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/sci/ - Science & Math

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>> No.8806043 [View]
File: 23 KB, 325x283, themoon.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
8806043

>>8803110
My realistic but horrific prediction:

>Patient lives, gets awaken but the spine never healed, still alive because life support.
>Can only move eyes and face muscles...but he cant talk because diafragm and lungs will never respond to brain. (probably they removed his vocal cords too...)
>...you can still see the complete desperation and horror in his poor face
OH-THE-HORROR.jpg
>trapped in his head, filled with tons of meds to barely stop the immune system from killing him.
>somehow he manages to comunicate with the help of lip readers.
>starts to suffer random shocks of phantom pain like never before, we cant even imagine the atrocity.
>STOP HIS MISERY!!!!! claims the half the word.
>LET HIM LIVE!!!!! says the other half of the world.
>he doest want to die, he cheated life and he's still there to see his beloved ones to the eyes...
>4chan goes crazy like never before in history.
>riots in front of the hospital.
>after literal days of agony, he just gives up....
>"this was a mistake...sorry mom, sorry dad, I love you"
>"...kill me"

---screenshot this---

>> No.8022806 [View]
File: 23 KB, 325x283, themoon.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
8022806

Sup. So I've been researching some stuff for a story, and I wanted to know how we'd be able to increase the pull of gravity on the Moon. I've seen it mentioned in other science fiction stories of planets/celestial bodies, particularly Ceres, have their rotation increased to induce a similar gravity to Earth's, to make it more comfortable for humans to live on it.

In theory, let's say we could increase the Moon's rotation (I don't know how, but let's just say for argument's sake we could - in one story they suggest a sort of 'train' that runs the equator at high speeds, in the direction of the spin, to gradually increase it over time), would the increased rotation have an effect on gravity? I know gravity is determined by the mass, rather than rotation so it wouldn't technically make gravity feel stronger. But would/could the rotation make a sort of artifical gravity by increasing the amount of centrifugal force a person would feel?

Bear in mind I'm not expert by any measure of this kind of stuff - hence why I'm asking.

>> No.8005062 [View]
File: 23 KB, 325x283, themoon.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
8005062

>>8005018

>after that you need to eject a mass near that of the planet into space

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