Message from @Overlord Yam

Discord ID: 567276934795624478


2019-04-15 09:11:30 UTC  

That's not the slight bit of a checkmate 😆 😆 😆 😆 😆 😆 😆 😆 😆 😆

2019-04-15 09:11:30 UTC  

r/woosh

2019-04-15 09:11:35 UTC  

That. Proves. Nothing.
There's no context and no mention of flatness

2019-04-15 09:11:40 UTC  

Oh, man this is great.

2019-04-15 09:11:42 UTC  

😆 😆 😆

2019-04-15 09:11:43 UTC  

i know

2019-04-15 09:12:09 UTC  

you can't even tell a joke from seriousness

2019-04-15 09:12:10 UTC  

😆 😆 😆

2019-04-15 09:12:27 UTC  

Yeah, sarcasm is a tone you can't read in text.

2019-04-15 09:12:29 UTC  

Except I can and I was laughing

2019-04-15 09:12:40 UTC  

takes more context than that

2019-04-15 09:12:54 UTC  

to accurately judge if it's truly sarcasm or real.

2019-04-15 09:12:55 UTC  

i think the checkmate makes it fairly obvious

2019-04-15 09:13:13 UTC  

That's your perception

2019-04-15 09:13:14 UTC  

Whatever helps you sleep at night

2019-04-15 09:15:10 UTC  

but in the sun it can be just as hot

2019-04-15 09:15:19 UTC  

thats why the ISS has radiator panels

2019-04-15 09:15:38 UTC  

yes rounded

2019-04-15 09:15:56 UTC  

"space doesn't exist"

2019-04-15 09:15:57 UTC  

a star do a die and go boom

2019-04-15 09:16:00 UTC  

probably their reasoning

2019-04-15 09:16:31 UTC  

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)

2019-04-15 09:16:46 UTC  

wait hold on a second

2019-04-15 09:16:54 UTC  

the thing i looked at before said celsius. its time for a thonk

2019-04-15 09:16:58 UTC  

-130 c

2019-04-15 09:17:09 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/564598119590002708/567277222289866763/outerspace_temp.pdf

2019-04-15 09:17:21 UTC  

That is what scientists use to replicate outer space temperature

2019-04-15 09:17:37 UTC  

"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."

2019-04-15 09:18:04 UTC  

To simulate open space conditions

2019-04-15 09:18:17 UTC  

When they want to use variables like temperature, they usually value precision.

2019-04-15 09:18:30 UTC  

well they can because of the space suit

2019-04-15 09:18:51 UTC  

ok i did some more research and its 121.111 celsuius

2019-04-15 09:18:56 UTC  

sorry about that everyone

2019-04-15 09:19:08 UTC  
2019-04-15 09:19:20 UTC  

I posted a peer reviewed research article on a university database of research journals

2019-04-15 09:19:31 UTC  

according to that it's -130c

2019-04-15 09:20:01 UTC  

I did attach the first/most recent article

2019-04-15 09:21:50 UTC  

No

2019-04-15 09:22:02 UTC  

*moonlandinghappned*

2019-04-15 09:22:12 UTC  

*noitdidnt*

2019-04-15 09:22:28 UTC  

*3peopledied* *3peoplealmostdiedinspace*