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| 06 Sep 2016 01:01 AM |
| if you were an astronaut and got separated from your spacecraft and floated away in space endlessly until you ########### and died a lonely death that you knew was about to come. why do i think about this stuff late at night |
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| 06 Sep 2016 01:02 AM |
| ####################################### |
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Ky_Lo
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| Joined: 13 Aug 2011 |
| Total Posts: 16511 |
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| 06 Sep 2016 01:02 AM |
| that would be pulling a george clooney |
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| 06 Sep 2016 01:05 AM |
| Or, somehow, a force of gravity threw you in the direction of earth, you got the small probability of not disintegrating, then somehow landed in the ocean near a beach and swam back, that would be awesome. |
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Ky_Lo
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| Joined: 13 Aug 2011 |
| Total Posts: 16511 |
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| 06 Sep 2016 01:05 AM |
| ^ that would be pulling a sandra bullock!! |
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| 06 Sep 2016 01:07 AM |
@Spooky
Yeah, except the impact from hitting the water would instantly kill you at that speed.
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| 06 Sep 2016 01:10 AM |
| I wouldn't say INSTANTLY. Now, knowing the physics that I do know, If you were to land in a diving motion, you'd cut through the adhesive molecules that water has and you would dive down very far. Now, you'd have to progress up slowly, or else your lungs will explode, literally. If you landed in a diving motion and the exact second, millisecond you hit, and curved your body, the velocity of your fall would throw you to whichever direction you were pointed. Now, the water does have a chance of boiling on impact, but it's only for not even 1/4 a second. |
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