Illustrations of the relative size of the comet on which the ESA probe recently landed by Christopher Becke, a high school physics teacher in Williamsburg, Virginia.
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Illustrations of the relative size of the comet on which the ESA probe recently landed by Christopher Becke, a high school physics teacher in Williamsburg, Virginia.
Damn nerds! Only one of those things is a thing
That’d be the Death Star then?
Why is it not popularly known as the Rosetta Stone yet? Or is it? I’ve been on the road with work.
Didn’t the know the fictitious Death Star was that fictitiously big.