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==Explanation==
 
==Explanation==
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{{incomplete|Created by a CARE BEAR STARE. Please mention here why this explanation isn't complete. Do NOT delete this tag too soon.}}
  
 
This comic was posted on a week with a notably high number of {{w|rocket launch}}es.  Originally, there were to be four {{w|Orbital spaceflight|orbital rocket}} launches from the United States on December 19, 2018 (the publish date for the comic), which would have tied with the prior record for number of orbital rocket launches in one day.  While these launches were ultimately delayed, breaking the event, the comic was doubtless under production by then.
 
This comic was posted on a week with a notably high number of {{w|rocket launch}}es.  Originally, there were to be four {{w|Orbital spaceflight|orbital rocket}} launches from the United States on December 19, 2018 (the publish date for the comic), which would have tied with the prior record for number of orbital rocket launches in one day.  While these launches were ultimately delayed, breaking the event, the comic was doubtless under production by then.
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: A rocket accelerates from the moment it leaves the ground.  The faster a rocket goes, the bigger volume of air it pushes through per second - but the higher a rocket goes, the thinner the air.  (Before liftoff, the rocket is not moving, and thus is not pushing through air.  Once in orbit, there is essentially no air to push through, so the rocket is not pushing through air.  Between those two times, the rocket is pushing through some amount of air, the exact amount increasing before Max Q and decreasing after Max Q.)  "Max Q" is the moment where these two factors produce a maximum, and is the point where the rocket's structure must withstand the most air pushing back against it.
 
: A rocket accelerates from the moment it leaves the ground.  The faster a rocket goes, the bigger volume of air it pushes through per second - but the higher a rocket goes, the thinner the air.  (Before liftoff, the rocket is not moving, and thus is not pushing through air.  Once in orbit, there is essentially no air to push through, so the rocket is not pushing through air.  Between those two times, the rocket is pushing through some amount of air, the exact amount increasing before Max Q and decreasing after Max Q.)  "Max Q" is the moment where these two factors produce a maximum, and is the point where the rocket's structure must withstand the most air pushing back against it.
 
; Booster separation
 
; Booster separation
: Rockets are designed in {{w|Multistage rocket|stages}}, so they do not have to carry the empty fuel tanks all the way to orbit.  (Carrying any mass to orbit is expensive, so the more that can be dropped off earlier, the better.) Two or three stages are typical.  "Booster separation" marks the point where the first of these stages (the "{{w|Booster (rocketry)|booster}}"), its fuel expended, is typically ejected.
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: Rockets are designed in {{w|Multistage rocket|stages}}, so they do not have to carry the empty fuel tanks all the way to orbit.  (Carrying any mass to orbit is expensive, so the more that can be dropped off earlier, the better.) Three stages is typical.  "Booster separation" marks the point where the first of these stages (the "{{w|Booster (rocketry)|booster}}"), its fuel expended, is typically ejected.
 
; Max-CB<nowiki>:</nowiki> Highest chance of collision with {{w|Care Bears}}.  
 
; Max-CB<nowiki>:</nowiki> Highest chance of collision with {{w|Care Bears}}.  
:  This is entirely fictitious.  Care Bears are fictitious characters, which have a toy line, television series, and movies.  The existence of a basketball sneaker named the "Nike Air Force Max CB" may or may not be relevant.
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:  This is entirely fictitious.  Care Bears are fictitious characters, which have a toy line, television series, and movies.  The existence of a basketball sneaker named the "Nike Air Force Max CB" may or may not be relevant. Alternatively, in a space-based MMORPG {{w|Eve Online}}, "Carebears" is a derogatory term used for characters who avoid pvp combat,  stay mostly in Concord (police) controlled high-security space (usually mining asteroids in their spaceships), and never venture to low security or zero security space, where pvp  is freely enabled
 
; Main stage separation
 
; Main stage separation
 
: See "booster separation" above.  This marks the point where the second stage (the "main stage") is ejected.
 
