He isn't wrong, if china came out and said "Hey we are gonna go to mars and prove our space program is better than Nasa ever was." we would try to go to Mars first lol.
@Dorn Il-Khan If the russians were shooting people up into space before they knew what space was and can do. The Chinese can do that with a handful of villages, some labor and a lot of explosions.
Interesting fact, Helium 3 is used to create Nuclear Fusion (which is a FAR cleaner and safer alternative to Nuclear Fission). It's speculated that 25 tons of Helium 3 (which is a LOT) can power all of Northern America for an entire year. The Earth has very little Helium 3, barely enough to run tests. The moon though, has more than 1 million metric ton of Helium 3 on the surface (just the surface).
@@TheycallmeHatGuy I mean Yeah There’s not really anything in the ocean that can get you if you don’t live anywhere near the ocean There’s plenty in space that can get you anywhere you are
Artificial gravity isn't good... you're basically in a centrifuge. Your body doesn't like that at all. Even at a large scale it's not really a good idea. I know, buzzkill...
@@chrisakaschulbus4903 Depends on how large of a scale youre talking about. Also depends on how long people working under artificial gravity. You can work a month in this style of artificial gravity and the negative effect would be negligible at worst (in a large scale, bigger than what we currently have but not scifi levels)
You can simulate gravity by spinning the ship, but it needs to have a large diameter to prevent motion sickness. "2001: A Space Odyssey" starts with a large spinning space station that's probably realistic enough. As for sex, I've heard in zero-G environments, men have trouble performing due to blood pressure issues. Without gravity, your body sends blood to the head, away from the lower body. Also, after months, your heart shrinks and less blood gets to extremities. Additionally, zero-G environment causes testosterone levels to drop. So it's not outright impossible, but probably awkward and difficult.
Now I kinda want an open forum/debate about space-shagging. I'm thinking it would be fun for a while, but you'd have to maneuver like in a Sonic 2 water level to not constantly crash in to sharp edges, spikes, robots, etc..
I'm Australian but this is the first I've ever heard of John Batman in my life. To be fair though, I don't get out much, and didn't pay much attention in school.
I firmly believe the human that goes in the space capsule for the aliens should be James Corden. I can think of no better ambassador for our species to keep them all far away from us for the rest of time.
So, one little correction to the gravity discussion at the end. The International Space Station does actually have gravity. It's nowhere near high enough to be unaffected by earth's gravity. However, the reason astronauts living on it appear weightless while on the ISS is because it's in a state of freefall, rapidly falling to the earth.
I feel like it will still be a long while before we're colonizing the moon or Mars. So many things have to go right and so many things can go horribly wrong to make it seem much more impossible. It would definitely cost a lot of lives and money to pull it off.
@@chrisakaschulbus4903 What does that even mean? Is it not a good idea for humanity to start looking for other places for the future? What about overpopulation? What's the issue if other planets in our vicinity don't have life? What are we infecting? Are you suggesting we just stay put until we make ourselves go extinct?
@@Providence.. "Are you suggesting we just stay put until we make ourselves go extinct?" Uhm yes...? Because what does anything need less of? Humanity and all it's great characteristics. Like greed, wars and literally the damage of global warming we have to fix because it was caused by "the mighty and strong human". If you think we need this on any other planet, i ask you, what gives us the right to do that?
@@chrisakaschulbus4903 Biology, that is our right. We are simply doing what any animal who would have evolved to our level of sentience would do, spreading further and further because that's what evolution demands.
@@chrisakaschulbus4903 And anyway, if you haven't realized in your misanthropic day dream, good and morals are also inventions of the great humanity, the reason you dislike things like war and greed is the morals made by the same humans, you are a hypocrite.
Gravity is one of the forces in the universe that we have yet to figure out. Gravity holds the answers to a lot of our physics questions. If we ever DO figure out gravity, we'll be able to do a lot of that sci-fi stuff you see in tv/movies.
There's a difference between figuring something out and using it in scifi ways. What we DO already know about gravity kinda rules out those possibilities. As far as we can see gravity only comes from mass, and it's only positive.
This is super late, but Batman is a last name 100%. I went to school with a "Kane Batman," which is even more ironic considering Michael Caine ended up being Alfred in the Nolan trilogy, after he was already born lol
Bruh, space shagging for a few weeks would turn the spaceship into a giant snow globe. Y’all can’t handle it. Only me and my woman get to enjoy space shagging.
