Mr. Bambu
Suffer-Not-Injustice Bambu
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What's the problem?
Making this thread on a whim after seeing calcs that rustle my feathers a little bit.
To make a long story short, I think we need to provide an official stance on the distance from the Earth to the edge of the atmosphere. The reason I think this is because calcs tend to use 10,000 kilometers (that's about 2.5% of the distance to the moon), which is the lower-end of the edge of the Exosphere, the outermost layer of the atmosphere that is formally recognized. There are a few problems with this, the greatest of which being that the exosphere, for all intents and purposes, is outer space: its sole role as a classification of the atmosphere is that it is where atoms that escape the actual atmosphere of Earth float about.
Satellites and even the International Space Station all rest in the layer below it, the Thermosphere, which is still widely regarded as being "outer space" for all intents and purposes. These are all beyond the point that is considered "space" by the vast majority of people. What this means is that calculations using "the atmosphere" as a phrase are often incorrect by a factor of 20-100, as they're using a vastly overestimated line that is for all intents and purposes indistinguishable from the area surrounding it.
What should we do?
I think the best solution is what @Jaften recommended when I raised my concerns with him and others elsewhere. He suggested the Kármán Line as the typically recognized edge-of-space, which exists 100 kilometers up and is used by international law to separate Earth from outer space. It is based upon the theoretical maximum height terrestrial flying vehicles (read: airplanes) can go, after which conditions become too difficult (read: space-like) to traverse.
Now, the "edge of space" is recognized as a fairly arbitrary term: there is no hard cut-off, rather it is a gradual loss of properties that define our atmosphere. The greatest distinctions, one feels, are the points at which properties are lost. The Karman Line represents some of these losses of characteristics of atmosphere. I think it is the best option, especially when compared to the oft-cited 10,000 kilometer figure.
So, thoughts, insights, all are appreciated. This is a calc group matter and so all CGMs have a voice here.
Tallies
Agree with 100km: 11 (Mr. Bambu, DMUA, Damage3245, Aguywhodoesthings, Migue79, SeijiSetto, TheRustyOne, AbaddonTheDisappointment, CloverDragon03, KLOL506, Flashlight237)
Disagree with 100km: 0
Making this thread on a whim after seeing calcs that rustle my feathers a little bit.
To make a long story short, I think we need to provide an official stance on the distance from the Earth to the edge of the atmosphere. The reason I think this is because calcs tend to use 10,000 kilometers (that's about 2.5% of the distance to the moon), which is the lower-end of the edge of the Exosphere, the outermost layer of the atmosphere that is formally recognized. There are a few problems with this, the greatest of which being that the exosphere, for all intents and purposes, is outer space: its sole role as a classification of the atmosphere is that it is where atoms that escape the actual atmosphere of Earth float about.
Satellites and even the International Space Station all rest in the layer below it, the Thermosphere, which is still widely regarded as being "outer space" for all intents and purposes. These are all beyond the point that is considered "space" by the vast majority of people. What this means is that calculations using "the atmosphere" as a phrase are often incorrect by a factor of 20-100, as they're using a vastly overestimated line that is for all intents and purposes indistinguishable from the area surrounding it.
What should we do?
I think the best solution is what @Jaften recommended when I raised my concerns with him and others elsewhere. He suggested the Kármán Line as the typically recognized edge-of-space, which exists 100 kilometers up and is used by international law to separate Earth from outer space. It is based upon the theoretical maximum height terrestrial flying vehicles (read: airplanes) can go, after which conditions become too difficult (read: space-like) to traverse.
Now, the "edge of space" is recognized as a fairly arbitrary term: there is no hard cut-off, rather it is a gradual loss of properties that define our atmosphere. The greatest distinctions, one feels, are the points at which properties are lost. The Karman Line represents some of these losses of characteristics of atmosphere. I think it is the best option, especially when compared to the oft-cited 10,000 kilometer figure.
So, thoughts, insights, all are appreciated. This is a calc group matter and so all CGMs have a voice here.
Tallies
Agree with 100km: 11 (Mr. Bambu, DMUA, Damage3245, Aguywhodoesthings, Migue79, SeijiSetto, TheRustyOne, AbaddonTheDisappointment, CloverDragon03, KLOL506, Flashlight237)
Disagree with 100km: 0
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