Skip to main content
Search type Search syntax
Tags [tag]
Exact "words here"
Author user:1234
user:me (yours)
Score score:3 (3+)
score:0 (none)
Answers answers:3 (3+)
answers:0 (none)
isaccepted:yes
hasaccepted:no
inquestion:1234
Views views:250
Code code:"if (foo != bar)"
Sections title:apples
body:"apples oranges"
URL url:"*.example.com"
Saves in:saves
Status closed:yes
duplicate:no
migrated:no
wiki:no
Types is:question
is:answer
Exclude -[tag]
-apples
For more details on advanced search visit our help page
Results tagged with
Search options not deleted user 349

For questions that require plausible (better than suspension-of-disbelief) answers based on Real World science that are not necessarily constrained to the known limits of Real World science. Contrast with the hard-science, science-fiction and internal-consistency tags. This tag may not be used alone. This tag may not be used with the science-fiction, hard-science, or internal-consistency tags.

7 votes
2 answers
1k views

Seasons without an axial tilt?

Let's assume we have an otherwise Earth-like planet orbiting a star just like our own. Our planet has an axial tilt of 0 degrees, meaning its axis is perpendicular to its orbital plane. Could this pl …
14 votes
9 answers
6k views

Automobiles after the apocalypse

So last year I started writing a post-apocalyptic story, and then realized I had no idea what the world was really like, and quite a few things just didn't seem to make sense. One of the biggest that …
14 votes

How do I make oxygen for a generation ship?

The most common solution to this approach is to try and mirror Earth's biosphere. Since you need water, food, and air, you need a solution that provides all 3. Hydroponics (and its closely-related tw …
Kromey's user avatar
  • 8,545
13 votes
4 answers
2k views

What if we never stopped growing?

As I'm sure you're all aware, human beings at some point in their lives -- generally post-puberty or so -- stop growing. As a result, there's some easily-predictable measures, such as the average heig …
37 votes
Accepted

What would block a planet from seeing the stars?

Clouds Perpetual cloud cover -- such as what you might find on Venus -- would of course obscure the night sky and the stars therein. The caveat here is that you would likely have people wondering "Wha …
Community's user avatar
  • 1
22 votes
Accepted

Assistance to fight off a silicon-based lifeform

Stay calm, soldier. Our scientists have a few suggestions for you. Liquid ammonia boils at a temperature of −28F (−33C), so any creature with this as its blood will be significantly colder on thermal …
Community's user avatar
  • 1
9 votes
Accepted

What can we do to Mars to give it a survivable atmosphere?

Oxygen is easy -- import/manufacture more and fill your atmosphere with it. The hard part will be in getting the atmosphere to begin with; if you can do that, the rest is just details. But here's the …
Kromey's user avatar
  • 8,545
19 votes

What kind of/How a secret language could be developed in middle ages by a secret society?

I think you overestimate the complexity of medieval cryptography -- a Vigenère cipher, for instance, was still rather "high-grade" at the time yet for someone well-versed in its use would require noth …
Kromey's user avatar
  • 8,545
17 votes
3 answers
1k views

Can we breathe the moon's crust?

According to this answer to what the moon is made of, the moon's crust is, among other things, 43% oxygen. Assuming we were to go back to the moon within the next couple of years with the goal of est …
11 votes

Does the sun being blocked affect electricity?

Nope. The dust in the air may generate a static charge, which in turn may increase lightning (even in the absence of storms), and blocking the sun will of course limit the effectiveness of photovolta …
Kromey's user avatar
  • 8,545
4 votes

How could a specific asteroid be diverted to impact the earth?

Rockets. And math. The way you make an asteroid meet up with (read: smash into) another body is exactly the same way you make a spacecraft meet up with (read: dock with) another craft: You adjust its …
Kromey's user avatar
  • 8,545
18 votes

Wouldn't building down make more sense when colonizing a dead planet?

Because the dome is impermeable; rock isn't. Or more accurately, the ground is not impermeable. Cracks run this way and that, soil lets gases seep through it, and it all shifts and cracks anew freque …
Kromey's user avatar
  • 8,545
8 votes
Accepted

Can cities and homes stop being functional during an impact winter where the only option is ...

As Tim B points out in his answer, and I pointed out in mine to your original Impact Winter question, the temperatures are only going to drop by about 13 degrees C, or less than 25 degrees F. Yes, it …
Kromey's user avatar
  • 8,545
8 votes
Accepted

Would living underground during an impact winter be ideal?

Underground shelters could help improve survivability in the first days/weeks after an impact, as it provides shelter from raining debris and can also allow survivors to breath cleaner air that has fe …
Kromey's user avatar
  • 8,545
9 votes
Accepted

Where would an asteroid have to hit earth to cause an impact winter?

Pretty much everything you need is right there on that page. Here's a breakdown that largely re-digests your link, though I'll toss in a few extra tidbits to round it out a bit more. Surprise This …
Kromey's user avatar
  • 8,545

15 30 50 per page