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NASA refurbishes video copies of moon landing

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  • #21
    Re: NASA refurbishes video copies of moon landing

    Originally posted by Yedtarts View Post
    Forget the flag, what about the lighting angles and the shadows? What about the exact same back ground, in one the lander is there and in the other it’s not there? What about there is no dust on the lander’s foot pads although according to them the send is very powdery? And what about all the foot prints underneath the lander? What about the camera’s crosses stayed behind certain objects? Also there are thousands of questions which ether they don’t give any explanations or they answer sarcastically.
    All of this is addressed in the page I linked early in the thread.
    [COLOR=#4b0082][B][SIZE=4][FONT=trebuchet ms]“If you think you can, or you can’t, you’re right.”
    -Henry Ford[/FONT][/SIZE][/B][/COLOR]

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    • #22
      Re: NASA refurbishes video copies of moon landing

      Originally posted by Siggie View Post
      Yedtarts, the video you're posting is the same one Phil debunks in my link above.

      Andre - Add antigravity to that? First of all it's remove the influence of gravity bc there's no anti-gravity anything, but that's neither here nor there. How do you expect gravity to affect it? It's being help up by a metal rod across the top. You made a case about there not being air. That's what the test addressed. You can't make a case about gravity without saying how you think gravity or the lack of it would have changed what was observed. You say it acts Earthly as if you have any experience with anything that's not Earthly...
      Anti gravity - meaning a force that opposes gravity, not a device that defies gravity. Scientists like to coin their own language then shove it down your throat as if they are the only ones that can define things.

      In the past, mainstream scientists once regarded the "crazy" inventors of "flying machines" with smug amusement if not outright disgust. As a result, modern aviation didn't come from conventional science, but from the arena of "crackpot" flying-machine inventors. Dismissing the crazy antigravity inventors of today would fit right in with those who ridiculed all the amateur aerodynamicists of the past. Think about it, people were writing novels about going to the moon wayyyyyyy before it supposedly happened.

      You haven't been to the moon
      You weren't alive when it happened
      What do you base your belief on?
      Last edited by KanadaHye; 08-21-2009, 05:17 AM.
      "Nobody can give you freedom. Nobody can give you equality or justice or anything. If you're a man, you take it." ~Malcolm X

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      • #23
        Re: NASA refurbishes video copies of moon landing

        Conspiracy theorists rejoice: Prized 'moon rock' in Dutch national museum is a fake

        AMSTERDAM - It's not green cheese, but it might as well be.

        The Dutch national museum said Thursday that one of its prized possessions, a rock supposedly brought back from the moon by U.S. astronauts, is just a piece of petrified wood.

        Rijksmuseum spokeswoman Xandra van Gelder, who oversaw the investigation that proved the piece was a fake, said the museum will keep it anyway as a curiosity.

        "It's a good story, with some questions that are still unanswered," she said. "We can laugh about it."

        The museum acquired the rock after the death of former prime minister Willem Drees in 1988. Drees received it as a private gift on Oct. 9, 1969 from then-U.S. ambassador J. William Middendorf during a visit by the three Apollo 11 astronauts, part of their "Giant Leap" goodwill tour after the first moon landing.

        Middendorf, who lives in Rhode Island, told Dutch NOS news that he had gotten it from the U.S. State Department, but couldn't recall the exact details.

        The U.S. Embassy in the Hague said it was investigating the matter.

        The museum had vetted the moon rock early on by checking with NASA, Van Gelder said.

        She said the space agency told the museum then that it was possible the country had received a rock: NASA gave moon rocks to more than 100 countries in the early 1970s, but those were from later missions.

        "Apparently no one thought to doubt it, since it came from the prime minister's collection," Van Gelder said.

        The rock is not usually on display; the museum is primarily known for its paintings and other works of fine art by masters such as Rembrandt.

        It was on show in 2006 and a space expert informed the museum it was unlikely NASA would have given away any moon rocks three months after Apollo returned to Earth.

