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Seeing Earth From Space with Jordan Klepper & Nicole Stott - Cosmic Queries 

StarTalk
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What do you learn from going to space? On this episode, Neil deGrasse Tyson and guest co-host, comedian Jordan Klepper, answer patron questions about living in space with engineer and NASA astronaut, Nicole Stott. What’s the Overview Effect?
Do we have all we need to send humans to Mars already? If not, what are the things we haven’t figured out? We explore the plane of the solar system versus the plane of the galaxy. Can a human safely feel gravitational waves? Is there a scientific reason for the shape of The Enterprise? Neil explains why he wants things to look cool and how he envisions the future. Will we evolve past a need for design?
Next, we talk to Nicole Stott and she tells us all about going to space, astronaut hobbies, and why we should be living like space station crewmates on earth. Is it difficult to paint a watercolor in space? We discuss Nicole’s Space for Art Foundation and how she finds inspiration and power in the cosmos. Should we send more artists to space? What about satirical comedians? What does it feel like to look back on earth from space? Do you need different types of art materials in zero G? Nicole breaks down how she had to modify her painting for space and other lifestyle adjustments.
We discuss the progress of female engineers within NASA and advice for any young women trying to become an astronaut or engineer. What goes on in the body when it goes into space and comes back to earth? Find out what it feels like to feel gravity again. Discover how art can help make science more accessible for the blind, and what programs exist to educate using the different senses. What part of space travel could be made better? We discuss air pressure and strange habits that you pick up from being in space. All that plus, find out about Jordan’s close- and super real- friendship with Buzz Aldrin.
Thanks to our Patrons Elisa, terrell robinson, Adorak, Leo Azir Ra, Aaron Isaacson, Ian Konkle, and Josh Laurente & Emily McCadden for supporting us this week.
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About StarTalk:
Science meets pop culture on StarTalk! Astrophysicist & Hayden Planetarium director Neil deGrasse Tyson, his comic co-hosts, guest celebrities & scientists discuss astronomy, physics, and everything else about life in the universe. Keep Looking Up!
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26 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 479   
@sarinahart
@sarinahart 2 года назад
I’ve never seen Jordan Klepper as a guest host. He was my favorite so far
@oceanblue2386
@oceanblue2386 2 года назад
Neil just hearing you guys laugh on this show makes me laugh every night when I'm going to bed. That's very good for our mental health. Your show does many good things for many people besides just Science Education. ❤️. ❤️. ❤️
@peggywoods4327
@peggywoods4327 2 года назад
I'm so happy to see Klepper here! Having seen his other work I know he needed the break to be among (rational) thinking folks
@MemphiStig
@MemphiStig 2 года назад
i worry about the health of someone who spends so much time exposed to such raw stupidity, but i thank him for his sacrifice.
@erikhendrickson59
@erikhendrickson59 2 года назад
Lol so true. I did a little sort of experiment where I watched ONLY Fox News for a week every night, and the end of that seven days I was starting to question things like vaccine efficacy. And this was as someone going into it knowing ahead of time that I was watching propaganda.
@prodip170000
@prodip170000 2 года назад
Ni///
@brandontankersley8107
@brandontankersley8107 2 года назад
​@@erikhendrickson59 That's how brainwashing works. Drill the lies in every moment of the day. Mix in smidgen of factual information presented falsely and you have the Trump voter base.
@DraperJake
@DraperJake 2 года назад
Neil has spoken extensively about humans having a very primal connection to the stars, and this episode got into the emerging accomodations needed for blind astronomers. If someone without sight can feel the pull of the stars enough to get into this career then I have no idea what other proof we need to confirm our natural desire to understand space.
@justinmawi3745
@justinmawi3745 2 года назад
I love Klepper... More Klepper & Chuck
@1206mattdillon
@1206mattdillon 2 года назад
Having both would be hilarious!
@cwcordes
@cwcordes 2 года назад
Bill Shatner (Capt Kirk) became the poster child for Overview Effect this week . Great StarTalk!! Thanks for the overview.
