@rb357

Rower, astronomer, caver, YouTube film maker, scout leader - from Cheshire in the north-west of England

Wilmslow, UK เข้าร่วม Nisan 2012
364 กำลังติดตาม304 ผู้ติดตาม
Richard Bullock
Richard Bullock@rb357·
@robprogressive The actual announcement is over EV charges. EVs will get charged 3p/mile, so if they do 10,000 miles it will cost £300. Hybrids will get a 1.5p/mile charge, so £150 for 10,000 miles. Non-electric vehicles already pay fuel duty, so won't get an additional charge.
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Rob Moore
Rob Moore@robprogressive·
The more you drive, the more fuel you buy, & the more tax you pay on it (from money already taxed) Now Rachel Reeves is confirming a new £300 charge for anyone doing over 10,000 miles a year. Feels like drivers are being hit multiple times for the same thing. How many more times are we going to be fleeced by this Government?
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Peter Hague
Peter Hague@peterrhague·
BREAKING: NASA has lost contact with the crew of Artemis II
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Richard Bullock
Richard Bullock@rb357·
@Pinboard Live view from the low-res external camera right now. Similar to what I posted:
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Pinboard
Pinboard@Pinboard·
Unfortunately the Artemis II closest lunar approach (5,000 miles) is much further than Apollo 8 (60 miles), so there isn't going to be a new Earthrise photo.
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Richard Bullock
Richard Bullock@rb357·
@Javedakhtarjadu When Armstrong landed, the Moon was about 367,000km/228,000 miles from Earth. The Artemis II astronauts are currently 413,000km/257,000 miles. Quite a bit further
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Javed Akhtar
Javed Akhtar@Javedakhtarjadu·
Astronauts further from Earth than any human before . BBC . Are they unwittingly saying that Armstrong actually had never landed on moon ?
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Richard Bullock รีทวีตแล้ว
Jason Major
Jason Major@JPMajor·
"The more I look at the Moon, the browner and browner it looks." Interesting color observation by the Artemis II crew as they are passing around the Moon's far side!
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Richard Bullock
Richard Bullock@rb357·
@husheruk If you toggle "set the time zone automatically" on and off, it should correct itself.
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Richard Bullock
Richard Bullock@rb357·
@husheruk Yes. Again. Has happened before where it's gone forward on the correct date, then given another hour a week later.
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Nicholas Winfield
Nicholas Winfield@husheruk·
Is any ones computer clock an hour fast this morning?
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D P
D P@DP7840101276832·
@WorkElizab And if we landed on the moon on 1969 why are we only doing a fly by in 2026🤔
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Richard Bullock
Richard Bullock@rb357·
@1aad7c82d8484e8 @planet4589 Relative to the Moon, the spacecraft is accelerating slowly - currently gaining about 10m/s (22mph) per hour, but that rate will go up a lot. They'll be something like 400m/s (900mph) faster at closest approach than now.
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Finally_a_FM
Finally_a_FM@1aad7c82d8484e8·
@planet4589 That is a real good question: I was just looking at at the official tracking site and saw "velocity" still going (slowly) down.
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Jonathan McDowell
Jonathan McDowell@planet4589·
The Integrity spacecraft just entered the lunar gravitational sphere of influence, at 0438 UTC Apr 6. Wiseman, Glover, Koch and Hansen are now the 25th to 28th humans to have left terrestrial space.
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Mysterybot
Mysterybot@mysteryb0t·
Can someone with a high-powered telescope show us Artemis II on the way to the moon?
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Danae Hudlow
Danae Hudlow@danae_hudlow·
Do I dare risk another geography tweet to ask whether we all agree that this is upside-down Australia? ("UPSIDE-DOWN" RELATIVE TO MAPS, OKAY? I KNOW THERE'S NO UPSIDE-DOWN IN SPACE)
Reid Wiseman@astro_reid

There are no words.

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NASA
NASA@NASA·
History in the making In this new image from our @NASAArtemis II crew, you can see Orientale basin on the right edge of the lunar disk. This mission marks the first time the entire basin has been seen with human eyes.
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Richard Bullock
Richard Bullock@rb357·
@valitarosarina @NASA @NASAArtemis So Oriental Basin was in darkness for each Apollo mission, so would not have been visible. It was timed that way, to make the shadows longer at the landing sites.
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Val
Val@valitarosarina·
@NASA @NASAArtemis What do you mean “the first time”? What about 1969?
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Richard Bullock
Richard Bullock@rb357·
@CerberusFella @NASA @NASAArtemis All the Apollo missions were timed to arrive at morning on the landing sites, to make the shadows longer to make the terrain easier to identify. Oriental Basin was in darkness for each Apollo mission
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Richard Bullock
Richard Bullock@rb357·
@CryptoWhale The exif data confirms the two photos were taken 19 seconds apart. One with an exposure 4 times longer than the other.
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Mr. Whale
Mr. Whale@CryptoWhale·
🌍 | Two different photos published by NASA. Today we learn that the clouds on the globe do not move at all. Another valuable lesson.
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