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by ge96 80 days ago
10 days? Hope they brought snacks

Seriously though I hope they're able to get up and walk around

I don't know if I could handle that 10 days in that small room

6 comments

I've heard it feels a lot bigger once you're in freefall. Imagine if you could use all of your room's surfaces as floor space. I would think your room would feel a lot bigger.
They can move around after they switch from launch to spaceflight config. Apparently they also have some exercise gear for the journey.
It is just the capsule though? There's no stage under them/another cylinder? Module

Trying to imagine how big the thing is like 10x10 feet room

Just the capsule - there is a module but it can’t be reached and is for more engines that they will leave behind.
ABC News says 330 habitable cubic feet or about the interior space of two minivans.
330 cubic feet =~ 9.3m²
A cube with an edge of 2.1 meters.
> ABC News says 330 habitable cubic feet or about the interior space of two minivans

I did lockdown in a ~450 sq. ft. Habitable under 400. Partner. Cat. Me. The astronauts will be fine.

~450 square feet, with how many feet in the third dimension? You probably had an order of magnitude more volume than 330 cubic feet there.
> You probably had an order of magnitude more volume than 330 cubic feet there

I’m 6’, so that’s the usable volume. (I’m not claustrophobic heighwise.)

I honestly don’t see an issue spending a couple days with folks I respect and admire in close quarters for ten days.

Seems like its at least bigger than the Apollo Lunar Module from the 70's

And with modern forms of entertainment to make the trip less boring.

> And with modern forms of entertainment

"We're sorry, your Prime subscription appears to have cancelled. Would you like to renew it? We can send you a text message to get this started ..."

This capsule isn't part of your Netflix Household. Create an account to enjoy your own Netflix today.
I wonder if Starlink works if the dish is above the satellites. Technically GPS can work from the moon.
Starlink uses phased arrays pointed at the ground but lasers between satellites. So it wouldn’t be impossible to spin one around and have it bounce traffic to earth through the swarm pointing down.

But these satellites are very close to earth compared to the moon. It wouldn’t only save 0.3% transmit power vs just sending right to the surface. It’s very unlikely the consumer antennas could manage hitting an earth satellite from the moon.

> Technically GPS can work from the moon.

Well, one side of it.

Actually, it's all dark.
I don't think I would be bored in this trip!
Astronauts are made of different stuff. Truly the best of the best.
Forget about the snacks, I wonder about the toilet in 10 days in such cramped living conditions.
Toilet fan has already jammed. Not sure if this means the shit has, or hasn't, hit the fan.
I hope they will be able to stretch their legs on the moon.
They're not getting off at the moon, it's just a fly by.
... it's an orbital mission. They're orbiting the moon, not landing.