        Researchers from Amsterdam's Free University said they could see at a glance the rock was not from the moon.

        "It's a nondescript, pretty-much-worthless stone," Geologist Frank Beunk said in an article published by the museum.

        He said it was worth no more than C50 ($70).

        http://www.cbc.ca/cp/Oddities/090827/K082704AU.html
        "Nobody can give you freedom. Nobody can give you equality or justice or anything. If you're a man, you take it." ~Malcolm X

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        • #24
          Re: NASA refurbishes video copies of moon landing

          India ends moon mission

          NEW DELHI, India (CNN) -- India has ended its unmanned moon mission after failed attempts to regain contact with the orbiter, an official said Monday.

          The Indian Space Research Organization currently has no means to locate Chandrayaan-I, which can float in space like a dead satellite for 1,000 more days before crashing on the lunar surface, said S. Satish, a spokesman for the agency.

          "We are exploring the possibility of making a request to the United States and Russia to help locate it since they have powerful radars," Satish said.

          The space agency blames system failures on Chandrayaan-I for the abrupt loss of contact Saturday.

          Chandrayaan-I was originally expected to stay in orbit for two years, but Satish said that was a stretch.

          "That probably was a mistake because such craft do not have this much life," he said.

          However, the mission had met most of its scientific objectives by providing "large volume of data," the space agency said.

          In 312 days, it completed more than 3,400 orbits around the moon before vanishing off the radars, according to the space agency.

          Chandrayaan-I aimed to take high-resolution, three-dimensional images of the lunar surface, especially the permanently-shadowed polar regions.

          The craft carried payloads from the United States, the European Union and Bulgaria. One of its objectives was to search for evidence of water or ice and attempt to identify the chemical composition of certain lunar rocks.

          Earlier this year, the Indian government increased the federal budget for space research to about $1 billion from $700 million.

          http://www.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/asiapc...nds/index.html

          Great, more space junk... look out belowwwwwwww.
          "Nobody can give you freedom. Nobody can give you equality or justice or anything. If you're a man, you take it." ~Malcolm X

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          • #25
            Re: NASA refurbishes video copies of moon landing

            Global puzzle: Some Apollo moon rocks are lost, perhaps not all by mistake

            Published: Monday, September 14, 2009 | 6:03 AM ET
            Canadian Press Toby Sterling, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

            AMSTERDAM, Netherlands - Attention, countries of the world: Do you know where your moon rocks are?

            The discovery of a fake moon rock in the Netherlands' national museum should be a wake-up call for more than 130 countries that received gifts of lunar rubble from both the Apollo 11 flight in 1969 and Apollo 17 three years later.

            Nearly 270 rocks scooped up by U.S. astronauts were given to foreign countries by the Nixon administration. But according to experts and research by The Associated Press, the whereabouts of some of the small rocks are unknown.

            "There is no doubt in my mind that many moon rocks are lost or stolen and now sitting in private collections," said Joseph Gutheinz, a University of Phoenix instructor and former U.S. government investigator who has made a project of tracking down the lunar treasures.

            The Rijksmuseum, more noted as a repository for 17th century Dutch paintings, announced last month it had had its plum-sized "moon" rock tested, only to discover it was a piece of petrified wood, possibly from Arizona. The museum said it inherited the rock from the estate of a former prime minister.

            The real Dutch moon rocks are in a natural history museum. But the misidentification raised questions about how well countries have safeguarded their presents from Washington.

            Genuine moon rocks, while worthless in mineral terms, can fetch six-figure sums from black-market collectors.

            Of 135 rocks from the Apollo 17 mission given away to nations or their leaders, only about 25 have been located by CollectSpace.com, a Web site for space history buffs that has long attempted to compile a list.

            That should not be taken to mean the others are lost - just that the records kept at the time are far from complete.

            The AP reviewed declassified correspondence between the State Department and U.S. embassies in 1973 and was able to locate ten additional Apollo 17 rocks - in Switzerland, Belgium, Italy, Barbados, France, Poland, Norway, Costa Rica, Egypt and Nepal.

