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26.10.2010 - 14:24:20 <anon> Iia on ihana
26.10.2010 - 14:52:26 <anon> ei toiminu
26.10.2010 - 14:52:43 <anon> will this really work?
26.10.2010 - 15:28:26 <anon> zero gravity?
26.10.2010 - 15:33:10 <anon> lol there is no zero gravity on the moon anon
26.10.2010 - 15:33:28 <anon> i think the moon would become unstable if you hollow out the middle of it
26.10.2010 - 15:41:37 <anon> moon is just a huge rock i hole wont make a diffrence
26.10.2010 - 15:44:21 <anon> I think the water would freeze
26.10.2010 - 17:18:30 <anon> This would work.
26.10.2010 - 17:23:08 <anon> been there, done that
26.10.2010 - 17:24:33 <anon> jelly?
26.10.2010 - 18:37:36 <anon> if you heat it and put some atmosphere in the hole it might actually work, but why dig through 1300km of rock if you can have zero gravity on a spaceship?
26.10.2010 - 18:56:41 <anon> I already tried that with Jupiter. Doesn't work.
26.10.2010 - 19:55:27 <anon> Well the water would be on the outside rims of the hole, of course. N00B!
26.10.2010 - 21:33:10 <anon> Ingorants... It not says "zero gravity" it says "gravity pushes from all sides". The difference between the moon and earth is the moons (cold and diggable) core.
26.10.2010 - 21:58:24 <anon> Troll physics is done by 8-year-olds.
26.10.2010 - 23:11:56 <anon> Can I be ingorant too?
27.10.2010 - 00:12:49 <anon> Only idiots think this would work.
27.10.2010 - 00:13:30 <anon> Actually the water wouldn't float in middle of the moon, it would be attached to the sides...
27.10.2010 - 07:15:48 <anon> or would it...
27.10.2010 - 09:54:23 <anon> Why water? I would fill the hole with sandniggers...
27.10.2010 - 22:41:35 <anon> Net gravitation inside a sphere is zero so (very) theoretically possible: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shell_theorem#Inside_a_shell
17.11.2010 - 00:51:41 <anon> the core makes the gravity of the moon, without it who knows waht shit might happen....
17.11.2010 - 00:51:49 <anon> no core, no gravity
23.11.2010 - 05:57:08 <anon> equal mass in all directions means gravity wouldn't push, it would pull in all directions. whoever posted that water would stick to the sides is correct.
30.11.2010 - 17:55:24 <anon> shopped! i see pixels
11.12.2010 - 19:29:04 <anon> "Troll physics is done by 8-year-olds." hahahahahahahahahahahahaha
18.02.2011 - 12:24:32 <anon> The water would stick to the light side of moon, because of earths gravitational pull
18.02.2011 - 12:25:21 <anon> To get a zero G swimming pool you need to gather the water in a "flat" location of space
25.02.2011 - 10:17:32 <anon> 23.11.2010 - 05:57:08 <-- dear fucking god, go to school
27.06.2011 - 00:51:30 <anon> Moon is 1/6 earth's gravity, not zero gravity.
31.07.2011 - 16:20:45 <anon> If the water would be on the sides and not in the middle it would leak away through the hole, and you wouldn't be able to fill it like he does it in the 3rd frame in the first place, your house would need to go down to the center of the core at least, or even through to the opposite side of the hole
31.07.2011 - 16:21:10 <anon> ^ house = hose
08.11.2011 - 16:28:53 <anon> Won't work: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moon#Internal_structure
12.03.2012 - 22:06:36 <anon> Gravitational field of a hollow sphere is zero inside the sphere, so there would effectively be zero g. If the water's own gravity pulled into a sphere, it would still not force it to the center.
12.03.2012 - 22:07:52 <anon> Also, earths gravity would mostly be counteracted by the centrifugal "force", as moon u'know, orbits earth.
17.04.2012 - 23:13:34 <anon> Sounds easily doable! Why didn't you try it?
21.04.2012 - 08:04:58 <anon> must be really nice swimming there with your spacesuit
27.06.2012 - 16:02:15 <anon> gravity is lower than earths but its not zero, dum fags...
15.08.2012 - 21:42:26 <anon> ENTERING ZERO GRAVITY
28.10.2012 - 21:36:10 <anon> it says "gravity pushes from all sides". <- Except that gravity doesn't push, it pulls. Which means as someone else said, the water would gather up on the outer rim of the hole, not in the center.
06.12.2013 - 15:42:40 <anon> SUOMI ON PASKA MAA!
12.04.2014 - 21:43:26 <anon> gravity pushes?? well trolled or very stupid
02.06.2016 - 10:33:27 <anon> By the way, consider how "swimming" in a zero gravity swimming pool would happen — you couldn't, but you would be in danger of getting caught in a water bubble without being able to breathe...
22.04.2017 - 14:26:28 <anon> i tested this and it worked
21.09.2017 - 09:07:49 <anon> lol
25.05.2019 - 14:34:18 <anon> 28.10.2012 - 21:36:10 <anon> it says "gravity pushes from all sides". <- Except that gravity doesn't push, it pulls. Which means as someone else said, the water would gather up on the outer rim of the hole, not in the center. <- except that the other side of the moon also pulls it so it would stay in the center. We know this in 2019
03.09.2021 - 05:39:38 <anon> Mass causes gravity. In the center of the moon all moon-mass is around the water. Also it counteracts itself in all directions. Therefore - it is effectively gravity-free at the center of the moon. Likewise at the center of earth. This an important thing that no one thinks about when they think what is at the center of earth.
19.06.2023 - 07:30:27 <anon> Center of the mass would still be in the center
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