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My Very Erotic Mate Joyfully Satisfies Unusual Needs Passionately |
Men Very Easily Make Jugs Serve Useful Nocturnal Purposes |
Man Very Early Made A Jug Serve Useful Noble Purposes |
My Very Educated Mother Just Showed Us Nine Planets |
My Very Eager Mother Just Showed Us Nine Planets |
My Very Exhausted Mother hAs Just Swept Up a Planetary Nebula |
Most Voters Earn Money Just Showing Up Near Polls |
My Very Educated Mother Just Served Us Nine Pizza-pies |
Many Viscious Elephants Made John, Suzy and Uncle Need Protection |
Solar Mass Very Easily Makes All Jupiter's Satellites Undergo |
Numerous Perturbations. |
Mein Vater erklaert mir jeden Sonntag unsere niedlichen Planeten |
(My Father explains to me every Sunday our nine planets) |
Man verachte einen Menschen in seinem Unglueck nie -- Punkt |
(Never scorn/despise a person in his misfortune/bad luck/misery |
-- period!) |
Colors of the spectrum: Red Orange Yellow Green Blue Indigo Violet |
ROY G. BIV (pronounce as a man's name) |
Richard Of York Gave Battle In Vain |
Read Out Your Good Book In Verse |
Galilean Satellite of Jupiter: Io Europa Ganymede Callisto |
I Expect God Cries |
I Eat Green Cheese |
I Embarrass Good Christians |
Ich erschrecke all guten Christen |
(I scare all good Christians) |
Saturnian Satellites |
Miriam's Enchiladas Taste Divine Recently. Tell Her I'm Proud. |
(Mimas, Enceladus, Tethys, Dione, Rhea, Titan, Hyperion, |
Iapetus, Phoebe) |
Uranian Satellites: |
Mispronunciations Afflict Uranus Too Often |
My Angel Uriel Takes Opium |
(Miranda, Ariel, Umbriel, Titania, Oberon) |
NOTE: the remaining FAQ sections do not appear in sci.astro, as they cover |
material of relevance only to sci.space. |
NEXT: FAQ #8/15 - Contacting NASA, ESA, and other space agencies/companies |
[email protected] (Norman Anderson) writes: |
>[email protected] (Mitch) writes: |
>>effect that one of the SSRBs that was recovered after the |
>>recent space shuttle launch was found to have a wrench of |
>>some sort rattling around apparently inside the case. |
>I heard a similar statement in our local news (UTAH) tonight. They referred |
>to the tool as "...the PLIERS that took a ride into space...". They also |
>said that a Thiokol (sp?) employee had reported missing a tool of some kind |
>during assembly of one SRB. |
I assume, then, that someone at Thiokol put on their "manager's hat" and said |
that pissing off the customer by delaying shipment of the SRB to look inside |
it was a bad idea, regardless of where that tool might have ended up. |
Why do I get the feeling that Thiokol "manager's hats" are shaped like cones? |
Comet P/Helin-Roman-Crockett also spent some time as a temporary |
satellite to Jupiter a few years ago if you believe the calculations |
by Tancredi, G., Lindgren, M. and Rickman, H.(Astron. Astrophys., |
| Mats Lindgren | [email protected] | |
| Astronomical Observatory | 21619::laban::ml | |
| Box 515 | | |
| 751 20 Uppsala | Phone (+46) (0)18 51 35 22 | |
| Sweden | Fax 52 75 83 | |
In article <[email protected]> Callec Dradja <[email protected]> writes: |
>I am a bit nervous about posting this beacause it is begining to |
>stray fron the topic of space but then again that doesn't seem to |
>stop alot of other people. :-) |
>With all of this talk about breathing at high pressures, I began |
>to think about the movie Abyss. If you remember, in that movie one |
>of the characters dove to great depths by wearing a suit that used |
>a fluid that carries oxegen as opposed to some sort of gas. Now I |
>have heard that mice can breath this fluid but for some reason, humans |
>are unable to. Does anyone know more details about this? |
>Gregson Vaux |
I believe the reason is that the lung diaphram gets too tired to pump |
the liquid in and out and simply stops breathing after 2-3 minutes. |
So if your in the vehicle ready to go they better not put you on |
hold, or else!! That's about it. Remember a liquid is several more times |
as dense as a gas by its very nature. ~10 I think, depending on the gas |
and liquid comparision of course! |
Acurist |
In article <[email protected]> [email protected] (James Thomas Green) writes: |
>Suppose the Soviets had managed to get their moon rocket working |
>and had made it first. They could have beaten us if either: |
>* Their rocket hadn't blown up on the pad thus setting them back, |
>and/or |
>* A Saturn V went boom. |
The Apollo fire was harsh, A Saturn V explosion would have been |
hurtful but The Soviets winning would have been crushing. That could have |
been *the* technological turning point for the US turning us |
from Today's "We can do anything, we're *the* Super Power" to a much more |
reserved attitude like the Soviet Program today. |
Kennedy was gone by 68\69, the war was still on is the east, I think |
the program would have stalled badly and the goal of the moon |
by 70 would have been dead with Nasa trying to figure were they went wrong. |
>If they had beaten us, I speculate that the US would have gone |
>head and done some landings, but we also would have been more |
>determined to set up a base (both in Earth Orbit and on the |
>Moon). Whether or not we would be on Mars by now would depend |
>upon whether the Soviets tried to go. Setting up a lunar base |
>would have stretched the budgets of both nations and I think |
>that the military value of a lunar base would outweigh the value |
>of going to Mars (at least in the short run). Thus we would |
>have concentrated on the moon. |
I speulate that: |
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