            But the correspondence yielded a meagre 30 leads, such as the name of the person who received them or the museum where they were to be initially displayed. Ecuador and Cyprus are among several that said they had never heard of the rocks. Five were handed to African dictators long since dead or deposed.

            The outlook for tracking the estimated 134 Apollo 11 rocks is even bleaker. The locations of fewer than a dozen are known.

            "NASA turned over the samples to the State Department to distribute," said Jennifer Ross-Nazzal, a NASA historian, in an emailed response to questions. "We don't have any records about when and to whom the rocks were given."

            "The Office of the Historian does not keep records of what became of the moon rocks, and to my knowledge, there is no one entity that does so," emailed Tiffany Hamelin, the State Department historian.

            That may seem surprising now, but in the early 1970s, few expected Apollo 17 would be the last mission to the moon. With the passage of time, the rocks' value has skyrocketed.

            NASA keeps most of the 382 kilograms (842 lbs) gathered by the Apollo missions locked away, giving small samples to researchers and lending a set of larger rocks for exhibitions.

            Apollo 11 gift rocks typically weigh just 0.05 grams, scarcely more than a grain of rice. The Apollo 17 gift rocks weigh about 1.1 grams. Both are encased in plastic globes to protect them and ease viewing.

            Each U.S. state got both sets of rocks, and Gutheinz said he and his students have accounted for nearly all the Apollo 17 rocks, though some are in storage and inaccessible. They have only just begun researching Apollo 11 rocks in the states.

            In one known legal sale of moon samples, in 1993, moon soil weighing 0.2 grams from an unmanned Russian probe was auctioned at Sotheby's for $442,500.

            Gutheinz, the former U.S. investigator, says ignorance about the rocks is an invitation to thieves, and he should know.

            In 1998, he was working for the NASA Office of the Inspector General in a sting operation to uncover fake rocks when he was offered the real Apollo 17 rock - the one given to Honduras - for $5 million.

            The rock was recovered and eventually returned to Honduras, but not before a fight in Florida District Court that went down in legal annals as "United States vs. One Lucite Ball Containing Lunar Material (One Moon Rock) and One Ten Inch By Fourteen Inch Wooden Plaque."

            The case is not unique.

            Malta's Apollo 17 rock was stolen in 2004. In Spain, the newspaper El Mundo this summer reported that the Apollo 17 rock given to the country's former dictator, Francisco Franco, is missing.

            Franco died in 1975. The paper quoted his grandson as denying the rock had been sold. He said his mother had lost it, but claimed it was the family's personal possession, to sell if it wished.

            Gutheinz says Romania's Apollo 17 rock disappeared after the fall and execution of Nicolae Ceausescu in 1989.

            According to Gutheinz and other reports, Pakistan's Apollo 17 rock is missing; so is Nicaragua's, since the Sandinistas came to power in 1979. Afghanistan's Apollo 17 rock sat in Kabul's national museum until it was ransacked in 1996.

            In fact, the Netherlands is one of the few countries where the location of both the Apollo 11 and Apollo 17 gift rocks is known. Britain, Australia, Canada and New Zealand are others - though none has rocks from both missions on permanent public display and some have been kept in storage for decades.

            The Amsterdam case appears to be not fraud but the result of poor vetting by the Rijksmuseum.

            Spokeswoman Xandra van Gelder said the museum checked with NASA after receiving the rock in 1992 from the estate of the late Prime Minister Willem Drees. NASA told the museum, without seeing it, that it was "possible" it was a moon rock.

            But it weighed a whopping 89 grams (3.1 ounces). In addition, its gold-colored cardboard plaque does not describe it as a moon rock.

            The U.S. ambassador gave Drees the rock during an Oct. 9, 1969 visit by the Apollo 11 astronauts to the Netherlands. Drees's grandson, also named Willem, told the AP his grandfather had been out of office for more than a decade and was nearly deaf and blind in 1969, though his mind was still sharp.