@peppeddu
@peppeddu 2 года назад
I always thought the Enterprise had that shape to make efficient use of the space inside, not for aerodynamic reasons, besides, the warp engines had to be far away from the rest of the ship and the space dock had to be kept separate for safety reasons. Gene Roddenberry understood the need for good looking ships and rationality as well.
@KeljuIvan
@KeljuIvan 2 года назад
In Star Trek, there's also an example of the functional spaceship: the Borg Cube! It's just a big cube with no wings, thin sections or other useless vulnerabilities.
@bobd2659
@bobd2659 2 года назад
@@gamegenetix96 Specifically seen were the landing pods that Voyager had on its underbelly. The Enterprise on the other hand didn't do so well trying to land..."Which is why you never put a woman in charge" - Marina Sirtis.
@willie417
@willie417 2 года назад
@@bobd2659 I couldn't help it😀 the Enterprise is very large, Intrepid-class vessel capable of holding 200 crew members U.S.S. Voyager Intrepid Class NCC-74656 Dimensions : Length : 343 m Beam : 133 m Height : 66 m Decks : 15 Mass : 700,000 metric tons Crew : 141 U.S.S. Enterprise Galaxy Class NCC-1701-D Dimensions : Length: 642,5 meters Width: 467,0 meters Height: 137,5 meters Mass: 397805 metric tons Number of decks: 42 Crew (standard): 1012 Crew (maximum): 5000
@Squeedow
@Squeedow 2 года назад
@@bobd2659 Booo!!! lol
@isaackitone
@isaackitone 5 месяцев назад
But Voyager was also captained by a woman. Captain Katherine Janeway.
@blessedveteran
@blessedveteran Год назад
I love Chuck, but Jordan definitely is a great person to be alongside Neil ❤ Thank you for this!
@martinwettig8212
@martinwettig8212 2 года назад
Jordan Klepper! I really enjoy the variety of awesome people on Star Talk, it's brilliant!
@oahc1052
@oahc1052 2 года назад
Great show! Love the questions and the answers. I just want to comment on the difference between pressurization of a space station vs an airplane. The main reason why we don't pressurize airplanes to sea level pressures is that airplanes go through cycles of pressurization and depressurization constantly, which puts wear and tear on the fuselage, resulting in metal fatigue and other stresses. A space station is at constant pressure (ideally) and therefor suffers less of these stresses. I'm sure you could pressurize an airplane to sea level and it would handle that just fine, but it would greatly reduce the amount of pressurization cycles that it could handle before basically ripping apart. A fun fact, since Neil himself mentioned the new Boeing 787. It has larger windows because the skin of the fuselage is made from composites that are stronger than aluminium and also not very susceptible to fatigue stress. Because of this the cabin of the 787 is also pressurized to a much lower altitude.
@gpwgpw555
@gpwgpw555 2 года назад
I had to look it up. Commercial Aircraft are pressurized to 6000 ft. Non-pressurized aircraft can go to 10,000 to 15,000 feet without supplemental oxygen. I Wanted to fly from Oregon to Texas. I have heart disease and was concerned about flying. I drove to the top of Mt Hood to see what it was like. I did not make the trip.
@pavellambracht5823
@pavellambracht5823 2 года назад
Why would they make them go through the pressure cycles? What is the reason?
@oahc1052
@oahc1052 2 года назад
@@pavellambracht5823 The pressure cycle is simply the change in pressure over the course of a flight. They start at ground at some atmospheric pressure, then they go up to an altitude where the pressure is lower, to then land on the ground again where the pressure is higher again. These changes in pressure makes the skin of the fuselage expand and contract back and forth, and it makes the material bend and stretch by an ever so tiny amount, getting progressively weaker over time. So airplanes are rated at how many of these cycles they can fly before they need to be inspected for cracks.
@gpwgpw555
@gpwgpw555 2 года назад
@@pavellambracht5823 If you don't pressurize a high-flying plan, all the people on the plan would die without supplemental oxygen.
