@[email protected] to [email protected] • edit-21 day agoIf I were traveling some near light speed percent, and hit a grain of sand, would it be catastrophic? What are the chances of violent destruction in the "vacuum" of space, when going "relatively" fastmessage-square17fedilinkarrow-up177arrow-down10file-text
arrow-up177arrow-down1message-squareIf I were traveling some near light speed percent, and hit a grain of sand, would it be catastrophic? What are the chances of violent destruction in the "vacuum" of space, when going "relatively" fast@[email protected] to [email protected] • edit-21 day agomessage-square17fedilinkfile-text
Pun intended, but still a serious question. Would a neutron matter? (Pun also intended, but also serious)
minus-squareTomMaszlinkEnglish21•21 hours agoThis is why Star Trek’s Enterprise has that forward-facing deflector dish. It wouldn’t last very long without something to prevent such collisions.
This is why Star Trek’s Enterprise has that forward-facing deflector dish. It wouldn’t last very long without something to prevent such collisions.