- cross-posted to:
- astronomy@mander.xyz
- hackernews@derp.foo
- cross-posted to:
- astronomy@mander.xyz
- hackernews@derp.foo
India fails to re-establish communication with its Moon probe::undefined
India fails to re-establish communication with its Moon probe::undefined
How did NASA handle the comms with Curiosity? Maan you’ve got to appreciate NASAs engineuity
Mars has an atmosphere and a more typical day length. It doesn’t get that cold there.
The length of a day on the moon is 29.5 earth days, and there’s no atmosphere.
The rover spent 14 days *in total darkness and cold
Electronics don’t survive that. Weird shit happens when it gets that cold. Not to mention something simple like thermal expansion breaking a trace.
Er, no. Absolute zero is -273.15°C (-459.67°F) while the moon at its coldest is about -173.15°C (-297.67°F) so you’re about 100°C off.
Whoops. You’re right…F and C confusion.
Ha, I do it all the time as a Canadian living in the States.
As someone who grew up in Canada during the transition to metric, I think I might go into an infinite loop if I moved to the US. Ok the temp is 72 f which is 22 C which is 72 f which is…
Yeah. I’m used to all the scientific stuff being metric, and only conventional for stuff that doesn’t matter. I saw -270 when I looked it up and thought “that’s about 3 K, I guess that’s feasible”.
I do think unit fights are stupid, though. Units are about communicating and understanding.
I learned that DC fast chargers are around 250 kW. I can tell you how fast that could boil a cubic meter of water or all kinds of science things, but that’s not meaningful to me.
I can then tell you that that’s enough to trip the big breaker on five houses. That’s a bit more meaningful to me, but how much is a house.
Now, how many ovens set to max is that? I know how hot an oven is. It’s more than 80 ovens. That’s a much better unit, but I still can’t really understand 80 ovens.