I’m aware of the NCIS scenes, what else you guys got?

  • @Valmond@lemmy.world
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    196 months ago

    Stuff falling towards earth from a spaceship/satelite.

    You’re already in orbit, things might wander away but it won’t be attracted in any specific direction.

    • Dragon Rider (drag)
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      136 months ago

      This one doesn’t apply in Star Wars because nobody orbits anything in Star Wars. Antigravity is cheaper than accelerating into an orbital vector.

        • macniel
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          16 months ago

          drag in orbit? 0, microgravity that pulls on everything even in high orbit? yes.

          • @Valmond@lemmy.world
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            06 months ago

            What is this microgravity?

            I mean the earth pulls with its gravity, and your vessel/satelite overcome that by being in orbit. Something coming lose will just stay in orbit too.

            • macniel
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              26 months ago

              Uhm no. While you are in orbit you simply revolve around a parent object (a planet for example) but you still are subjected to its (and by proxy it to yours) gravitational pull. Eventually something that came lose will deorbit.

              • @Valmond@lemmy.world
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                16 months ago

                Keyword here is eventually. Sure it will, but what it definitely will not do is accelerate towards planet earth at what looks like 9.81m/s². AKA falling.

      • And if whatever sheared off the part of the spaceship/satellite changed it’s momentum. If I’m on a space station, and fling something directly towards the earth, from my perspective it will fall directly towards earth for quite some time (probably out of eyesight) before the orbital movements make it behave in odd (compared to on-the-surface) ways.

        • @Valmond@lemmy.world
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          16 months ago

          Well, flung not falling then? Until it enters the atmosphere and it’s forward speed gets breaked down I guess.