File: SPAAAAACEEEE.swf-(760 KB, Other)
[_] Anonymous 06/03/13(Mon)08:37 No.1991877
Marked for deletion (old).
>> [_] Anonymous 06/03/13(Mon)09:41 No.1991897
Around 22570 Pluto crashes into Neptune. Fun fact.
>> [_] Anonymous 06/03/13(Mon)09:45 No.1991899
>pluto
>visit planet
>> [_] Anonymous 06/03/13(Mon)09:46 No.1991901
Flash could have been made before it was reclassified? If anything the moon isn't a planet.
>> [_] Anonymous 06/03/13(Mon)09:50 No.1991902
Pluto's 248-year orbit around the sun takes it 17 degrees above and below the plane in which
Neptune and the other planets travel. So their paths don't actually cross as they swap positions.
>> [_] Anonymous 06/03/13(Mon)10:15 No.1991914
This is pretty lame. It doesn't include moons or the other celestial bodies in our solar system.
>> [_] Anonymous 06/03/13(Mon)11:11 No.1991953
... Celestia is better.
>> [_] Anonymous 06/03/13(Mon)11:20 No.1991959
>>1991897
I'm at 24000 and pluto hasn't crashed.
>>1991953
I'm doing sunbutt's job now ponyfag.
[spoiler]I'm kidding I love Celestia[/spoiler]
>> [_] Anonymous 06/03/13(Mon)13:02 No.1992028
this flash made me realize that leaving for mars in 2023 is not the most efficient year to leave
since distance between earth and mars could be smaller.
>> [_] Anonymous 06/03/13(Mon)13:27 No.1992045
>>1992028
well this would be true if they can get to Mars in 1 second lol
>> [_] Anonymous 06/03/13(Mon)13:31 No.1992047
>>1992045
I considered the time it takes to travel to mars, although I heard somewhere that it would only
take 20 days by 2023, but I just checked on the mars one page and it says 6 to 8 months so I
guess they took this in consideration