kjpmi
kjpmi t1_j6gmeov wrote
Reply to comment by MaliciousHippie in TIL workers dismantling the wrecked MV Primrose off of North Sentinel Island were confronted by the isolated Sentinelese, but defused the situation by giving them bananas and letting them on board to acquire scrap metal. Workers were visited by the Sentinelese 2-3 times a month for 18 months. by CaptainJZH
>Sentinelese islands
It’s just one island that they live on. North Sentinel Island.
The rest of the islands are the Andaman and Nicobar islands.
There are other modern peoples inhabiting the other islands.
kjpmi t1_j3pt1lw wrote
I’ve come to realize that everyone on Reddit is either pooping waaay to infrequently OR pooping waaay too often. There is no middle ground.
kjpmi t1_j1vfprf wrote
Reply to comment by This_Username_42 in do we really believe aliens can decode the golden records by Calm-Confidence8429
In hundreds of thousands of years when they actually pass any potentially habitable star systems, they will have no longer been able to broadcast any signals for hundreds of thousands of years.
kjpmi t1_j1vf9r6 wrote
Reply to comment by DrLongIsland in do we really believe aliens can decode the golden records by Calm-Confidence8429
Exactly. The hard part is recognizing it and intercepting it, not deciphering it.
kjpmi t1_j1v2k14 wrote
Reply to comment by Adeldor in do we really believe aliens can decode the golden records by Calm-Confidence8429
The odds that an intelligent alien race could even intercept it are remote. Think about Omouamua (however you spell that). Chances are an intelligent race wouldn’t detect the Voyager crafts AND be able to realize that they might not be natural until well after they were millions and millions of miles past their planet.
kjpmi t1_j0wa66l wrote
Why does the 5 star Grilled Cheese (3rd from last) not even have any cheese in it!? That’s not a grilled cheese at that point.
kjpmi t1_j0w9z1n wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in [OC] Breakdown of ingredients in popular grilled cheese recipes by ns0
The 5 star rated Grilled Cheese (third from last) doesn’t even have any damn cheese in it!
kjpmi OP t1_iyd7556 wrote
Reply to comment by RoosterCogburns2957 in Artemis 1 at its furthest point in its moon orbit, about 268,000 miles from earth. by kjpmi
Here you go my friend. There are resources out there to find the mental health treatment you need. You are never alone. You just need to be willing to seek help.
kjpmi OP t1_iyd5z05 wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Artemis 1 at its furthest point in its moon orbit, about 268,000 miles from earth. by kjpmi
Okay I’ve wasted enough time engaging with you. I hope you get the help that you need. Truly I do. Good luck.
kjpmi OP t1_iyd3zqv wrote
Reply to comment by RoosterCogburns2957 in Artemis 1 at its furthest point in its moon orbit, about 268,000 miles from earth. by kjpmi
Research does not equal watching flat earth and moon hoax YouTube videos.
If you don’t have good critical thinking skills then you’re unable to filter out the bullshit. You’re gullible. You fall for dumb ass conspiracy theories.
kjpmi OP t1_iyaifrx wrote
Reply to comment by RoosterCogburns2957 in Artemis 1 at its furthest point in its moon orbit, about 268,000 miles from earth. by kjpmi
You sound thoroughly crazy. Just letting you know. Have a good day.
kjpmi OP t1_iyagyu5 wrote
Reply to comment by RoosterCogburns2957 in Artemis 1 at its furthest point in its moon orbit, about 268,000 miles from earth. by kjpmi
How about not worshiping anyone? Including god/Jesus who isn’t real either.
kjpmi OP t1_iya3mla wrote
Reply to comment by clichesaurus in Artemis 1 at its furthest point in its moon orbit, about 268,000 miles from earth. by kjpmi
They weren’t aiming to hit it lol.
It’s in an orbit around the moon.
And I think more of our tax dollars should go to NASA and science in general. A very small part of the federal budget is set aside for this stuff as it is.
kjpmi OP t1_iy9ry96 wrote
Reply to comment by ReallyEvilRob in Artemis 1 at its furthest point in its moon orbit, about 268,000 miles from earth. by kjpmi
From this perspective the moon is 45,000 miles away and the earth is much further at 268,000 miles away.
So yeah, things look smaller the further away they get.
kjpmi OP t1_iy9rni1 wrote
Reply to comment by wiggle-biscuits in Artemis 1 at its furthest point in its moon orbit, about 268,000 miles from earth. by kjpmi
I think it’s 45,000 miles past the moon.
kjpmi OP t1_iy9h4e9 wrote
Reply to comment by ZoeperJ in Artemis 1 at its furthest point in its moon orbit, about 268,000 miles from earth. by kjpmi
You already did so thank you! But it’s not like it’s some mystery or super hard to find out.
kjpmi OP t1_iy9fse6 wrote
Reply to comment by ZoeperJ in Artemis 1 at its furthest point in its moon orbit, about 268,000 miles from earth. by kjpmi
I would hope that the majority of the world can use google and convert it in about 5 seconds if they felt curious.
kjpmi OP t1_iy9e8uf wrote
Reply to comment by ZoeperJ in Artemis 1 at its furthest point in its moon orbit, about 268,000 miles from earth. by kjpmi
Psst. They’re both the same distance here in the real world. 😉
kjpmi OP t1_iy8f1cp wrote
Reply to comment by Raspberries-Are-Evil in Artemis 1 at its furthest point in its moon orbit, about 268,000 miles from earth. by kjpmi
Good question. I would like to know too. Its moon orbit is larger than Apollo orbits were. But I don’t know why.
kjpmi OP t1_iy8erxk wrote
Reply to comment by ithinkitsthis in Artemis 1 at its furthest point in its moon orbit, about 268,000 miles from earth. by kjpmi
I would imagine it’s due to the contrast/exposure of the image.
In order to keep the spacecraft and the earth and moon from being completely washed out in the image you lose the visibility of the stars.
The sun is extremely bright in space.
kjpmi OP t1_iy8deht wrote
Reply to comment by Spartan2470 in Artemis 1 at its furthest point in its moon orbit, about 268,000 miles from earth. by kjpmi
Cool. Thanks!
kjpmi OP t1_iy8b6dl wrote
Reply to comment by BurkeWood in Artemis 1 at its furthest point in its moon orbit, about 268,000 miles from earth. by kjpmi
Haha
kjpmi OP t1_iy858wb wrote
Reply to Artemis 1 at its furthest point in its moon orbit, about 268,000 miles from earth. by kjpmi
I think this is just such a cool picture. Wanted more people to see it.
Here’s the blog link where the image is from if anyone is interested. https://blogs.nasa.gov/artemis/2022/11/28/artemis-i-flight-day-13-orion-goes-the-max-distance/
kjpmi t1_jcc8aiv wrote
Reply to comment by Bbrhuft in Radon is a monatomic gas, but its decay products are solids. After a decay, what happens to the individual atoms of the daughter elements? Do they stay suspended in the atmosphere or slowly rain out? by foodtower
You can test your furnace air filter after it has been collecting dust for a while, with a Geiger counter with the right probe.
Even if you don’t have a radon problem, you will detect a slightly higher decay count compared to background.