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THIS is this why we invest in science. This.

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  • THIS is this why we invest in science. This.

    Love it.

    This was written by Phil Plait last week.


    THIS is why we invest in science. This.

    By Phil Plait




    Every day — every single day, it seems — I see a note on Twitter, or get email, or hear someone on TV asking why we bother spending so much money on NASA. Billions of dollars! We should be spending that money right here on Earth!

    This argument is wrong in every conceivable way. Ignoring that we do spend that money here on Earth, ignoring that NASA’s budget is far less than 1% of the national budget, ignoring that the amount we spend on NASA in a year is less than we spend on air conditioning tents in Afghanistan, ignoring that we spend five times as much on tobacco in a year than we do on space exploration… this argument is still dead wrong.

    Why?

    Because when we invest in science, when we invest in space, when we invest in exploration, we always, always get far more back in return than we put in. And not just in dollars and cents.





    See that picture above? It shows a new type of rocket engine design. Usually, fuel is pumped into a chamber where the chemicals ignite and are blown out the other end, creating thrust. The design pictured above does this in a new way: as the fuel is pumped into the chamber, it’s spun up, creating a vortex. This focuses the flow, keeping it closer to the center of the chamber. In this way, when the fuel ignite, it keeps the walls of the chamber cooler.

    So what, right?

    Here’s what: using this technology — developed for rockets for NASA, remember — engineers designed a way to pump water more quickly and efficiently for fire suppression. The result is nothing short of astonishing:

    One series of tests using empty houses at Vandenberg Air Force Base compared [this new] system with a 20-gallon-per-minute, 1,400 pound-per-square-inch (psi) discharge capability (at the pump) versus a standard 100-gallon-per-minute, 125 psi standard hand line—the kind that typically takes a few firemen to control. The standard line extinguished a set fire in a living room in 1 minute and 45 seconds using 220 gallons of water. The [new] system extinguished an identical fire in 17.3 seconds using 13.6 gallons—with a hose requiring only one person to manage.


    In other words, this new system put out a fire more quickly, using less water, and — critically — with fewer firefighters needed to operate the hose. This frees up needed firefighters to do other important tasks on the job, and therefore makes fighting fires faster and safer.

    There is no way you could’ve predicted beforehand that investing in NASA would have led to the creation of this specific innovation in life-saving technology. But it’s a rock-solid guarantee that investing in science always leads to innovations that have far-ranging and critical benefits to our lives.

    If for no other reason that’s why we need to invest in science: in NASA, in NSF, in NOAA, and all the other agencies that explore the world around us. It’s for our own good. And it always pays off.

  • #2
    Interesting
    Originally posted by Yale
    I want to give her a colonoscopy with my tongue.

    Comment


    • #3
      That's cool and I firmly believe more money should go to NASA.
      "People sleep peaceably in their beds at night only because rough men stand ready to do violence on their behalf. "
      George Orwell

      Comment


      • #4
        nerd

        Comment


        • #5
          Dont forget about NASA also invented Tang!!! Woohoo!!!

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by SSsierra90 View Post
            Interesting
            Yep
            Originally posted by Treadhead View Post
            That's cool and I firmly believe more money should go to NASA.
            /agree
            Originally posted by Damnittsteve View Post
            nerd
            Problem?
            Originally posted by gnturboray View Post
            Dont forget about NASA also invented Tang!!! Woohoo!!!
            And velcro. Think of the old people who have no dexterity! Without NASA we'd have MILLIONS (more) of old people running around in Crocs or flip flips in public.

            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by racrguy View Post
              Yep

              /agree

              Problem?


              And velcro. Think of the old people who have no dexterity! Without NASA we'd have MILLIONS (more) of old people running around in Crocs or flip flips in public.
              What the fuck is a flip flip?

              Comment


              • #8
                This is why I always tell people to think of what we could be doing with our fortune instead of waging useless UN mandated wars. We could have another renaissance!
                Full time ninja editor.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Awesome article. People tend to focus on one little thing and ignore everything else.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by majorownage View Post
                    This is why I always tell people to think of what we could be doing with our fortune instead of waging useless UN mandated wars. We could have another renaissance!
                    or if our best and brightest college kids did something other than go to wall street.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Originally posted by Strychnine View Post
                      Love it.

                      This was written by Phil Plait last week.




                      http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/ba...-science-this/
                      Bazinga

                      Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I727 using Tapatalk
                      Fuck you. We're going to Costco.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Originally posted by stinginstang View Post
                        or if our best and brightest college kids did something other than go to wall street.
                        I wouldn't say the best and brightest go to wall street...I'd say it's a decent spread across fields...but wall street just seems to have incredible payouts.

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          That would be something to research - where do the ivy leaguers go? I don't have any evidence but I think I remember a disproportionate number taking the "big payout" route.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            A company that develops rocket engines for NASA has turned that rocket tech into an amazingly efficient method of extinguishing fires that can put out a flaming car in nine seconds.


                            WRX

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              It cracks me up to read some of the retarded comments on here in other threads saying that "scientists don't know shit, they just hypothesize this and hypothesize that" while typing on a magic box to post on a forum that scientists made possible.

                              Comment

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