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Benuliukas Says:

Oct 5, 2009 - wow, that was amazing, it can give a lot of answers about universe

tuseroni Says:

Oct 8, 2009 - i must say, the effects of the bubbles in the water remind me of gravitational effects, for instance the first one with the big bubble and small bubble, they seemed to be moving about in a way very indicative of the way stellar masses move through space, collisions and absorptions as well. and the effervescent tablet's bubbles remind me of the way early planets formed, with bigger bubbles absorbing smaller bubbles to grow larger. was quite interesting

SirTeeGeeEss Says:

Oct 9, 2009 - "Waves in a Large Free Sphere of Water - An experiment at the International Space Station. " ... Learn to read.

w00kiey Says:

Oct 13, 2009 - i wander what beer looks like

soulflower84 Says:

Oct 19, 2009 - scientists are so hot.

hissclick Says:

Oct 21, 2009 - are you really that uneducated?

moutapt Says:

Oct 22, 2009 - 2:35 alien?! O.O

L0VECHILDD Says:

Oct 22, 2009 - yeah, for sure. LOTS of answers.

BigTymerPimp Says:

Oct 23, 2009 - EAT THE BUBBLE! That's cool. Nothing like Alka-Seltzer bubbles in space.

RowanTolley02 Says:

Oct 24, 2009 - zero gravity is cool.

JackotheWako2000 Says:

Oct 27, 2009 - that was awesome. I wonder what vinegar and baking soda would look like in 0 G.

shadyalien Says:

Oct 28, 2009 - This is like the best thing ever.

ostskateteam Says:

Oct 29, 2009 - thats awsome!!!!!

nattsurfaren Says:

Oct 30, 2009 - bubbles eating other bubbles it's like in the real world with companies.

user25119498503 Says:

Oct 30, 2009 - Actually, I think it is better to associate the effect with biological competition; animals preying upon one another evoke much more appealing imagery than quarterly profit projections.

mintymintmintmint Says:

Nov 2, 2009 - sweet still confused how u suspend all that water in mid air but still awsom

anorwood84 Says:

Nov 3, 2009 - Because it's in microgravity... Like in earths orbit.

sniperGasMask Says:

Nov 6, 2009 - They're obviously in microgravity.

ModPCLM Says:

Nov 8, 2009 - wtf

o0tinerz0o Says:

Nov 8, 2009 - at 2:34 it looks like a human face!

harvellt Says:

Nov 9, 2009 - Mintymintmintmint are you kidding?? it's nasa.... and the water is floating.....

klutterkicker Says:

Nov 14, 2009 - Don't tell me that last one wasn't just those guys saying "what can we stuff into a sphere of water?" lol Those bubbles though might mimic the actions of some biological materials like phospholipids suspended in tiny pressurized regions. Or maybe not.

samnseq89 Says:

Nov 15, 2009 - The discription said "International Space Station" It's probably just in space like harvellt said

klett69 Says:

Nov 20, 2009 - that makes me think of the possible invisible effects of microwaves and other radio waves on human body cells; our cells... Can someone say why 2.4 GHz was absolutely necessary as a standard?

deathmetod Says:

Nov 23, 2009 - you suck