Zero g fun times would be entirely possible. Astronauts have to exercise for like 4 hours a day, and have to wear a harness so they don't float off the treadmill or whatever. So it's possible, just a tad bit awkward I imagine.
Oh the harness is used to anchor them to the machines they're using, they provide enough resistance to make sure the muscles are properly being exerted.
You can't actually get to the speed of light, you can continuously accelerate, but that acceleration will become lesser and lesser as you approach the speed of light, so you can never actually reach it.
The ocean turning into a BIGGER ocean with terrifying creatures is basically what Hunter x Hunter is exploring right now. I know it's way too long to cover on your channel but I suggest it for sure. The 2011 anime adaptation is the best anime. I just wish it didn't take to long to get into the good stuff.
I love when people talk about colonizing mars it never comes up that this will also mean the first murder there at some point. The first racially motivated crime. The first war. That part of humanity won't vanish when we throw a sample of it onto some other planet.
The main problem with the space elevator is the base materials for the structure. There are quite a few solutions that would make it easier like having multiple anchors instead of the typical depiction of it being just a literal tower. Another solution to make it possible would be to have liquid or something inside the columns, moving constantly to make it more stable. The chinese are now experimenting with growing food on the tiangong and soon foundry experiments, hell they already have a functioning microwave up there, while in the ISS they are still heating up water to have warm meals which take at least 30 minutes. Anyways, right now it seems more plausible to just build a moon base with a foundry and bring back asteroid to mine and process them in said base, rather than just keep building rockets and spending billions to send them into space with small crews and supplies.
@@rRekko Yep multiple ancors would be the way to go. I also agree that is the cheaper and better option. Don't they still have issues with the radiation and atrophy with extended duration?
But astronomers believe that rogue planets could be a thing so that first rule of what makes a planet a planet is already contradictory to that. I guess "used to orbit a star" counts?
The cern idea was actually not that stupid. „Magnetic Engines“ are seriously being worked on. Obviously i cant explain anything but i remember i had it in college for a semester.
Yes, we even had stuff like that huge space slingshot whatever happened to it. But it's all to launch satellites and stuff that can survive the crazy g force needed for those to work
The USA did not defeat the USSR in the space race ..... The USSR sent the first man into space, invented and sent the first satellite into space, created the first space station, landed the first artificial device. All America did was send the first man to the moon, when the USSR was already literally mastering space with might and main
I like OrdinaryThings subtle jab at Ishowspeed at 18:02 when he pulls up and says, "You don't have any other choice." At least I kinda interpreted it that way. Maybe I'm wrong. Also, I'm not sure if you checked out Ordinary things new video on the ApoCOALypse. It's pretty good and very informative about the coal industry.
Listen, im not the type to think about or care about the sex life of a couple of youtubers, BUT, your space talk made me feel like yall have never seen/had water sex. Its a different thing. Its a whole different kind of experience.
@@gnarlynikki Never thought about the bloodflow issue before lol. Though, the vascular system is a closed pump environment, I cant imagine its too much different.
He isn't wrong, if china came out and said "Hey we are gonna go to mars and prove our space program is better than Nasa ever was." we would try to go to Mars first lol.
Honestly, so true
I mean better than where my tax dollars currently go. I'm on board.
Or put all that money into making a movie faking the space landing, like last time
Never underestimate the mountains people will move over pride
@Dorn Il-Khan If the russians were shooting people up into space before they knew what space was and can do. The Chinese can do that with a handful of villages, some labor and a lot of explosions.
2:45
I remain bewildered he didn’t take the opportunity to say “In the asteroid field.”
Interesting fact, Helium 3 is used to create Nuclear Fusion (which is a FAR cleaner and safer alternative to Nuclear Fission). It's speculated that 25 tons of Helium 3 (which is a LOT) can power all of Northern America for an entire year.
The Earth has very little Helium 3, barely enough to run tests.
The moon though, has more than 1 million metric ton of Helium 3 on the surface (just the surface).
Wait
Did he think that space ships have gravity because space ships in movies have gravity? 🤣
Yeah dude for some reason I thought that shit existed. 🤣
@@TheycallmeHatGuy I mean
I get it if you don’t follow anything that’s actually going on in space
@UnlicensedOkie I am legitimately afraid of space lol
@@TheycallmeHatGuy I mean
Yeah
There’s not really anything in the ocean that can get you if you don’t live anywhere near the ocean
There’s plenty in space that can get you anywhere you are
@@TheycallmeHatGuy it exists, it just aint even close to practical yet. The best system is centrifuges, and they aint good.
