you mean.... .... .... .... .... .... ....
Yes, that's it. I can hear them. Constantly, never stopping. You couldn't make them stop, of course. Hehehah!
you mean.... .... .... .... .... .... ....
How would a space program develop on the Earth-like moon of a gas giant?
How would a space program develop on the Earth-like moon of a gas giant?
It should be pretty obvious that the worlds are round, spinning on their axes, and spinning around the gas giant - unlike our one tidally locked moon, where you can't tell whether you are the centre of the universe or not without looking closely.I would find it more interesting to see how mythology and religion would develop in such a place. Bonus points if the gas giant has an "eye" like Jupiter... :lol:
I would find it more interesting to see how mythology and religion would develop in such a place. Bonus points if the gas giant has an "eye" like Jupiter... :lol:
Our school really needs to gettogether, school year 2012-2013 was the worst year i had, the chemistry teachers kept getting replaced by a new one, Because of this there was some topics that the old teacher left that the new one didn't even teach us, and worse it was included in the exams. We could have stu(died) but there was some topics that the teacher said that wasn't in our books. :facepalm:
Depends on the distance, but launching interplanetary probes would be more difficult. Since you have to both escape the gravity of the moon AND the parent planet.
True, but if the orbit was high enough, what about using the parent planet for a sling?
I think that there would be a lot more work on an "interplanetary" space program to explore the other moons, which would not need as much dV as it would to go to, say, Mars.
As for using the primary of the subsystem: depart downwell, and burn at periapsis relative to the gas giant. Boom, you've just multiplied your dV for a given fuel supply.
Earlier ones weren't, and they got cooked. Galilieo was almost lost to melted tapes after a hit from a CME while headed to Jupiter, IIRC. Currently, they use shielded circut runs and, at least on Juno, a large "vault" for the sensitive electronics if it's truly critical. However, most spacecraft still aren't heavily hardened against radiation... it's too heavy.
However, if life did evolve in such an environment, perhaps they would have a much higher resistance to radiation.
How would a space program develop on the Earth-like moon of a gas giant?