@pavellambracht5823
@pavellambracht5823 2 года назад
@@gpwgpw555 so when people say the pressurized plane, does it mean it is basically pumped with oxygen?
@denisenj7648
@denisenj7648 2 года назад
Neil once said that we went to the moon and discovered earth. We sent men to the moon and saw our planet as one whole, no map lines, and precious and fragile, and started the green movements and earth day etc., and realized we need to take care of our home.
@robertgraybeard3750
@robertgraybeard3750 2 года назад
Denise NJ - there is an excellent RU-vid video ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-CHMIfOecrlo.html *_The Overview Effect_*
@MikeG-nz8gt
@MikeG-nz8gt 2 года назад
Love some Star Talk! Keep them coming.
@seantlewis376
@seantlewis376 2 года назад
This is one of the best Cosmic Queries I have watched. Nicole Stott is a wonderful guest.
@brandonsteinbach4208
@brandonsteinbach4208 2 года назад
I can't get enough of cosmic queries.
@humanbeing-_-_-
@humanbeing-_-_- 2 года назад
Nicole Stott is one of my heroes. So excited y’all had her on! 🤩😁
@epicswirl
@epicswirl 2 года назад
*As an engineer I’m glad that you’re boosting my ego today Neil!*
@nHans
@nHans 2 года назад
Yup! He has acknowledged our work in past videos as well. Also, he's one of very few scientists who *doesn't* say that engineering is applied science.
@lemongavine
@lemongavine 2 года назад
We need more engineers!
@barbaralachance5836
@barbaralachance5836 2 года назад
I agree ☺️ today I'm happier to be an engineer!!
@nHans
@nHans 2 года назад
​@C. V. _"Engineering literally is applied science"_ - whoa, let me stop you right there! I literally said it's not, and neither does Neil. Why then would you want to stir up unnecessary controversy? Engineering most definitely is *_not_* applied science. It's an independent and a highly rewarding profession-and it predates science by several millennia. Engineering *_uses_* science. It also uses modern management, finance, economics, market research, law, insurance, math, computing and other fields. If you're not an engineer, it's not surprising that you're repeating that discredited myth. It originated with frustrated physics professors. See, they teach to both science and engineering majors. The engineers go on to have successful careers, but the science grads stay on, hoping to land research or teaching positions for pitiful stipends. All the while, the professors' own grant applications keep getting rejected over and over. It's a 'sour grapes' kinda thing. 🙄 Don't get me wrong. We're happy to help-among others-all those sub-specialties of physics that you listed. But that's not our focus. Just take a look around. Everything that's 'man-made' is an *_engineered_* product. You're living in an engineered world. You're welcome! 👍 _"Scientists discover the world that exists; Engineers create the world that never was."_ - Theodore von Kármán, aerospace engineer.
@jeremiahbachmann3901
@jeremiahbachmann3901 2 года назад
Michigan is proud of Jordan Klepper. We make 'em good here.
@dwcramer92
@dwcramer92 2 года назад
I was not aware he was from Michigan, that's pretty cool!
@amandamoushabek3955
@amandamoushabek3955 2 года назад
Loved this! One of my favorites! I always love hearing astronauts talk about being in space
@ignorasmus
@ignorasmus 2 года назад
@22:21 - WoooW! That actually teared me up ! That was so, so, so beautiful just to hear about, close eyes and try to imagine...
@Squeedow
@Squeedow 2 года назад
Klepper is whip-smart!!! Love this guy!
@bastmode882
@bastmode882 2 года назад
The name for patreon members is just "Patrons" 😂😂 intro has me dying.
@geneabrego9759
@geneabrego9759 2 года назад
"another reason why PLUTO HAD IT COMING!" I almost spat out my drink when he made that comment
@paigecfrancis
@paigecfrancis 2 года назад
Clicked on this as soon as I saw Klepper. Genius 🔥
@hufflebuffben
@hufflebuffben 2 года назад
I appreciate the love for design! Design has a huge impact on our lives, history, and culture as a whole. Design evolves with us, and the ones who successfully challenge the norm raise the bar.