Artificial Gravity sounds like those training rooms Bulma made for Vegeta that create artificial x amount Earths natural Gravity fields.
If only. Right now our best artificial gravity is literally a big ass spinning room that uses the fake force of centrifuge to hold you down.
@@zeallust8542 are you saying that we could build HALO in real life ?
@@Dan_Kanerva Yes but not as a super weapon
Artificial gravity isn't good... you're basically in a centrifuge. Your body doesn't like that at all. Even at a large scale it's not really a good idea. I know, buzzkill...
@@chrisakaschulbus4903 Depends on how large of a scale youre talking about. Also depends on how long people working under artificial gravity. You can work a month in this style of artificial gravity and the negative effect would be negligible at worst (in a large scale, bigger than what we currently have but not scifi levels)
"Space. What do you know about space?"
That it's the final frontier. 😆
You can simulate gravity by spinning the ship, but it needs to have a large diameter to prevent motion sickness. "2001: A Space Odyssey" starts with a large spinning space station that's probably realistic enough. As for sex, I've heard in zero-G environments, men have trouble performing due to blood pressure issues. Without gravity, your body sends blood to the head, away from the lower body. Also, after months, your heart shrinks and less blood gets to extremities. Additionally, zero-G environment causes testosterone levels to drop. So it's not outright impossible, but probably awkward and difficult.
They are actually yeeting satellites into orbit now with what is basically a big spinning wheel 😛
Now I kinda want an open forum/debate about space-shagging. I'm thinking it would be fun for a while, but you'd have to maneuver like in a Sonic 2 water level to not constantly crash in to sharp edges, spikes, robots, etc..
"Mars has been China since ancient time."
Issac Arthur has a RUclips channel where he talks about all kinds of space and futurism topics.
Hell yeah bruther
I'm Australian but this is the first I've ever heard of John Batman in my life.
To be fair though, I don't get out much, and didn't pay much attention in school.
Big problem with artificial gravity is coming up with the power to make what we know could work actually work at a scale to be usable.
I firmly believe the human that goes in the space capsule for the aliens should be James Corden. I can think of no better ambassador for our species to keep them all far away from us for the rest of time.
Isn't it one one the moon's of endor that the ewoks live on?
So, one little correction to the gravity discussion at the end. The International Space Station does actually have gravity. It's nowhere near high enough to be unaffected by earth's gravity. However, the reason astronauts living on it appear weightless while on the ISS is because it's in a state of freefall, rapidly falling to the earth.
I feel like it will still be a long while before we're colonizing the moon or Mars. So many things have to go right and so many things can go horribly wrong to make it seem much more impossible. It would definitely cost a lot of lives and money to pull it off.
But why infect other planets with humanity? Isn't one enough?
@@chrisakaschulbus4903 What does that even mean? Is it not a good idea for humanity to start looking for other places for the future? What about overpopulation? What's the issue if other planets in our vicinity don't have life? What are we infecting? Are you suggesting we just stay put until we make ourselves go extinct?
@@Providence.. "Are you suggesting we just stay put until we make ourselves go extinct?" Uhm yes...? Because what does anything need less of? Humanity and all it's great characteristics. Like greed, wars and literally the damage of global warming we have to fix because it was caused by "the mighty and strong human".
If you think we need this on any other planet, i ask you, what gives us the right to do that?
@@chrisakaschulbus4903
Biology, that is our right.
We are simply doing what any animal who would have evolved to our level of sentience would do, spreading further and further because that's what evolution demands.
@@chrisakaschulbus4903
And anyway, if you haven't realized in your misanthropic day dream, good and morals are also inventions of the great humanity, the reason you dislike things like war and greed is the morals made by the same humans, you are a hypocrite.
Gravity is one of the forces in the universe that we have yet to figure out. Gravity holds the answers to a lot of our physics questions. If we ever DO figure out gravity, we'll be able to do a lot of that sci-fi stuff you see in tv/movies.
There's a difference between figuring something out and using it in scifi ways. What we DO already know about gravity kinda rules out those possibilities. As far as we can see gravity only comes from mass, and it's only positive.
