Message from @🍄The Mad Philosopher🍄
Discord ID: 567278400079659008
yes rounded
"space doesn't exist"
a star do a die and go boom
probably their reasoning
Spacewalking astronauts face a wide variety of temperatures. In Earth orbit, conditions can be as cold as minus 250 degrees Fahrenheit. In the sunlight, they can be as hot as 250 degrees. A spacesuit protects astronauts from those extreme temperatures (taken from nasa website)
wait hold on a second
the thing i looked at before said celsius. its time for a thonk
-130 c
That is what scientists use to replicate outer space temperature
"The irradiation was carried out at low pressure (~0.01 Torr) and
low temperature (−130 ◦C) to simulate the conditions of Mars or outer space."
To simulate open space conditions
When they want to use variables like temperature, they usually value precision.
well they can because of the space suit
ok i did some more research and its 121.111 celsuius
sorry about that everyone
I posted a peer reviewed research article on a university database of research journals
according to that it's -130c
I did attach the first/most recent article
*moonlandinghappned*
*noitdidnt*
*3peopledied* *3peoplealmostdiedinspace*
33 symbolism
Nope
No one did
3 people died in the Apollo 1 tragedy
Cosmic couture: The spacesuit hasn't changed for 40 years. Time for a wardrobe refresh, says Leah Crane. By: Crane, Leah, New Scientist, 02624079, 1/6/2018, Vol. 237, Issue 3159
it's in HTML oof
3 people died in Apollo 1 and 3 people almost died in Apollo 13
when an oxygen tank exploded
Must mean space is real
in apollo 1 they were burnt alive
Dead people = earth is a globe
no
thats not what im saying
starbucks coffee isn't good omg
when three people die thats a big thing
"NASA has contracted Boeing to make the Starliner capsule and suits, and the firm unveiled the prototype garb in January 2017: a bright blue suit made with lighter materials and more flexible joints than previous offerings. It has a soft helmet that is attached to the suit like a hood; astronauts pull it over their heads and zip it down in an emergency. This "space hoodie" design is far less clunky than the traditional fish-bowl helmets. "In the last 60 years, there's been no suit lighter than this one," says Kavya Manyapu, a Boeing engineer."