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@malgindmitry5704
@malgindmitry5704 3 күн бұрын
NASA's era is gone. Now it's Space X's era...
@lonestarwolfentertainment7184
@lonestarwolfentertainment7184 5 күн бұрын
This would be the perfect Anti-Kaiju weapon.
@mistycloud4455
@mistycloud4455 7 күн бұрын
Ai will help us make robots
@ryszardslaw6656
@ryszardslaw6656 7 күн бұрын
Tak mądrego Naukowca chcialby mieć kazdy narod ,teraz psioczą, Byl wielkim twórca przyszłości i wizjonerem ,stworzył coś co wykraczało myślenie wielu naukowców
@Venator-Class_Star_Destroyer
@Venator-Class_Star_Destroyer 13 күн бұрын
First words of the Cosmonauts on the Moon: "Я делаю этот шаг ради своей страны, своего народа и ради марксистско-ленинского образа жизни. Зная, что сегодня - всего лишь маленький шаг на пути, который когда-нибудь приведет нас всех к звездам." A translation to English "I take this step, for my country, for my people, and for the Marxist-Leninist way of life. Knowing that today is but a small step on a journey that will someday take us all, to the stars"
@Kraplates
@Kraplates 17 күн бұрын
I ask merely should you know. Nine three odd calende
@DeathTrooperCommander-iy8dw
@DeathTrooperCommander-iy8dw 20 күн бұрын
Edit: Thank you so much for these amazing animations and this content. So I love the main channel (Found and Explained) but then I heard you talking about this channel in one of your videos and I just adore space more than anything so I instantly subscribed.
@robertfoster7807
@robertfoster7807 25 күн бұрын
The rods won't fall they need to be reduced from 8 kilometres a second orbital velocity
@bbartky
@bbartky 29 күн бұрын
Generally a good video but I felt a piece of me die every time you said Saturn “Vee”. 🤦‍♂️ The V in Saturn V is the Roman number for the number five. How could you possibly not know this? Please go back and fix it since no one will take you seriously if you leave it as is. Also, while you’re at it, how about adding overlay text with SI units every time you use Imperial units?
@JZsBFF
@JZsBFF Ай бұрын
We're the product of this planet and its gravity and we're not leaving, except perhaps on a little trip.
@yasho.
@yasho. Ай бұрын
is the channel dead completely ?
@ryannur7467
@ryannur7467 Ай бұрын
It can only benefit weather
@alanluscombe8a553
@alanluscombe8a553 Ай бұрын
I’m glad America was first the Apollo missions are incredible but I do wish the soviets would have done it as well.
@satyakammisra
@satyakammisra Ай бұрын
The cost to build this will be over $1 trillion. So to house each citizen of this city will cost $1,000,000 just in housing. Bullshit concept. Carbon nanotubes and graphene costs more than fold per kg.
@davidbaker5777
@davidbaker5777 Ай бұрын
Workshop building a dome over NYC on planet mars
@davidbaker5777
@davidbaker5777 Ай бұрын
Workshop building a dome over NYC on planet mars and Namib desert
@ekspatriat
@ekspatriat Ай бұрын
That intro picture is surely from the Airfix kit box art!
@ariatari2137
@ariatari2137 Ай бұрын
0:06 its already wrong first both cosmonauts cannot be the first humans on the surfuce of the moon because lk lander was designed only to carry one people at the time second komarov was already dead third gagarin was dead too (or very soon he will die idr) fourth it was most likely for aleksiej leonov to fly there fifth learn how to spell russian names
@philipwong895
@philipwong895 2 ай бұрын
The United States was financially exhausted by spending on the Space program, the Great Society program, and the Vietnam War. In 1971, it could no longer keep its Bretton Woods commitment to exchange gold and the US dollar at a fixed rate of $35 per ounce. The last time the US had a positive trade balance was in 1975. The US has basically been bankrupt since 1975.