            "My guess is that he did not hear well what was said," said the grandson. "He may have formed his own idea about what it was."

            The family never thought to question the story before donating the rock, to which it had not attached great importance or monetary value.

            http://www.cbc.ca/cp/Oddities/090914/K091402AU.html
            "Nobody can give you freedom. Nobody can give you equality or justice or anything. If you're a man, you take it." ~Malcolm X

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            • #26
              Re: NASA refurbishes video copies of moon landing

              Water sheathes, permeates moon
              Spacecraft reveal higher than expected abundances of the liquid on the lunar surface and in volcanic rocksBy Ron Cowen Web edition : 8:06 pm Text Size Scientists’ understanding of the moon could be all wet. Its surface is surprisingly dewy and its interior contains more water than previous analyses of moon rocks have indicated, according to new studies.


              Observations from three spacecraft suggest that water is widely distributed over a thin layer of the lunar surface rather than locked up in icy enclaves predicted to lie at the moon’s poles. The results, detailed in a trio of papers to be posted online September 24 in Science, suggest that liquid water may be more available to future moon explorers than had been thought. Concentrations in sunlit soil might average about 1,000 parts per million, the equivalent of roughly a quart of water per ton of material. That water doesn’t remain on the moon, but comes and goes each lunar day.


              In contrast, water molecules bound to phosphate minerals within volcanic rocks — material that formed well beneath the lunar surface — date back several billion years, says Francis McCubbin of the Carnegie Institution for Science in Washington D.C. A fourth, unpublished study led by McCubbin finds a surprisingly high abundance of this interior water, which may shed new light on how the moon formed.


              The researchers who made the surface observations caution that their observations, which are based on low-resolution spectroscopy of minerals on the lunar surface, cannot clearly distinguish between water and the hydroxyl ion, which can serve as a marker for water.


              Nonetheless, Roger N. Clark of the U.S. Geological Survey in Flagstaff, Ariz., asserts that “this is the first detection of water on the moon and we see it all over, not just in the polar regions.” Clark, a coauthor of two of the Science papers, led a team that found evidence of water in spectra taken by the Cassini spacecraft as it flew past the moon in 1999. Clark says he knew his team had a real signal a while ago, but he says he waited to publish because “the detection was so fantastic, I felt we needed confirmation.”


              Confirmation has now come in the form of spectra taken by instruments aboard NASA’s Deep Impact spacecraft and Chandrayaan-I, India’s first mission to the moon. Each of the papers in Science reports data from one of the spacecraft.


              Last week, other researchers reported that the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter spacecraft had found hydrogen on the moon’s surface, a possible marker of water (SN Online: 9/18/09).


              The three Science papers “present a strong case for surficial water on the moon, and this could certainly be the result of delivery by icy impactors or solar wind interactions long after the moon formed,” comments Robin Canup of the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colo., who is not a member of any of the teams.


              Data collected by Deep Impact one-quarter of a lunar day apart reveal that layers of water only a few molecules thick form, evaporate into space and then reform each lunar day, notes Jessica Sunshine of the University of Maryland in College Park, lead author of the Deep Impact study.


              An obvious driver of such a cycle would be hydrogen ions delivered by the solar wind. The ions could interact with oxygen-rich minerals on the lunar surface to produce water, Sunshine suggests. Heat from the sun could then vaporize the water each lunar noon. Although the long-term effects of this interaction on the moon are unknown, “this same process should be occurring on airless, silicate-rich bodies throughout the inner solar system,” she says.


              In McCubbin’s study of the lunar interior, he and his colleagues calculate that phosphate minerals contain a concentration of water as high as several thousand parts per million. This result, combined with lower abundances of water in other volcanic material reported in 2008 by Alberto Saal of Brown University in Providence, R.I., points to an average overall abundance of water in the lunar mantle significantly higher than the previous estimate of 1 part per billion.