@migalotto1283
@migalotto1283 2 года назад
Neil inspired me to learn more about science...He's mind is unremarkable
@AP-tr4nd
@AP-tr4nd 2 года назад
remarkable*
@ironmantis778
@ironmantis778 2 года назад
Oop!
@jex-the-notebook-guy1002
@jex-the-notebook-guy1002 2 года назад
so you were inspired by a liar
@cfranco714
@cfranco714 2 года назад
Our atmosphere is “thin blue line” that I support!
@PatRNBSN
@PatRNBSN 2 года назад
I'm glad he brought up the importance of boys seeing women doing this work. I volunteer with a literacy project, and one time we gave a team of 4 students (2 boys and 2 girls) the specifics of a project, and had them design and implement the project. I was surprised and encouraged to see the girls designed the project and guided the boys in implementing it. I feel that many changes will come through the younger generation when they become adults.
@redoktober526
@redoktober526 2 года назад
A wise man once said, "Earth without art is eh". ✌🏼
@deansheets
@deansheets 2 года назад
Thank you for spreading knowledge and truths.
@CaliforniaBushman
@CaliforniaBushman 2 года назад
Finally had viral tweet yesterday. Very proud people think it's a good Onion Headline; 'Texas has car keys taken away for record third time in one week'
@NineAtoms1
@NineAtoms1 2 года назад
It's that time of day!
@asarogers4742
@asarogers4742 2 года назад
@StarTalk I'm visually impeared and I just got back from my 4th year at SCIVIS (space camp interested visually impeared students) and it makes me so happy it came up here, it's like I got a shout out!! Thank you so much, abd it would mean a lot if I could get a heart or a response
@deenulazarus5454
@deenulazarus5454 Год назад
@jordanklepper would be great with prep school students... His ability to humour people in their own wierd thoughts is unparalleled
@GRimRenji
@GRimRenji 2 года назад
He will probably never see this but Doctor Tyson is an incredible man and an even better scientist. I wish I could thank him for helping me out, now I have more ambition and desire to achieve more then I have for many years. I now no longer let what happened in past define what I can achieve. Hope one day I can meet him would be insane.
@Qui-Dad-Jinn
@Qui-Dad-Jinn 2 года назад
It would be amazing for Neil to talk to Shatner.
@peggywoods4327
@peggywoods4327 2 года назад
I second that! I bet Neil (and the rest of us) would listen to what he had to say (as opposed to how blasé he was treated by Besos)
@JJs_playground
@JJs_playground 2 года назад
I third that
@codyadkins3061
@codyadkins3061 2 года назад
I fourth it
@oldschoolman1444
@oldschoolman1444 2 года назад
@@peggywoods4327 I know, could Bozo been more careless.
@rbee6507
@rbee6507 2 года назад
Jordan, what a talent. Glad to see him on the show. P.S. We still have a long way to go on Air Travel...All of those creature comfort improvements may just seem like cheaping out on material/build costs, but the operating/fuel costs is an even greater issue and largely uncontrollable. It is literally the difference between stable infrastructure and insolvency, despite the large dollar figures generated by Boeing/Airbus/Airlines.
@julieouellette7810
@julieouellette7810 2 года назад
Two of my favorite people to watch 🙂
@solidspirit2365
@solidspirit2365 2 года назад
Good Stuff Brothers and Sisters
@liawalker9966
@liawalker9966 2 года назад
Klepper on Star Talk 😍😍😍😍
@Doug7RM
@Doug7RM 2 года назад
I want Neil’s consciousness transferred into a cyborg so we can have him for ever
@guillermonassercibils6538
@guillermonassercibils6538 2 года назад
Klepper you are my hero
@juliewood823
@juliewood823 2 года назад
Wow MY peloton in space !!! Awesome 😘
@stephanienirenberg7426
@stephanienirenberg7426 2 года назад
I Love Chuck Nice with all my heart but Jordon Klepper kills it every time. I adore him.
@nickglass12
@nickglass12 2 года назад
Excellent! Love Nicole!
