Joey22jordison
Joey22jordison
81 / 5
1st Nov 2015
5th Nov 2015
It`s my first infographics about Space. Leave comments and suggestions. Thanks.
2001 hal9000 2010 thefinalfrontier pluto arthurcclarke knewall 2061 zooooooom

Comments

  • PokeMinecraft14
    PokeMinecraft14
    4th Nov 2015
    @robloxian52 Only in areas that are never exposed to sunlight, such as in craters. Daytime surface temperatures on the moon are hot enough to boil water. Due to the lack of atmosphere the sun's ultraviolet can split water into hydrogen and oxygen. I cannot exist outside of dark, cold craters. Almost all of the moon is as dry as it gets.
  • robloxian52
    robloxian52
    4th Nov 2015
    @Pokeminecraft14 It is possible for water to exist on the moon but, only as ice
  • PokeMinecraft14
    PokeMinecraft14
    4th Nov 2015
    The information is not true. The moon cannot have water on it's surface and moonquakes show it is not underground either. The hot daytime temperatures on the moon cause water to turn into gas and get blown away. Please remove this information.
  • atomic2385
    atomic2385
    4th Nov 2015
    your english is better than most people on the internet's
  • Joey22jordison
    Joey22jordison
    4th Nov 2015
    @12Me21, I took info from Interne. I cant guarantee that the information is true
  • 12Me21
    12Me21
    4th Nov 2015
    The moon has more water than earth? I know there IS water, but the moon is pretty small... Is it just because the moon is colder so there can be water deeper inside?
  • Joey22jordison
    Joey22jordison
    4th Nov 2015
    UPD.: Water volume of Earth and Moon
  • Tangle10
    Tangle10
    4th Nov 2015
    PokeMinecraft14: Doesn't Jupiter, yknow, make the asteroid belt itself stay where it is? Mars has no staying power at all.
  • PokeMinecraft14
    PokeMinecraft14
    4th Nov 2015
    I'm back with more corrections and suggestions. Jupiter is not much of a shield. The asteroid belt is between us and Jupiter, so Jupiter will not block anything. Something more likely would be Jupiter flinging asteroids at us, it probably has before. As for my suggestion, basic information and art for venus would be great. It's the hottest planet and has a very thick atmosphere.
  • Tangle10
    Tangle10
    4th Nov 2015
    sentinal-5: Gotcha. For a short mission, though, you could probably do a Venus 62km airthingy. Would probably be as easy as the stuff in The Martian... ;)