XPost: sci.space.tech   
   From: bondage@frontiernet.net   
      
   Sander Vesik wrote:   
   >   
   > In sci.space.tech Scott T. Jensen wrote:   
   > > I'm up on the Space Station and I go out for a nice little space walk. I   
   > > take along my specially designed hunting rifle and fire a bullet down at   
   the   
   > > planet. What would the bullet need to be made of for it to make it all the   
   > > way to the surface and not burn up on entry to our atmosphere? Is there   
   > > anything the bullet could be made of that would be able it to make the   
   trip?   
   > > And would the speed of the bullet affect its chances? Would also the   
   bullet   
   > > go weird like how bullets do when you shoot them into a pool of water?   
   >   
   > If the bullet reaces surfaces then changes are good you left Earth   
   > Orbit... The major effort is not making the bullet reach surface but   
   > maiking a gun that could impart it with enough velocity. You couldn't   
   > achieve it with a chemical gun, for example.   
   >   
   > >   
   > > Idly curious,   
   > > Scott Jensen   
   >   
   > --   
   > Sander   
   >   
   > +++ Out of cheese error +++   
      
      
    If you fire opposite orbital direction, you've effectively given it a   
   'de-orbit' burn. Its perigee will be low enough to enter the atmosphere.   
      
    After that, it's a matter of what it's made of, and how much it   
   weighs, compared to the entry surface area. I don't know if it would   
   stay in a 'flat' attitude, or end up entering nose-first. (or something   
   more complex, once friction slows the spinning I assume it was given   
   from barrel rifling)   
      
    If you fire it *ahead,* you've given it an orbit with a higher apogee   
   than before, and added to the orbital debris situation. (shame on you)   
      
      
   ---   
      
    You know what to remove, to reply....   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   
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