Oh I was just binging your incognito mode things lol, that was a coincidence
Banging in space probably exists on a certain part of the internet
This is super late, but Batman is a last name 100%. I went to school with a "Kane Batman," which is even more ironic considering Michael Caine ended up being Alfred in the Nolan trilogy, after he was already born lol
So Nikki doesn't like sand? Because it's coarse and rough and irritating and it gets everywhere?
Their imaginations are somehow...quiet frightening 😅
Y'all should watch space is bigger than you think and the ocean is deeper than you think I think it's by the infographics Channel
You can create some form of artificial Gravity by using transipical Force
Bruh, space shagging for a few weeks would turn the spaceship into a giant snow globe. Y’all can’t handle it. Only me and my woman get to enjoy space shagging.
Zero g fun times would be entirely possible. Astronauts have to exercise for like 4 hours a day, and have to wear a harness so they don't float off the treadmill or whatever.
So it's possible, just a tad bit awkward I imagine.
Oh the harness is used to anchor them to the machines they're using, they provide enough resistance to make sure the muscles are properly being exerted.
Astronauts do suffer from bone loss and density
You can't actually get to the speed of light, you can continuously accelerate, but that acceleration will become lesser and lesser as you approach the speed of light, so you can never actually reach it.
The ocean turning into a BIGGER ocean with terrifying creatures is basically what Hunter x Hunter is exploring right now. I know it's way too long to cover on your channel but I suggest it for sure. The 2011 anime adaptation is the best anime. I just wish it didn't take to long to get into the good stuff.
I love when people talk about colonizing mars it never comes up that this will also mean the first murder there at some point. The first racially motivated crime. The first war.
That part of humanity won't vanish when we throw a sample of it onto some other planet.
The space elevator has a lot of problems despite being a good idea. It would cost so much and it'd have to have a lot of heavy metal anchors or wires.
The main problem with the space elevator is the base materials for the structure. There are quite a few solutions that would make it easier like having multiple anchors instead of the typical depiction of it being just a literal tower. Another solution to make it possible would be to have liquid or something inside the columns, moving constantly to make it more stable.
The chinese are now experimenting with growing food on the tiangong and soon foundry experiments, hell they already have a functioning microwave up there, while in the ISS they are still heating up water to have warm meals which take at least 30 minutes. Anyways, right now it seems more plausible to just build a moon base with a foundry and bring back asteroid to mine and process them in said base, rather than just keep building rockets and spending billions to send them into space with small crews and supplies.
@@rRekko Yep multiple ancors would be the way to go. I also agree that is the cheaper and better option. Don't they still have issues with the radiation and atrophy with extended duration?
I wouldn't want to share a space suit with anyone, but if I did, I'd want to be in the back regardless of gender lol
god theres sooo many great space movies you missing out you should watch event horizion its a great family movie
Honestly it's fun for everyone
But astronomers believe that rogue planets could be a thing so that first rule of what makes a planet a planet is already contradictory to that. I guess "used to orbit a star" counts?
The cern idea was actually not that stupid. „Magnetic Engines“ are seriously being worked on. Obviously i cant explain anything but i remember i had it in college for a semester.
Yes, we even had stuff like that huge space slingshot whatever happened to it. But it's all to launch satellites and stuff that can survive the crazy g force needed for those to work
Did ordinary things mean twinkies and women or twinks? 😂
The USA did not defeat the USSR in the space race ..... The USSR sent the first man into space, invented and sent the first satellite into space, created the first space station, landed the first artificial device. All America did was send the first man to the moon, when the USSR was already literally mastering space with might and main
Hello
I like OrdinaryThings subtle jab at Ishowspeed at 18:02 when he pulls up and says, "You don't have any other choice." At least I kinda interpreted it that way. Maybe I'm wrong. Also, I'm not sure if you checked out Ordinary things new video on the ApoCOALypse. It's pretty good and very informative about the coal industry.
Listen, im not the type to think about or care about the sex life of a couple of youtubers, BUT, your space talk made me feel like yall have never seen/had water sex. Its a different thing. Its a whole different kind of experience.
wellllll, actually (had to 😅) blood flows differently in space and makes *certain things* difficult to achieve in space.
@@gnarlynikki Never thought about the bloodflow issue before lol. Though, the vascular system is a closed pump environment, I cant imagine its too much different.
@@gnarlynikki space viagra
12:08 well..this didn’t age well