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ISS Discussion Thread


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5 hours ago, kerbiloid said:

power lifting in zero-g is a thing.

Well yes, because inertia is a thing. Energy will need to be expended to make mass A start moving over distance B and stopping again, and vice versa.

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2 hours ago, swjr-swis said:

Well yes, because inertia is a thing. Energy will need to be expended to make mass A start moving over distance B and stopping again, and vice versa.

Yeah, the sport will be to get Mass X from motionless at Point A to motionless at Point B as quickly as possible   

Zero-gee basketball would be interesting.  Zero-gee Ice hockey, um, maybe not

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20 minutes ago, StrandedonEarth said:

Yeah, the sport will be to get Mass X from motionless at Point A to motionless at Point B as quickly as possible   

Zero-gee basketball would be interesting.  Zero-gee Ice hockey, um, maybe not

I personally would be quite excited for handball. In zero G, there's potential for some real Magnus effect shenanigans.

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5 hours ago, StrandedonEarth said:

Zero-gee basketball would be interesting

They knew!

Spoiler

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mesoamerican_ballgame

Same good at any direction and angle.

Anybody here still wanting to say that they didn't have space contacts?

800px-Pok_ta_pok_ballgame_maya_indians_m

 

5 hours ago, StrandedonEarth said:

 Zero-gee Ice hockey, um, maybe not

Spoiler

Baseball_on_Lake_Mendota_ice_(2247442050

 

5 hours ago, Codraroll said:

I personally would be quite excited for handball. In zero G, there's potential for some real Magnus effect shenanigans.

EVA handball. 

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Ball games on the inside of a cylinder spinning to give artificial gravity would be fun, small enough that you could pass straight upwards to someone in the opposite side. The coriolis effect would do the head in of a poor earthbound human like me.

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  • 1 month later...
  • 1 month later...

1969.
LEM of Apollo-11 lands on the Moon. 
"That's one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind".

2011.
The parts of a LEO station module mockup are presented in the exhibition hall.
No assembled vessel. Start date is unknown. The station to dock them to is twenty years old, and ther's running a discussion if burn and sink it asap, or let it fly a decade more.
"Humanity's next step starts here."

The steps look somewhat exponential.

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On 10/13/2021 at 4:48 PM, tater said:

The Axiom modules are designed such that once they get enough of them on ISS, they can disconnect and fly free

Is it possible to have two massive stations (once separated) initiate in the same orbit and move on to orbits safe from each other? 

I would think that a bit fraught 

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15 minutes ago, JoeSchmuckatelli said:

Is it possible to have two massive stations (once separated) initiate in the same orbit and move on to orbits safe from each other? 

I would think that a bit fraught 

They have propulsion on Axiom.

Disconnect.

Leave ISS sphere like any Soyuz/Dragon/etc.

Raise apogee desired number of km (100?)

Circularize.

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