For All Mankind | Surviving A Solar Storm On The Moon
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- Опубликовано: 9 июн 2022
- Molly goes out in the solar storm to rescue her colleague Wubbo.
From Season 2 Episode 1 "Every Little Thing" - Nearly a decade later, technology and lunar exploration have taken huge strides -- but a solar storm threatens the astronauts on Jamestown.
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About For All Mankind: In an alternative version of 1969, the Soviet Union beats the United States to the Moon, and the space race continues on for decades with still grander challenges and goals.
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For All Mankind | Surviving A Solar Storm On The Moon
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This TV Show deserves more attention and recognition. It is honestly one of the TV Shows out there, if not, the best one - easily!
Sadly it's on AppleTV as far as I know where I am.
The show being exclusive to Apple TV is what is limiting the audience
If the show was streamed on Netflix or Hulu it would gain a significant audience.
Molly Cobb was an absolute hero in this series.
It's hard to believe that with everything going on in season 3 it still hasn't topped this scene
You might not have agreed when you wrote the comment, but Episode 9 of Season 3 might have change your mind.
This was as scary as the core breach scene in Chernobyl.
The finest definition of bravery this scene represents !
Funny to know that wubbo ockels was born and lived in the same village as I did, pretty cool to see the Dutch flag on his suit
I love how pretty much nobody believed her for a second when she said she didn't go out to save him.
I'm going to miss Molly, no b.s, cojones as big as the moon. Renaming JSC after her was a nice tribute.
If people knew everything she did for her country, for the planet, she would be considered one of the bravest woman in our history.
In this fictional time line, sure
No doubt people would consider Margo a hero too, if they only knew what she has done, I will not say much more because honestly I don't know who has seen all seasons and episodes since this one yet so I will not spoil it for you
It's just you, human. You and the layers of cloth and metal and your nerves, your heart and your spirit standing out there in the deadliest desert we have ever stood upon - you alone stand in the sun and eternal night - it is in your hands.
For all mankind it’s a great outer space show from blue pictures television.
Rest In Peace Molly Cobb
She survived this
But had pretty bad "health issues" after returning
Molly is a beast. To all scenarists and directors out there who desperately trying and failing image of "strong woman", look this is how it's done. Can't imagine the courage to willingly walk under a stream of radiation that make moon dust boil.
Her and Ed are the best characters by a long shot. I hope we see more of her in Star City.
You gotta go out. You don't gotta come back. -Unofficial motto of the US Coast Guard
No you gotta want to come back and you might have to fight for it
hauntingly beautiful motto. mine is "the things we do,that others may live" as a member of the rescue community
sound, soundeffects, tense - just f…n perfect !!
1:18 Jebediah Kerman realizes that they told him to go on EVA to save weight on the lander.
Cool sound effect a continuous geiger counter sound on the audio track.
Credo sia la radio.
1:57. You go girl!!
Glad she's alone so I know that's her with the glare shield down.
Do you think if Molly would havemleft her solar shield down, the radiation wouldn’t have caused blindness?
She lifted it only for a moment
It wouldn't have mattered. The visor is more like a souped up pair of shades, because in space you don't have the atmosphere to scatter light and make it less intense. It wouldn't do much for even like x-ray or gamma emissions, but even then, this is proton radiation. Were talking heavy iozing radiation, like the proton beams in particle accelerators. It's like being showered by trillions subatomic bullets doing 0.3C, the suit isn't shielding much at all. That's why they were told to shelter. Put as much mass between them and the source.
@@popmannn They were lucky that their suit didn't breach due to erosion and life support didn't malfunction.
@@8749236Radiation doesn’t usually destroy pressure vessels.
Theoretically they could experience neutron embrittlement, but they’d be LONG dead by then. Or they could be heated to the point of loss of structural integrity, but, again, long dead.
Electronic malfunctions are the equivalent failure they should have been concerned about.
And what did their dosimeters show? That's the most important part !
She took hers off before she left so that it would stay green. To protect her future career prospects, but I think maybe also because she just didn't want to know how bad it was. The badge of the man she rescued was red. I think they said later that he had received 200 rem.
@@toddjh Fair enough.
