I really don't understand the low view numbers. This looks just like other science videos getting millions of views. Is it just the algorithm hating you? Seems that way because this should be way more popular.
This was super interesting, I'd never heard of shuttle glow before. Thanks Dr. Dainis and Reactions team :] Though, heads up, it seems someone made a typo in the description and wrote Danis instead of Dainis.
We suddenly feel incredibly validated about the amount of time we spend on the YT description-also super glad you enjoyed the video☺️ Space is a wild frontier.
- 7:20 That's a typo (or ambiguous wording). NO is nitric-oxide, N₂O is nitrous-oxide (laughing gas), NO₂ is nitrogen-dioxide. - 8:52 They also have to deal with just physical damage. Space isn't very dense, but even the occasional microscopic particle of dust traveling at supersonic speeds can impart enough force to do significant damage. I imagine the car (or the Voyagers) floating through space and over millennia becoming swiss-cheese. 😕
Splash space debris into the Australian National Enviro-whiner Exclusion Zone. Despite being trajectory-aimed at Point Nemo ("The Call of Cthulhu," H. P. Lovecraft - *no coincidence!*), Skylab scored an 11 July 1979 re-entry hit on the Shire of Esperance (-33.861, 121.892). NASA refused to pay the $(AUS)400 littering fine. Olly olly oxen free! Drop 'em if you've got 'em!
Just imagine, a few million years from now, long after we are extinct as a species, some advanced alien culture is going to discover a tesla jalopy drifting in space...
It's a mispronunciation not a factual error. Micrometre is the correct SI unit designation and in American English the unit and the instrument are spelled the same but pronounced differently. Micron is a common name but not the official name (similar to calling a kilogram a kilo).