@HalNordmann
@HalNordmann 2 ай бұрын
#FundNASA
@LSspaceReal
@LSspaceReal 2 ай бұрын
what is the chicken doing💀😭
@44R0Ndin
@44R0Ndin 2 ай бұрын
Things like these, and the fact that we never saw them, are why I am convinced that money and politics are the peak of stupidity. The reason I think that is because it is always one or both of those two facts that cause us to "not do the awesome thing we could have done". I want humanity to ALWAYS be pushing the cutting edge of technology, and damn the (economic, political) costs. Respect the environmental costs, respect the cost of human lives, but if it's "too expensive" in terms of money, or in terms of politics, do it anyways. There's an INCREDIBLY easy way to get around the "high political costs" of most kinds of advanced tech, because the "high cost" is often due to the fact that it results in an imbalance of power between nations. That way of describing the problem lends itself to an easy concept to solve that same problem: If the problem is the creation of an imbalance of power, share the developments with everyone so that everyone is uplifted equally, thereby restoring the balance. Yes, this runs counter to every lesson in politics. Yes, this is why I think politics is the peak of stupidity. There's an incredibly easy way to get around the "high monetary costs" of most kinds of advanced tech, the high cost is often because a new piece of technology needs some new and/or rare kind of material. The solution writes itself: If the problem is that the materials or tools are rare and/or specialized, Henry Ford and Standard Oil already figured out how to solve those kinds of shortages. Mass production of specialized tooling makes the tooling not specialized, and if the problem is scarcity of materials, don't throw up your hands and say "it's impossible", because it's NOT. The earth is STUPENDOUSLY massive, on a human scale. The entire Earth is composed of "materials" of various kinds, including all the rarest ones. And because the Earth is so stupendously massive, materials sufficient for any amount of human construction possible in the next ten thousand years are not just present, but abundant. If that's still not enough for you, go lasso an asteroid (probably a metal-rich one), tow it into Earth orbit where we haven't yet put any satellites, and mine it from there. Since we're building rockets in this video, the best place to build a rocket is if you're already in space. Mine the fuel (water ice) from the Moon's polar craters, or if that's not enough, go lasso a comet and drag IT back into earth orbit after wrapping it in a membrane to keep it from just sublimating into the vacuum of space. Guess what all this mass production and new mining does? Sure, the work might not be the safest right now (we can probably improve on that a lot if we try), but it's work, and it SHOULD pay well no matter where in the world it ends up happening. If it's NOT paying well, guess what? Society isn't working right, and something in society needs to change. Don't ask me what it is that needs to change, I'm not well versed in sociopolitical science. But the chances are high that what needs to change is "Put a percentage cap on how much net profit any given corporation can turn, which should either lower costs, or force wages higher, along with incentivizing the re-investment of excess profit to turn into REAL growth of production, not just "we're now charging more for the same stuff, and we're not even making any more of it, deal with it, all the profits go to the shareholders" which is the current plague on nearly all mega-corporations in at least the United States. They are worshiping money for the sake of money, and forgetting that they actually provide something to society, this percentage cap on maximum net (not gross) profits is meant to rectify EXACTLY that. However it would likely need to be combined with some AGGRESSIVE auditing procedures backed by somewhat loosely worded new laws to ensure that companies don't simply re-write their books to say "Yeah, the CEO's 40th luxury yacht is a critical component of the corporation, not actually property of the CEO" or something similarly slimy. I am not proposing impossible things. I am merely proposing things which are not yet done because there is not sufficient societal will to do them yet. The amount of societal will for such things is not fixed, it fluctuates from year to year.
@chadgdry3938
@chadgdry3938 2 ай бұрын
I want to believe
@chiimumango3979
@chiimumango3979 2 ай бұрын
This is what Megamind used to "kill" Metro Man
@GregH12345
@GregH12345 3 ай бұрын
When you work at NASA, it's hard to be supportive to an entity that wastes so much time and money. It's literally GIVEN to them and the waste is as bad as any govt agency. American people, if you had a clue and some cajones, you'd be outraged too, because it's your money they waste. At least I'm getting mine back.
@tedbohne
@tedbohne 3 ай бұрын
hughes XH-17
@somerandom_channel646
@somerandom_channel646 3 ай бұрын
The even saddest part is if that we could had visited mars by 2000 if NASA had the military's Budget, NASA takes only 24 Billion USD a year compared to the Military's 2.2 Trillion USD we spend 80% More on Useless, pointless Wars, if NASA had the military's Budget We'd Probably started a Titan Colony
@Tracy-zr9mg
@Tracy-zr9mg 3 ай бұрын
The burran only having one flight has nothing to do with the fall of the Soviet union. It has everything to do with the fact that the CIA changed the specs for the heat absorbing tiles in the publicly available information that anyone could obtain from NASA. The Soviets were simply getting plans from the government printing office in Washington. Theywere publicly available. The CIA fudged the numbers for the tiles and they all melted together on the the first and only launch. The Soviet space shuttle was unusable after that
@endotherm
@endotherm 3 ай бұрын
"Hydra -zeen"
@CarFreeSegnitz
@CarFreeSegnitz 4 ай бұрын
Not a recreation of suburbia. Much more likely to be a collection of modules. Economics will drive us toward building complete space station modules on the ground. We’ve got the material and expertise on the ground. Then launch completed modules on top of SpaceX Heavy booster or Blue Origin’s New Glen. Then dock them together with a minimum of spacewalks. We’ll get lots of practice building modules that it will continue like ruts in a road. Then we’ll team them up with tethers and spin them for spin gravity. More tethers, more modules. As little waste space as possible. While we’ll build stations cheaply by today’s standards they’ll still be very expensive by terrestrial building standards. We don’t waste space in Antarctica research stations or submarines. It’s not a matter of physics just economics.
