pull down to refresh

"A compass in space is going to measure different things [depending on] where exactly in space you are," Jared Espley, a planetary scientist at NASA Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland, told Live Science. A compass would still technically work in space, but it wouldn't necessarily point you back to Earth. Instead, it would point to the north pole of whatever magnetic field is the strongest, relative to where in space the compass is located. Read more: https://www.livescience.com/space/where-would-a-compass-point-in-outer-space
This would make a good fun fact Friday.
reply
25 sats \ 7 replies \ @fm 26 Nov
The next question should be: what time is it on space..
reply
reply
10 sats \ 5 replies \ @fm 26 Nov
Ahhh, the space colonizing mind!! lets have time being counted using hours that only exist on earth
reply
UTC until there is another standard.
reply
Exactly! And it might even take decades to find any other standards.
reply
31 sats \ 2 replies \ @fm 26 Nov
Despite only making sense on earth, yeah, we have no better standart. Either way, its not likely to have to use that on mars soon..
reply
Bitcoin block height standard :P
reply
Timechain, baby!
reply
...because outer space is fucking infinite, Laura
reply