mahatmakg
mahatmakg t1_j1mz69n wrote
Reply to comment by cyrusm in Tech Journalism Doesn’t Know What to Do With Mastodon by psychothumbs
I mean, for me it's like Twitter with no ads. I think social media can be a pleasant an positive way to connect and reconnect with others if it's not fueled by ads and helmed by madmen.
mahatmakg OP t1_j18fl8w wrote
Reply to comment by BurningFlex in Remembering Apollo 8 - Launched on this day, 1968. The pioneering first voyage into deep space, though overshadowed by the later Apollo missions by mahatmakg
You can ask him to think about the cold war. The soviets independently confirmed the flights of Apollo 8-17, they were listening intently. If there was doubt about the legitimacy of the program, they would have been shouting from the mountaintops. To believe that the Apollo program was all a ruse, you'd have to believe the same about the entire cold war. The tensions with Cuba which last to this day, the Vietnam war, the buildup of nuclear arms - was all of that a sham? In that case, this ruse would have come to encompass so many hundreds of thousands, if not millions of people, that there is no way that a secret like that could be kept for 60+ years.
Shorter answer: the Apollo astronauts left mirrors on the moon. Shine a laser at that spot, it shines back. Shine a laser elsewhere, nothing.
mahatmakg OP t1_j18bpky wrote
Reply to comment by Lardrewstar in Remembering Apollo 8 - Launched on this day, 1968. The pioneering first voyage into deep space, though overshadowed by the later Apollo missions by mahatmakg
I cry every time.i listen to that song
mahatmakg t1_j1or1vl wrote
Reply to comment by TinyDayDreamer0 in What determines the space between two planets? by TinyDayDreamer0
Not necessarily no. The arrangement of the planets in our solar system today came about because of the nature of the protoplanetary disc as the sun was being formed. They have basically been continuing in the same orbits for 4+ billion years. I'm not sure of your question is more about orbital mechanics or the history of formation side of things
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Protoplanetary_disk?wprov=sfla1