@ZeroDarkness-
@ZeroDarkness- 4 ай бұрын
Japanese: write it down write it down Japanese: behold the Sun gun with nuclear power... Gamma Emission by Nuclear Explosion Stimulate Inducing System or you can call it GENESIS (ジェネシス, Jeneshisu) kzbin.info/www/bejne/aaKnqYyinJ6pY9Esi=-QbD_nYYZycUVvRu
@hansigasus2006
@hansigasus2006 4 ай бұрын
Am I the only one thinking about the dangers of the climate using this this or just for blocking the light. Imagen u block the light to make a place more life friendly. This could have insanse climate effect on other places.... I dont think we understand that we play with literal fire using those things even when we tend to do something good with it.
@robinj.9329
@robinj.9329 4 ай бұрын
The original Disney Broadcast was recently on the Web! I watched it and "Bookmarked" it. But, today that site is gone! Too bad, it's a fantastic bit of History that every "Space Travel" geek should see and enjoy!
@paulefofana7239
@paulefofana7239 4 ай бұрын
5:47 reminds me of the Vanguard TV3 disaster
@angelarch5352
@angelarch5352 4 ай бұрын
That's amazing! Such great renders too!
@MrWhiskers65
@MrWhiskers65 4 ай бұрын
No offence, I preferred it when I only imagined what you looked like. Not that your unattractive or attractive…? I don’t know but also don’t care. I just thought it added something to a voice & not being familiar with what you looked like… my opinion of course.
@waynemccormick4773
@waynemccormick4773 4 ай бұрын
NASA gets less than 1% of the federal budget. Given the trillions of dollars R&D and technology spinoff has give our economy over 50+ years its obscene and incredibly short sighted that we couldn't commit to at least a steady state 1% with an occasional 1.1-1.2 %
@HalNordmann
@HalNordmann 2 ай бұрын
Definitely #FundNASA
@waynemccormick4773
@waynemccormick4773 4 ай бұрын
my god this is depressing 😭
@waynemccormick4773
@waynemccormick4773 4 ай бұрын
this timeline kinda sucks
@iamarizonaball2642
@iamarizonaball2642 4 ай бұрын
Nice.
@JLXT7
@JLXT7 4 ай бұрын
People would climb it
@jvelez5381
@jvelez5381 5 ай бұрын
Water shortages in 1960s New York. Really?
@jvelez5381
@jvelez5381 5 ай бұрын
Central Manhattan not Newyork as that would be Brooklyn and Queens
@NotTheWheel
@NotTheWheel 5 ай бұрын
Nice hive city
@Pixel22-fs3tt
@Pixel22-fs3tt 5 ай бұрын
I remember watching an episode of Extreme Engineering on Prime Video about this structure
@wohl1917
@wohl1917 5 ай бұрын
at 7:35 you're critical of the forward wings. Q: Wouldn't the large wing area have made for a lower reentry speed? Just as the lager surface area of the Space Shuttle slowed it and reduced the heat as opposed to the Apollo Capsule?
@CalvBore
@CalvBore 5 ай бұрын
you should take a look at the atlantis project's tethered ring concept, i think it would make a great subject for one of your videos
@romaneberle
@romaneberle 5 ай бұрын
9:54 lol. check out the 1980s BASIC code appearing on screen. (near top-right of picture.)
@DonCarlione973
@DonCarlione973 5 ай бұрын
Why do people constantly want to live right on the water?? I don't get it, They know they're sunken cities all over this planet I guess because they can't see them, out of sight out of mind. Then who's going to be living at the top of that pyramid, I wonder 🤔
@FuzzyTA11
@FuzzyTA11 5 ай бұрын
Surely walls as high as the atmosphere will do instead of a roof (as long as the atmosphere keeps turning with the ring)?