Message from @🎃Oakheart🎃

Discord ID: 632014698539253781


2019-10-11 00:37:24 UTC  

I have a website cited as well.

2019-10-11 00:37:33 UTC  

no where did you get the temperature range for the exosphere

2019-10-11 00:37:40 UTC  

For us who can't afford to send a probe up "into" outer space, we're just suckers left to choose to believe or not believe that NASA and other agencies have sent up probes.

2019-10-11 00:37:45 UTC  

"I can however, verify the temperature of the exosphere,"

2019-10-11 00:37:51 UTC  

showing a chart of melting temps isn't that

2019-10-11 00:38:17 UTC  

1700 degrees Celsius
The temperature in the exosphere varies greatly and can range from 0 to over 1700 degrees Celsius. It is colder at night and much hotter during the day. The air in the exosphere is very thin, and is made up mostly of helium, and hydrogen.
Exosphere Facts - Softschools.com

2019-10-11 00:38:24 UTC  

Thats what they teach you in school.

2019-10-11 00:38:28 UTC  

Which is where you get your basis.

2019-10-11 00:38:58 UTC  

Most metals would be molten, if not singeing hot at that point.

2019-10-11 00:39:00 UTC  

but then we're back to the case of Z asking me to verify that those temperatures were recorded

2019-10-11 00:39:09 UTC  

"Recorded
You never recorded anything
"

2019-10-11 00:39:18 UTC  

somehow those temperatures were recorded in the exosphere

2019-10-11 00:39:20 UTC  

One moment.

2019-10-11 00:39:43 UTC  

Oh its Oakheart

2019-10-11 00:40:02 UTC  

and mineyful

2019-10-11 00:40:09 UTC  

The determination of the air density along the track of low-Earth-orbit (LEO) satellite missions is possible by the recovery of the air drag force and momentum applying on the satellite.

2019-10-11 00:40:28 UTC  

From these data, the air density and winds in the thermosphere were inverted along the satellite track

2019-10-11 00:40:29 UTC  

Check this for the thermosphere.

2019-10-11 00:40:32 UTC  

From NASA.

2019-10-11 00:40:46 UTC  

Hot, isn't it?

2019-10-11 00:40:48 UTC  

so we're using NASA to prove that the exosphere was recorded

2019-10-11 00:40:54 UTC  

even though you say NASA is not to be trusted

2019-10-11 00:40:58 UTC  

So how again can NASA magically pass through without burning.

2019-10-11 00:40:58 UTC  

pick one

2019-10-11 00:41:11 UTC  

No, but you claim to trust NASA, so I'm trying to provide proof that would fit your close-minded agendas.

2019-10-11 00:41:22 UTC  

If you trust NASA, I'll use their information against you.

2019-10-11 00:41:35 UTC  

my response was that the air density is very low in the upper thermosphere

2019-10-11 00:41:44 UTC  

you neglected to state the 2000C was in the upper thermosphere *only*

2019-10-11 00:41:54 UTC  

I do believe that gravity is a real phenomenon. I do believe that Newtonian equations we learned in school are good approximations describing the behavior of matter under the influence of gravity. I do NOT believe that any of your teachers in school or the scientists that publish articles have any accurate idea of *what* gravity is *why* it is.

2019-10-11 00:42:01 UTC  

it's generally accepted that the further you go up, the less dense the atmosphere gets

2019-10-11 00:42:02 UTC  

The ISS also supposedly orbits in the thermosphere

2019-10-11 00:42:07 UTC  

So... how is it not burning up?

2019-10-11 00:42:08 UTC  

Lol

2019-10-11 00:42:13 UTC  

lol if you just read for a second

2019-10-11 00:42:25 UTC  

the higher you go up = less dense molecules = less molecules to bump into

2019-10-11 00:42:34 UTC  

less molecules to bump into = less heat generated

2019-10-11 00:42:46 UTC  

The Earth is the center of the solar system, it only makes sense.

2019-10-11 00:42:49 UTC  

while the molecules are very very "excited", making the hot, there are so few that it isn't as insane

2019-10-11 00:42:56 UTC  

I smell a fallacy

2019-10-11 00:42:58 UTC  

don't shift the topic