: See "booster separation" above.  This marks the point where the second stage (the "main stage") is ejected.
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: Another fictional step.  Astronauts are not the sort of people who panic easily, nor struggle with their crewmates.  More importantly, in any modern rocket the "pilot" is not a human being, but a computer incapable of panic{{citation needed}} (as in the human emotion). It is possible that part of the flight computer could fail, causing redundant failsafes to take over, but the process could not correctly be described as a "struggle", and in any case this sort of failure is uncommon enough that it is not part of a "typical" rocket launch.
 
: Another fictional step.  Astronauts are not the sort of people who panic easily, nor struggle with their crewmates.  More importantly, in any modern rocket the "pilot" is not a human being, but a computer incapable of panic{{citation needed}} (as in the human emotion). It is possible that part of the flight computer could fail, causing redundant failsafes to take over, but the process could not correctly be described as a "struggle", and in any case this sort of failure is uncommon enough that it is not part of a "typical" rocket launch.
 
; Pursuit phase
 
; Pursuit phase
: Fictional.  This assumes the (nonexistent) reunified booster would have enough fuel to pursue the top stage of the rocket, and a reason to do so.  See "Reunification".  This might be a reference to {{w|Pursuit guidance}}. The comic indicates that a fight ensues with only one of the pair continuing to orbit.
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: Fictional.  This assumes the (nonexistent) reunified booster would have enough fuel to pursue the top stage of the rocket, and a reason to do so.  See "Reunification".  This might be a reference to the Pursuit Phase of the [http://www.climbtherainbow.com/domestic-violence-information/the-domestic-violence-cycle/ Domestic Violence Cycle].  The phase is characterized by the abuser attempting to convince the abused to reunite after a separation.  This phase of the relationship cycle is when [https://www.nwalsafeplace.org/about-abuse/cycle-of-violence-2/ most domestic violence murders occur].  Sadly, the comic indicates that a fight ensues with only one of the pair continuing to orbit.
 
; Inter-stage {{w|dogfight}}
 
; Inter-stage {{w|dogfight}}
: Fictional.  See "Pursuit phase".  A dogfight is an aerial battle between fighter aircraft, conducted at close range.  This step claims that the rocket booster and the top stage of the rocket engage in a battle.
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: Fictional.  See "Pursuit phase".  A dogfight is an aerial battle between fighter aircraft, conducted at close range.  This step claims that the rocket booster and the top stage of the rocket engage in a battle.  In the domestic violence analogy, the boosters would probably have been better off finding their own, separate path.
 
; Winner proceeds to space
 
; Winner proceeds to space
 
: Fictional.  As noted above, in a real rocket launch there is no dogfight of which there can be a "winner". A careful reading would note that the bottom stage "wins" by default; in contrast, in a real (orbital) rocket launch, the top stage typically proceeds to space.
 
: Fictional.  As noted above, in a real rocket launch there is no dogfight of which there can be a "winner". A careful reading would note that the bottom stage "wins" by default; in contrast, in a real (orbital) rocket launch, the top stage typically proceeds to space.
  
The title text refers once again to the Care Bears franchise. The Care Bears live in a castle made of clouds, called [https://carebears.fandom.com/wiki/Care-a-Lot_Castle Care-a-Lot Castle], so the comic claims that NASA aims to avoid launching into their castle, but sometimes cannot avoid hitting "stray" Care Bears. That being said, the point about the strike has a basis in truth; at the speeds a rocket moves, impact with something roughly the size and weight of a human (or a Care Bear) has the potential to be catastrophic. If something should threaten to connect with the rocket, the best that the humans involved can do is hope for a glancing blow with a part of the rocket sturdy enough to endure the impact.
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The title text refers once again to the Care Bears franchise. The Care Bears live in a castle made of clouds, called [https://carebears.fandom.com/wiki/Care-a-Lot_Castle Care-a-Lot Castle], so the comic claims that NASA aims to avoid launching into their castle, but sometimes cannot avoid hitting "stray" Care Bears.
  
 
==Transcript==
 
==Transcript==

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