No, this wouldn't work. The earth is spinning on an axis, this has nothing to do with the actual temperature of the sun. The sun would still be of similar heat on arrival. You would not be able to land either.
[FnG]magnolia;19346537 said:
No, this wouldn't work. The earth is spinning on an axis, this has nothing to do with the actual temperature of the sun. The sun would still be of similar heat on arrival. You would not be able to land either.
No, this wouldn't work. The earth is spinning on an axis, this has nothing to do with the actual temperature of the sun. The sun would still be of similar heat on arrival. You would not be able to land either.
If they went there at night they wouldn't be able to see to land properly retard!![]()
10 pints is a little over the limit isn't it?![]()
No, this wouldn't work. The earth is spinning on an axis, this has nothing to do with the actual temperature of the sun. The sun would still be of similar heat on arrival. You would not be able to land either.
Firstly, allow me to say that I am no physicist but from what I understand, we cannot travel to the sun. Its surface is too hot.
Why don't we just go there at night then?
For those who had 10 pints - was it 4% stuff or 5%? Makes the difference between drinking 22.5 units or 29 units. Pretty impressive all the same. Most I've had was 8 pints, but I can go through 6 pints a night very often.
Roughly 3 pints were Guinness, until they ran out. The rest was the student guild's own caustic filth ale which is about 4.5%. Each pint was accompanied by a mandatory jagerbomb.
It was the last night of our campus pub before it's torn down for redevelopment and our last ever time there (graduating soon, though my OP suggests I may be here for another year). So yeah, seemed like the sensible thing to do.
Tonight's the last night of our student bar/club. We started uni in it and we're going to finish in it, so I'll do my best not get NASA involved tonight.![]()
Firstly, allow me to say that I am no physicist but from what I understand, we cannot travel to the sun. Its surface is too hot.
Why don't we just go there at night then?
Tonight's the last night of our student bar/club. We started uni in it and we're going to finish in it, so I'll do my best not get NASA involved tonight.![]()
No, it wouldn't work - it takes about 12 hours for the sun to cool down, by which time it's day again.
do it on the winter solstice then.