Is there the apollo/skylab suit
Excuse me for being a bit dumb, but don't you weigh 1/6 of of normal weight on the moon? Shouldn't that make it easier for Molly to carry Wubbo? Or is mass still mass and he still weighs the same as on earth when you pick him up? Again, excuse the stupidity
Mass IS still mass, but that's a pretty marginal amount of extra force needed. Most of the work you're doing on earth dragging something is fighting gravity. If you don't have to contend with gravity, normal people can move human-sized masses around using, say, a pallet jack without much exertion. (starting and stopping takes a small amount of effort, but inertia does the job most of the way) The MUCH bigger problem is they're both wearing EVA suits. Precisely because gravity is much lower off earth, those things are 120kg or more. That's easily 300kg+ in extra mass she needs to move and she still needs to contend with about 50kg of weight from gravity still. That's pretty strenuous.
May have quicker / easier to upright the rover and then use that?
Wait a minute. She shouldn’t be struggling that much with that guy. Especially if she’s on the moon. The moons gravity is only 1/6 that of earths. So if that guy were away, let’s say 250 pounds on earth he’s only 40 pounds on the moon. So she shouldn’t be needing to struggle as much as she is. I mean I admit yes, carrying 40 pounds is not easy but it’s not so difficult that it looks like this.
I understand that this is obviously a TV show and they you know do this kind of stuff to make it more dramatic. But regardless, the commander shouldn’t have had to like I said, struggle as much as she did pulling him along.
Yeah, it does seem like it should be a bit easier than that. But even though his weight would be dramatically reduced, his mass would be unchanged. That would throw off the balance and make it a bit awkward to carry him.
@@toddjh Agreed.
I was going to say that a space suit can weight around 110lbs, but even then, your point still stands.
tbf, she's literally getting cooked from the inside by radiation, and pulling 140 pounds worth of wubbo, on your back, in the shittily balanced a7 is a bad, bad time.
Great show, but im done with it. Season 4 was too much of a giant leap.
How so?
How?
There was no slowdown in the space race, no periods of things being shelved.
why are there waves on the moon? not how solar wind works. if this show was a little more realistic I'd be a lot more interested.
This wasn't regular solar wind. This was protonic radiation which is positively charged. Lunar dust is negatively charged. You see the waves from charged field lines and the dust being kicked up due to magnetic fields.
@@seanspartan2023 it was also traveling one third the speed of light not the days that it would normally take to reach the moon
Actually ironically enough that's one of the more realistic aspects, this phenomenon has been seen irl by rovers on the moon. As the other commenter said, huge amounts of charged radiation from the sun hitting the moon causes magnetic fields which pull on the negatively charged regolith. Imagine having a strong magnet and waving it over little iron pebbles, that is basically what's happening here. NASA refers to it as "sandblasting" as the storms literally sandblast an area of the moon, moving up to 100,000-200,000 tons of lunar material over a two day CME event.
Maybe spend more time knowing what is and isn't inaccurate than saying a show isn't worth your time because of what you believe to be inaccuracies
Dunning-Kruger effect strikes again
Promoting nonscientific nonsense. Downvoted.
I dont get why shes struggling carrying her partner, its the moon. Even if his total weight was 500lbs on earth, thats still only 80 on the moon. She could realistically throw him like a frizbee.
It’s all about drama. Not realism
Il peso sarà anche ridotto dalla forza di gravità più bassa, ma conta alcune cose:
1) sia lei che wubbo indossano la tuta eva, che oltre ad essere pesante limita i movimenti.
2) sta trascinando wubbo "a peso morto", quindi carica tutto su di se.
Sarebbe stato facile se entrambi fossero stati senza tuta, ma quelle cose limitano i movimenti e pesano.
Please go pull 80 pounds for a mile after doing a mile sprint while getting fried by radiation, tell me if it's easy for you
@@jackturner8472 please go pull 220 lbs in a ruck for 9 days patrolling the mountains if Afghanistan. Been there, done that. Its a dumb movie and I was pointing out how poorly it was written.
I really disagree, I think you should give the series another chance. It's shortcomings are nothing compared to the amount of effort put into realism, and if character drama is your thing, the acting and writing for both are excellent.@@delningit7033