FireCat
Oh Shi.. Don't wake the tiger!
- Reaction score
- 537
Just no, I don't believe that
About his "the moon should be hot thingy?"
Well, I am 14 and I can safely say that the reason why the moon isn't hot is because there's no air in it.
You need air to have temperature. Well, except for pure coldness.
Am I right?
BTW, don't be rude, mistakes happen, beliefs end up wrong and ect.
Vicboy, have you ever wondered why in the city it is hot and in the mountain it is cold? The sun rays heat the ground. The ground it the heat sourse, not the air. That is all there is to it. Also without air there isn't anything what can keep the heat for a longer time. + technology back then sucked. I am not sure.
I want to say yes, but a voice deep in my heart is telling me that this is a this is a lie.
Then again this can be just me.
You all should go back to school...
Moon is COLD.
The Sun's rays heat anything it comes in contact with. Like air, here on Earth.
On the Moon, there is no air.
But the Sun doesn't only heat the air, it comes in contact with the surface.
The Moon and Earth have surface, but the former doesn't have an ATMOSPHERE.
Also note, that Suns are not the only things that radiate heat. EVERYTHING does.
So Sun gives us heat, and the Earth's surface radiates heat back to space.
But not all of it - because of the atmosphere.
The Moon doesn't have an atmosphere. Therefore all heat is radiated back to space.
The Moon therefore is very cold at "night". In daytime, it's still pretty cold.
The Sun's rays heat anything it comes in contact with. Like air, here on Earth.
E=MC^2 says nothing beyond that the mass energy of a resting object is equal to the object's mass multiplied by the square of the speed of light.does E=MC2 count on the moon? coz then its not so weird.
Did you just misspelled Moon to Mean or wtf? rotfl
Air is being heating by the sun... And air heats air, and everything passes heat to everything nearby.
Therefore air slows it down. It traps part the heat it in, and locks part of it out.
It's like glass, come on.
Photons share properties from both particles and waves.
Eh, even around Mercury and Venus, IIRC the space itself is cold. It's not direct thermal energy from the sun through mediums that heats stuff so effectively, it's effectively all electromagnetic radiation.
The photons are the radiation. And yes, taking sunlight around mercury will heat stuff up far more effectively than taking sunlight around Earth. My point was that regardless of where you are from here to Mercury, you can heat stuff in space and you can chill stuff in space depending on what you're doing.
And by the way, I'm not arguing that Americans didn't land on the moon. I throughly believe we did.
I'm simply pointing out issues with the scientific reasoning in this thread. Space around Mercury IS cold, it's the sunlight that heats stuff up. Likewise, space near Earth is cold, and, while sunlight won't heat stuff up as effectively over here as it will near Mercury, it can still inflict much heating.
Photons are the radiation, they are the force carriers of electomagnetism. And since visible light is electomagnetic radiation, then the photons are the radiation.Photons are NOT the "radiation", if anything they are electromagnetic radiation
Were you aboard the Apollo 11? If not, stop using the word "we".I throughly believe we did.
It IS going out in a nova-way (if you mean in a spherical fashion), but all of the sun's energy isn't being released in a single burst.If the light where not going out in a line but more in a nova-way, then it would not matter anything over such "small" distances, everything would burn unless it was shielded by something else