So love that you shared those poignant and inquisitive questions from young students about your life in space! God Bless each and everyone of you who have taken that step, to soar off the planet you were born on, in search of Higher Truths about our Universe. Congratulations and thanks for your Courage and Valor for all Humanity❤💙💜🙏👏 You are truly an inspiration to all young people throughout the world, imagining their Future life goals and planning ahead. I cannot thank you enough for your Mission.
@ankitkawale97482 жыл бұрын
Kayla ❤️❤️❤️ Kjell ❤️❤️ Megan ❤️
@edwardvictormartin75112 жыл бұрын
Does NASA by any chance feel like timing the upcoming historic return missions so the ships are in orbit at night over America and can see it at the same time as the ISS? That'd be really cool. I already do see more than a few satellites with my bare eyes every night here in New Jersey going all about different directions but the ISS not as much as of this year. Yeah circle around a bit...it's what around 90minutes per each "circumnavigation" around via global orbit?
@bradleedenney2 жыл бұрын
Did an astronaut just confirm aliens?
@EchoesDistant2 жыл бұрын
Not confirmed, but speculated. However, he has a point. There is an uncountable number of stars, planets, and galaxies out there. The odds that there is no other life besides on Earth has to be infinitesimally small. Take what we know about life on Earth: It's EVERYWHERE! But, think about the most prolific form of life on Earth: Microbes, by a wide margin. So, when thinking about aliens, think not of little green men, but of microbial life. Think about all the kinds of life on Earth. Of the billions of species that there is, and was, only one (humans) has had the capacity for high-intelligence. So, life in the universe is probably commonplace, but intelligent life would be much less so. Lastly, we can't even be sure we are alone in this system. There could be microbial life in the ice caps of Mars, or in the subsurface oceans of Europa, and Enceladus. We are only scratching the surface of what we know about life.