-------------------- "And slowly, you come to realize, it's all as it should be, you can only do so much. If you're game enough, you could place your trust in me. For the love of life, there's a tradeoff, we could lose it all but we'll go down fighting...." - David Sylvian FreeSpace 2, the greatest space sim of all time, now remastered!
Registered: Mar 1999
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Daniel Butler
I'm a Singapore where is my boat
Member # 1689
posted
quote:"The No. 1 need right now for some of the builders of the United States' next spaceship: Lots of No. 1."
Seth Borenstein, your wit F A I L S.
Why vent it into space? On a small capsule like that, why not recycle it? Didn't they invent a machine/process to do just that quite recently?
Registered: Jul 2005
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posted
Yer on the moon for craps sake, open the flap and set it free!!
-------------------- Sparky:: Think! Question Authority, Authoritatively. “Believe nothing of what you hear, and only half of what you see.” EMSparks
Shalamar: To save face, keep lower half shut.
Registered: Jun 1999
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Daniel Butler
I'm a Singapore where is my boat
Member # 1689
posted
Yeah but why waste valuable water? You can't exactly traipse down to the Sea of Tranquility and fill a bucket, can you? No, you see, it isn't that kind of sea, if you can dig it.
Registered: Jul 2005
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posted
They don't recycle it because the equipment necessary to do that is probably too big and/or heavy, taking up valuable space and cargo mass. The gains in this situation most likely do not outweigh the costs.
Registered: Jul 2002
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Daniel Butler
I'm a Singapore where is my boat
Member # 1689
posted
Yeah, but as I mentioned, NASA recently invented a compact cheap way to recycle urine...I think. I read an article about it recently though of course I don't have it right here to support my argument cuz that'd be too convenient...It could be that it was an article about a proposed or theoretical process, I guess.
Registered: Jul 2005
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posted
They still make Tang? Gosh, I haven't had that in years.
I wonder if the "space food" they eat creats different waste products, or at least has a different effect on their systems than normal food? Like, maybe more of a certain mineral or chemical in their urine? I had some of the freeze-dried icecream they eat during a trip to D.C., and I was remarkable constipated for the next day. All those preservatives, and binders can't be too good for you, for an extremely long period of time. Obviously astronauts can survive on it for the duration of time they are in space, but I wonder what would happen if you ate nothing but that for a few years?
-------------------- "Kosh, I'd like to introduce you to our Resident schmuck and his side kick Kick Me."-Ritten
"Fighting for peace is like screwing for virginity". -George Carlin
Registered: Jul 2007
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posted
Remember the whole Cola Wars / First Taste in Space thing back around 1985? There's a reason you haven't heard of them taking carbonated drinks into space since then - the first time they burped, it all came back up!
Registered: Jul 2002
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quote:Originally posted by B.J.: Remember the whole Cola Wars / First Taste in Space thing back around 1985? There's a reason you haven't heard of them taking carbonated drinks into space since then - the first time they burped, it all came back up!
I can't say I have. I didn't even exist back in the 80's. But interesting fact.
-------------------- "Its coming on. I just saw the wall move..."
Registered: Feb 2008
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posted
I've got the poster back at my parents' house that Coca Cola put out after they "won".
Registered: Jul 2002
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Daniel Butler
I'm a Singapore where is my boat
Member # 1689
posted
I don't think food would float in your stomach in space because your stomach, being elastic, would be holding it all tightly together. But maybe if there was enough air in there.
Is 'space food' different from regular freeze-dried stuff? I didn't think it had any extra preservatives and binding agents in it; I thought the water was simply removed to save weight.
Registered: Jul 2005
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