@usmcrn4418
@usmcrn4418 2 года назад
The very clever Jordan Klelleper!
@danlhendl
@danlhendl 2 года назад
I thought I was corkscrewing around the fabric of space and time. it’s good to confirm that
@jaxdragon1723
@jaxdragon1723 2 года назад
but it was a C- answer on the Q:) plane of our solar system to the plane of our galaxy. he only explained half of ... i wish he had given more thought to the question,before answering ... i love Neil ....
@Fonzzz002
@Fonzzz002 2 года назад
"I love a design that says 'yeah, I wanna be in that'. "
@jmoney9494
@jmoney9494 2 года назад
Giggity giggity
@EmpyreanLightASMR
@EmpyreanLightASMR 2 года назад
I listened to Michael Collins's book "Carrying the Torch" this summer and he was saying the same thing, even back in the 60s, he believed they should be sending poets and philosophers to space to really get a perspective of the whole thing.
@michaelstoliker971
@michaelstoliker971 2 года назад
This makes my brain happy...Cave paintings in Space.
@ncebamankayi522
@ncebamankayi522 2 года назад
You had to go for Pluto!😅
@Woowoobang
@Woowoobang 2 года назад
Lived in Phoenix for the previous 11 yrs and I can assure that yes Phoenix is approximately 1/4 mile away from the surface of the sun. Brutal.
@Q_QQ_Q
@Q_QQ_Q 2 года назад
Lol
@ryanworkman3032
@ryanworkman3032 2 года назад
I'd like to see as a guest on StarTalk Neil's fellow astrophysicist and RU-vidr Dr Becky Smethest.
@1971khaos
@1971khaos 2 года назад
Edith Bunker called herself a "kleeper" when she thought she was a Kleptomaniac🤣🤣🤣
@eduzanete
@eduzanete 2 месяца назад
Accidentally I began to watch this video in 0.5 speed. Very funny!
@robertgraybeard3750
@robertgraybeard3750 2 года назад
For the first question, one of the other things engineers have to worry about is physiological deterioration because of zero g. The simplest solution would be go to Mars with a fleet of ships, in pairs, tethered together and rotating about a common center of gravity. The centrifugal force will provide artificial gravity. A tether of about 1.8 kilometers and 1 RPM will provide 1 g.
2 года назад
Jordan Klepper The Best.
@frankiecuellar
@frankiecuellar 2 года назад
11:50 good answer Neil!👍👍👍
@masdavis236
@masdavis236 2 года назад
"Cranked out a covid baby" is the actual scientific word for having a child 🖤
@themrtimmyboy
@themrtimmyboy 2 года назад
Jordan Klepper, great! Very funny!
@gothsauceproductions5243
@gothsauceproductions5243 2 года назад
I love that colorful space suit behind her it’s something I would totally invest in if Mars is ever terraformed in my life time & I’m part of it & need a cool suit to wear to express my individuality. Very dope.
@jf2369af
@jf2369af 2 года назад
I can't wait for the first rat rod spaceship
@younghan3573
@younghan3573 2 года назад
I haven't been to space, but i already want to tell the politicians that message!!!! Especially in California
@SettaXY
@SettaXY 2 года назад
Wow at the space suit. I want one
@jonharmon2653
@jonharmon2653 2 года назад
Off topic but....I love that wood accent around Neil's staircase
@michellesanctuary9089
@michellesanctuary9089 2 года назад
Dear Mister *Neil deGrasse Tyson* , i just want you to know that we love you so much 🧡
@TanksForTheMemories
@TanksForTheMemories 2 года назад
always sad when Chuck isn't here but Jordan is funny
@Eneov
@Eneov 2 года назад
This was a crown jewel in the star talk series
@guillermonassercibils6538
@guillermonassercibils6538 2 года назад
Once we realize that design just make thins more expensive, we will learn that "the future" is cheaper, and it's science too
@Abs0lutZr0
@Abs0lutZr0 2 года назад
I haven't seen this and I'm already geeked
@joseimpact
@joseimpact 2 года назад
no cap
@TechNextLetsGo
@TechNextLetsGo 2 года назад
I felt the same way seeing a total solar eclipse for the first time. You can see pictures and videos but it just doesn't compare to seeing it in person.
