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We very well can, and are doing it right now. *cough* global warming *cough*
1. what is the weather like in philadelphia?
Philly is great in Autumn and Spring just like most places in PA, but we are known for overcast weather unfortunately and this year is supposed to be a cold winter due to the mild summer so pack warm clothes, a set of long johns and a nice heavy coat goes a long way
2. fleas: cold weather and vacuuming?
The cocoons can survive freezing. They do in the wild. They wo not hatch in the cold, but will when it gets warm again. If I were you, I would call an exterminator. They will lay down the right stuff to eventually get rid of the fleas.
3. Are you in favor of weather modification?
The flapping of a chem-trails wings in Texas cause a typhoon in China
4. Boston weather, is it worth it to move there?
Boston is not so super cold because the ocean modifies things. And summer is tempered by continual Canadian cold fronts. Most winters there are only a few days of real cold (below 10 degrees F); and in summer only about a dozen days of heat above 90 degrees F. Otherwise winter is mostly between 18 degrees F (nights) and 35 degrees F (days, ranging some days to 55 or even 60 degrees, and summer ranges mostly between 65 degrees F (nights) and 86 degrees F (days)
5. How Is The Weather In Las Vegas?
it should be cool in the 60s day 30s night
6. Outfits for Winter/cold weather?
Its called a coat
7. Can you tan in this weather????
um its possiblee. i think so. but youd freeezzzee to death. lol
8. Would tanks or small walkers be better for Lunar militaries?
I would suggest something comparable to the LAV-25 used by the canadian and US military would be more appropriate than either.Do not underestimate Regolith, Regolith is not mere dust or sand.On Earth we have erosion effects from wind, rain, weather in general and if nothing else, simply motion. on the moon, we do not. The regolith is entirely composed of tiny abrasive chunks of silicate, razor sharp in almost every tiny grain. That stuff is horrible, it clumps and sticks together, it's statically charged and will stick to just about anything, and if you breath it you might as well be breathing knives, it will shred your lungs and kill you.Lots of moving parts exposed to vacuum and regolith is going to be an awful maintenance headache on its own. Wheels and motors on a relatively lightweight mobile platform will reduce that enormously. the many independent drive systems mean that if anything jams up it will be able to keep going, and the 8 wheels will spread the weight more than sufficiently in the lower gravity.Legs have been discussed to death, the only practical reason I can see for using them on the moon is to avoid dust by literally stilt-walking through it. The terrain on the moon is not rough enough to merit legs even if the gravity makes them easier to construct and move around with.Treads meanwhile are 100% exposed to regolith and essentially guaranteed to clog up with it. The big draw of treads is the hugely effective weight-distribution and surface-grip. but in lower gravity you do not need the weight distribution nearly as much, I could not comment on the grip issue.There is very little that can not be done by a wheeled platform instead of a conventional tank when mass is a reduced issue.For an example in science-fiction, you might look at the Mako vehicle from Mass Effect. A futuristic version of the LAV-25 I mentioned at the start.Lunar combat is going to be a messy affair, a nightmare combination of knife-fight range direct combat and satellite guided munitions.Your horizon is nearer than on earth, likely nearer than it should be simply because of the craters, you have no over-the-horizon radar (on earth, we achieve this by bouncing radar off the ionosphere) your only way to track things beyond the horizon or even line-of-sight is by satellites and flying craft that can directly see them.You may be able to achieve limited long range sensors by observing surface-vibrations from ground vehicles moving around, but in all likelihood the regolith will act as a vibration absorber, another argument for avoiding legs as the pounding footsteps will alert any such sensors like the vibrating glass of water in Jurassic Park.Explosions, particularly fragmentation weaponry will be murderous, on earth a frag grenade is intended to injure as much as it is to kill, on the moon, any suit-puncture is likely to be immediate death without some seriously clever automatic sealant technology, even then the task of getting back to a pressurised environment is going to take long enough moon-warrior is likely to die of their injuries.Any infantry operating on the surface will definitely want some form of armoured vehicle support, if nothing else to provide a med-evac and triage.