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Marking 15 years of continuous Human habitation of Space
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No, we are NOT in space...the 'space' station has to be boosted up in its orbit from time to time because of drag from the atmosphere...look it up
in 1969 we went to the Moon...it's now 2015 and for the last 15 years the best we can do is play tinker-toys in low Earth orbit.
Hang your head and cry, humanity.
in 1969 we went to the Moon...it's now 2015 and for the last 15 years the best we can do is play tinker-toys in low Earth orbit.
Hang your head and cry, humanity.


in 1969 we went to the Moon...it's now 2015 and f..."
They are in space. If you are far enough away to not feel the effects of gravity and there is no air to breath, those are pretty good indications that you are in space. The distance from Earth to space is 100 KMs and the distance from Earth to the ISS is about 400 KMs. If you can achieve orbit rather than plummeting to the ground, you are in space. Just sayin'.


Rose, we are NOT in space...in the first place, it ain't no vacume up there...there's enough air around the "space" station to cause enough drag to bring it tumbleing down...all these "space"-craft we send up there have to do a controlled burn while docked, else this excuse for a space station we have would fall out of the sky in a couple of years...not feel the effects of gravity...big deal, I can do that on the vomit comet, and THAT's not in "space"...our space program is a pice of junk...if we are not going to get serious and actualy DO something and GO somewhere, I say we scrap it...right now it's just a fancy jobs program

In astronomy and cosmology, space is the vast 3-dimensional region that begins where the earth's atmosphere ends. Space is usually thought to begin at the lowest altitude at which satellites can maintain orbits for a reasonable time without falling into the atmosphere.


That might well be more of an economic rather than scientific question, Allynn. The ISS is actually in the thermosphere, not even the exosphere, so the aurora borealis can be further out than it.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atmosph...
Still, it's far enough out to qualify as space as far as I'm concerned. English is a sloppy language & often leads to fruitless arguments like this.
I noticed a few low-key stories in the media today (not on the front page) mentioning that today that the human presence in space went through a bit of a minor milestone, reaching 15 years of continuous habitation.
November 2, marked the 15th anniversary of the arrival of the first crew aboard the International Space Station (ISS). There have been humans in space since then.
International Space Station Anniversary
Back at the end of 2000, some I was chatting with some friends over lunch, discussing the biggest stories of the year 2000. There were several stories, such as Bush's election as US President and the fact that we had all somehow miraculously survived "Y2K at the start of the year (which was going to throw us all back into the Stone Age when all the computers suddenly decided "00" meant the year was 1900 come New Year's Day.) One friends sugested that the big story was being overlooked: the permanent movement of humans into space.
Of course, we could all get bored with space next year, cut the budget (again), and forget the whole thing. But at least we started a 15 year streak.