@loomasshido4509
@loomasshido4509 2 года назад
"When you leave the protective magnetig blancket" Thanks God.
@Sir.Craze-
@Sir.Craze- 2 года назад
It's so strange to me that people need to go to space to grasp that we are the smallest most insagnificant speck that houses every single thing that's important to you. What she said.
@Immortalstone91
@Immortalstone91 2 года назад
Ha! Being from Phoenix I can say that the description of our location to the sun is hella accurate!
@juliewood823
@juliewood823 2 года назад
Wow ! Loved the ending of this post THANKS so much
@gooneybird808
@gooneybird808 2 года назад
That was a beautiful description of looking at earth.
@mftraw1099
@mftraw1099 2 года назад
30 seconds in and I'm smiling
@Padcast
@Padcast 2 года назад
Flat earthers seeing this headline seething at the mouth.
@youropinionmeansnothing2825
@youropinionmeansnothing2825 2 года назад
I get sad when I don't see Mr.Chuck
@ariannanorris-landry4428
@ariannanorris-landry4428 2 года назад
I was born and raised in Phoenix and as soon as I could I went to Alaska. Though I must say it's getting a little warm in Alaska these days.
@Nitephall
@Nitephall 2 года назад
You guys need to work on the audio balance of these videos. Neil is always really loud and his guests/comedians are much quieter. I have to crank the volume up to hear what the guest is saying and then Neil comes through and blows both my eardrums.
@tersamuno9898
@tersamuno9898 2 года назад
I thot it was Kuemper. Just teasing. You guys made my day. When we figure out our own infrastructure and repair , imagine the challenges in an alien circumstance.
@isaackitone
@isaackitone 2 года назад
Jordan hasn't been doing nothing. He's been trolling Trump supporters.
@zombie8myface898
@zombie8myface898 2 года назад
THANK YOU! To everyone involved with StarTalk, even you Patreonics!
@carlatteniese2
@carlatteniese2 2 года назад
Wow! Nicole (my friend on social media!) was at ILC Dover! Neil--yes, more artists in space!
@jacklcooper3216
@jacklcooper3216 2 года назад
Truth is a good motivator Neil
@Bellywasher86
@Bellywasher86 2 года назад
The enterprise can land on planets tho, so being aerodynamic would be a must...no? considering the speed they leave planets at
@Bellywasher86
@Bellywasher86 2 года назад
@@GarretGrayCamera maybe thats what I was thinking of but I know the enterprise did enter an atmosphere in at least one episode
@MrT------5743
@MrT------5743 2 года назад
@@Bellywasher86 Yes when the saucer section of Enterprise D crashed on Veridian 3 it did land.
@Bellywasher86
@Bellywasher86 2 года назад
@@GarretGrayCamera yes thats the one I was thinking of, when they go back to 60s👍
@celsopinheiro
@celsopinheiro 2 года назад
Good you finally brought the famous astronomer Klepper!
@c.youngberg9511
@c.youngberg9511 2 года назад
As far as understanding why we don't feel gravitational waves, you can compare it to how a Butterfly doesn't feel Air motion because it's body is matched with it's motion. We shift and flux with gravitational waves in the same way Butterflies shift and flux with air movements. Gravitationally wave-wise, we're neutrally buoyant with the other material around us, so Gravitational waves pass over/through us and all material around us at the same rate so we don't perceive them. Same thing with Butterflies and air movements. They're nearly perfectly neutrally buoyant to air movements, so regardless of outside, larger influences, they are simply shifted and moved the same as the air around them, so sudden changes are minimal to their perspective... same as us with Gravitational waves.
