Drop your most "wtf that's not how the world works" from movies/tv shows.
Drop your most "wtf that's not how the world works" from movies/tv shows.
I'm aware of the NCIS scenes, what else you guys got?
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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.
19 0 ReplyThis one doesn't apply in Star Wars because nobody orbits anything in Star Wars. Antigravity is cheaper than accelerating into an orbital vector.
12 0 ReplyThere are lot of films where this doesn't happen for sure 😃
2 0 ReplyDon't forget the universally established upward direction so all ships are magically oriented exactly the same when they meet
1 0 ReplyThen why don't the continents ever turn out from under them?
1 0 ReplyBecause the movie is only 2 hours long and it takes several hours for that to happen.
3 0 ReplyThe movie is 2 hours, but sometimes the events are much longer.
1 0 ReplyYes, but during the parts of those events when we weren't looking, they moved the ships over so they'd be in the same place relative to the ground.
3 0 ReplyThanks for the insight, dragonfucker
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Isn't the death star in orbit at one point?
1 0 ReplyYes the second Death Star is in orbit around Endor.
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Really depends on how low you are.
6 0 ReplyHow much drag can you get in orbit lol?
2 0 Replydrag in orbit? 0, microgravity that pulls on everything even in high orbit? yes.
1 0 ReplyWhat 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.
1 0 ReplyUhm 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.
2 0 ReplyKeyword 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.
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