Nothing cool like this ever happens around Charlotte

December 01st, 2008 | Category: Geekery at its best!

…and now I am upset because I always miss the cool things!

The space shuttle Endeavor just returned the other day from its mission to deliver many things, including the new urine converter to make fresh water in space. As it reentered the atmosphere, it created a double sonic boom which frightened more than a few residents of California. There are tons of videos, some even showing the whole house shaking. Funny part is, if you aren’t a firefighter, that the emergency phone lines were flooded with calls because people thought an explosion had happened near them.

NASA needs to build a base outside of Charlotte. Case closed.

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Has NASA really watched too much Armageddon…

July 28th, 2008 | Category: Science

…or is it just a cover-up for their “Nuke the World” campaign?

Armageddon or Nuke the Enemy?

Alright, so most of my friends make fun of me for really liking Armageddon…the wonderful movie with Bruce Willis, Ben Affleck and Liv Tyler in which they take ocean platform oil drillers and throw them in outer space so they can drill in an asteroid that is expected to impact the Earth so they can plant nuclear bombs to split it in pieces to miss the earth.

Rusty Schweickart, a former astronaut, has spoken against NASA’s motives for their placing nuclear weapons in orbit to blow asteroids to smithereens if they get near the Earth. The government’s plans completely contradict the verdict that was arrived at in the Armageddon movie. Nuclear weapons will have very little impact on asteroids if fired when in space, so Schweickart claims that NASA (under pressure from our government) is really just planning on placing the bombs in space for future defensive launches. I thought those days were over and done with (at least when it comes to the USA).

Anyways, Schweickart’s group, the B612 Foundation, has a much more rational approach to protecting us from asteroids. It relies on building more powerful telescopes that can identify asteroids at a much earlier stage and then use probes or unmanned spacecraft to “nudge” the asteroids to miss the Earth. At a far enough distance, only a slight movement is needed to miss us by quite a bit.

Chalk one up for ex-NASA astronauts, and zip for NASA itself.

Retrieved from -Gizmodo-

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