@MrT------5743
@MrT------5743 2 года назад
I see where you were going with your analogy, but butterflies do feel air motion. The also use the air for movement which means they are pushing off the air. In wind, the butterfly has so compensate to get where it is going. Maybe a better comparison would be jelly fish in water. Since it's body is closer to the density of the water that surrounds it. But the same problems with water movement and the jelly fish's own movement still come into play. I think since gravitational waves cause such a small effect that we can barely detect them at all no analogy would be sufficient. Maybe the thing would need to be really small in something really big. Like microbial life in the middle of the ocean (not the surface). They would have no reference of movement and would probably not notice any waves.
@jex-the-notebook-guy1002
@jex-the-notebook-guy1002 2 года назад
gravity comes from gravitas which means weight
@RickySTT
@RickySTT 2 года назад
Humbled, but feeling significant. That's exactly how I felt seeing a total solar eclipse.
@philipberthiaume2314
@philipberthiaume2314 2 года назад
Okay I got a comment about the starship Enterprise: yes there's no atmosphere in space and therefore sleek design really is not very relevant... HOWEVER, the starship does fly through atmosphere, we've seen several examples of it flying in the Earth atmosphere and other planets including the original series from the 1960s. So yes it does fly in atmosphere and would benefit from an aerodynamic shape.
@steve-o6413
@steve-o6413 2 года назад
Also beside flying through the atmosphere they have also landed on other Planets, and the Ship was equipped with landing struts that were retractable. But mostly used a shuttlecraft...
@MrT------5743
@MrT------5743 2 года назад
@@steve-o6413 Voyager landed and the defiant could land but they are smaller ships. They never showed any version of the Enterprise (A,B,C,D etc) land, other than when the saucer section of D crashed landed.
@ourunstablemind
@ourunstablemind 2 года назад
Chapters on the timeline would be great 🙏
@su3d333
@su3d333 2 года назад
We can communicate through more than just words. Non verbal communication
@thefub101
@thefub101 2 года назад
The enterprise does go down to planets from time to time tho. Although I feel like the columns with the engines on would just tear off with that much force.
@kalpeshparekh8943
@kalpeshparekh8943 2 года назад
Sir i have watched lots of your videos and learnt a lot of things. But can you explain indian astronomy or influence of ancient indian anstronomy on study of western astronomical study. Because i observed that indian knowledge is being under rated on many aspects. Thank you
@hokiturmix
@hokiturmix 2 года назад
I knew it. Egosoft games X Beyond the frontier and the rest has an alien species called Borons. They are squid like creatures uplifted to be "'space worthy". Their ships are filled with water. X3's Boron Ray is what i call futuristic ship design! :D
@PlaynBass
@PlaynBass 2 года назад
The Enterprise can land on planets. Smooth lines are a useful pattern for metalwork. Still need industry in space: it can't all be composites.
@animefreak3010
@animefreak3010 2 года назад
That and it warps through space. I can't imagine that would work properly if it wasn't shaped the way it was otherwise the ship may tear itself apart
@MrT------5743
@MrT------5743 2 года назад
None of the Enterprises A,B,C,D,E etc ever landed. Well except the saucer section of D did land once...It crash landed. Only smaller ships like Voyager landed. Defiant also could land, but it was a small ship too.
@PlaynBass
@PlaynBass 2 года назад
@@MrT------5743 Technically true. However, I think the capability was always there. Does anyone still have that book showing all the engineering details?
@MrT------5743
@MrT------5743 2 года назад
@@PlaynBass I have the blueprints for D. But didn't go looking yet. I don't recall seeing landing gear previously though.
@MrT------5743
@MrT------5743 2 года назад
@@PlaynBass ok just looked, too bad I can't post pictures. Decks 36 through 42 which is the bottom parts of the star drive from the flat parts that go out to hold up the warp drives to the bottom of the ship, shows no landing gear tucked inside.
@sameerayiesha
@sameerayiesha 2 года назад
10:55 ig that was answered by the borg cubes. That you don't need aero dynamics in 'Space'.
@thatwastheory3744
@thatwastheory3744 2 года назад
I've missed Jordan so much Great to see him back! very well composed :D
@kanewebley3156
@kanewebley3156 2 года назад
Talk show hosts have 3 times the support when science helps the progression for everything and everyone
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