Science is ridiculous
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wrote on 18 Jul 2023, 20:09 last edited by
Do we REALLY need to know if tardigrades can survive this? Where in nature would this ever, ever happen?
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wrote on 18 Jul 2023, 20:13 last edited by
I dunno, that's interesting. They can survive in space and in volcanoes, but not extreme acceleration.
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wrote on 18 Jul 2023, 20:22 last edited by
I wonder how many Gs that is.
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wrote on 18 Jul 2023, 20:48 last edited by
But if tardigrades can't survive the pressures of a collision with our moon, it's unlikely they could survive a meteorite impact with another planet, the study authors wrote.
That sounds kind of shortsighted to me.
There is enough junk floating around that could carry and perpetuate these things. It doesn't all collide at huge speeds, there might be enough glancing blows between space junk to carry these guys all over the place.
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I dunno, that's interesting. They can survive in space and in volcanoes, but not extreme acceleration.
wrote on 19 Jul 2023, 12:10 last edited by@Jolly said in Science is ridiculous:
I dunno, that's interesting. They can survive in space and in volcanoes, but not extreme
acceleration.deceleration.FIFY
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wrote on 19 Jul 2023, 12:21 last edited by
Nothing wrong with that kind of science. It's good to know these kinds of things.
If you want to worry about wasted money for science, look at gender studies...
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wrote on 19 Jul 2023, 12:25 last edited by
So we can colonize the solar system with tardigrades.