now i am going to worry all day about which way is up in outer space. i know how to do it if overtaken by an avalanche but dribbling to see it it runs down your chin or up your nose probably isn't acceptable on a space ship :-))
2006-07-25 23:20:07
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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technology fiction is my type one fiction yet purely on situation it has a superb foundation of clinical reality. i'm not into huge eco-friendly slimy ants that devour people and prefer to take over the international. The fiction should be strongly in accordance to clinical information that has been projected right into a very a threat destiny concern. i became prepared on megastar Trek. I quite like memories that relate to time shifts. more often than not because time is such an enigma. notwithstanding, I a lot favor television reality sequence that simplify the reducing fringe of clinical information, in certain, atomic particle study and a threat hypothetical new understandings of fact. at the same time as new mathematical theories throw gentle into darkish corners i hit upon that very interesting. i ought to like to understand what genuine fact is before I die. (i believe we purely have a draw close of a tiny nook of widely used fact and something is phantasm). i opt for to comprehend if there is this kind of element because the 'modern-day' or is it squeezed out between memory of the previous and anticipation of the destiny. i recognize the idea of diverse universes; the search for 'goldilocks' planets. etc.. i opt for to understand what understanding is. i'm not asking too a lot am I?
2016-10-15 09:54:01
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answer #2
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answered by ? 2
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I suppose when they take off from a planet they assume they are the right way up from that planets gravitational pull and just use that as their base. They usually set a course whilst on planet and they'd use that as a base when travelling in space.
The anti-grav on board would mimic that and so they'd stay the same way up at all times. If every ship did that then the'd all be that way up.
Minute variences in planetary gravity would account for odd angles of meeting in space.
2006-07-26 00:28:06
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answer #3
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answered by Fayth 2
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They are not always the same way up .. in a lot of films and scifi ships are at angles to each other...
Noy all aliens speak english but almost everyone has a universal translator.. in The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, they use the Babel fish...
Can you tell i don't get out much,,
2006-07-25 23:31:38
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answer #4
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answered by Chelle s 2
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In The Wrath of Khan, the ships pass each other at a "strange" angle. This is realistic, but tends to disorient the viewers.
2006-07-25 23:16:07
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answer #5
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answered by _Kraygh_ 5
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It's due to the gravitational pull of the planets they happen to be closest to and because if they flew upside down for too long they would black-out/go unconscious, rather like the effects a jet pilot would experience.
For flippancy..... And besides..... if they flew upside down, whenever they crapped it'd hit them in the eyes!
2006-07-25 23:22:37
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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Probably for the same reason that every alien race they encountered conveniently spoke English.
2006-07-25 23:13:51
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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Because that would make sense to the viewers.
Also, theoretically they communicate between themselves, and orient themselves accordingly. Perhaps.
2006-07-25 23:12:17
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answer #8
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answered by AlphaOne_ 5
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Because the directors said so.
=P
2006-07-25 23:15:34
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answer #9
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answered by mrpopcorn 3
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they don't always only in some shots plenty of other shots wh8ich show them at angles to each other
2006-07-25 23:13:49
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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because it's easier to hang the models that way
2006-07-25 23:15:57
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answer #11
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answered by Tuppence 4
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