              It’s been a long-standing assumption, notes Canup, that if the moon formed when a giant, Mars-sized impactor smacked into the young Earth, any water would have been vaporized by the high temperatures generated during such a cataclysm and that vapor would have escaped into space. However, that assumption “has yet to be evaluated with direct models,” she adds.


              McCubbin agrees that there may have been some way for water to be retained in this accepted model of the moon’s formation. Any alternative explanation of moon formation will have to account for all the water now known to reside inside the moon.


              On October 9, a NASA spacecraft called LCROSS will deliberately crash into a cratered area of the moon’s south pole, where frozen water likely resides. The resulting plume of kicked-up soil should reveal the abundance of water there.


              Says Canup: “Our picture of a bone-dry moon is clearly in need of updating


              I just wanted to add that if the lunar landing and lunar rock samples were real, there is no way they could have not known this then but.....
              Hayastan or Bust.

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              • #27
                Re: NASA refurbishes video copies of moon landing

                Originally posted by Haykakan View Post
                I just wanted to add that if the lunar landing and lunar rock samples were real, there is no way they could have not known this then but.....
                There is so much proof... the pictures, videos, I dream of jeannie.... it can't be a lie!!
                "Nobody can give you freedom. Nobody can give you equality or justice or anything. If you're a man, you take it." ~Malcolm X

                Comment


                • #28
                  Re: NASA refurbishes video copies of moon landing

                  NASA set to crash on the moon -- twice

                  NASA's Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite is scheduled to drop its Centaur upper-stage rocket on the lunar surface at 7:31 a.m. ET.

                  NASA hopes the impact will kick up enough dust to help the LCROSS probe find the presence of water in the moon's soil. Four minutes later, the LCROSS will follow through the debris plume, collecting and relaying data back to Earth before crashing into the Cabeus crater near the moon's south pole.

                  The LCROSS is carrying spectrometers, near-infrared cameras, a visible camera and a visible radiometer. These instruments will help NASA scientists analyze the plume of dust -- more than 250 metric tons' worth -- for water vapor. See how moon will be 'bombed' »

                  The orbiting Hubble Space Telescope and NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter will watch, and photograph, the collisions. And hundreds of telescopes on Earth also will be focused on the two plumes.


                  "We expect the debris plumes to be visible through midsized backyard telescopes -- 10 inches and larger," said Brian Day at NASA's Ames Research Center at Moffett Field, California. Day is an amateur astronomer who is leading education and public outreach for the LCROSS mission.

                  "The initial explosions will probably be hidden behind crater walls, but the plumes will rise high enough above the crater's rim to be seen from Earth," he said. The Cabeus crater lies in permanent shadow, making observations inside the crater difficult.

                  The impacts will not be visible to the naked eye or through binoculars. If you don't have a telescope, or you live in areas where daylight will obscure the viewing, NASA TV will broadcast the crashes live. Coverage begins at 6:15 a.m. ET Friday.

                  The two main components of the LCROSS mission are the shepherding spacecraft and the Centaur upper stage rocket. The spacecraft will guide the rocket to its crash site.


                  Data from previous space missions have revealed trace amounts of water in lunar soil. The LCROSS mission seeks a definitive answer to the question of how much water is present. NASA has said it believes water on the moon could be a valuable resource in the agency's quest to explore the solar system.

                  LCROSS launched with the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter aboard an Atlas V rocket from Cape Canaveral, Florida, on June 18.

                  http://www.cnn.com/2009/TECH/space/1...ash/index.html

                  Wouldn't that be something if they could just put a man on the moon to collect soil samples.
                  "Nobody can give you freedom. Nobody can give you equality or justice or anything. If you're a man, you take it." ~Malcolm X

                  Comment


                  • #29
                    Re: NASA refurbishes video copies of moon landing

                    All i gotta say is http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4w9EksAo5hY
                    Hayastan or Bust.

                    Comment


                    • #30
                      Re: NASA refurbishes video copies of moon landing

                      Originally posted by Haykakan View Post
                      Voodoo believe that they no longer have ambition to land on the moon anymore... because it's too cheap and NASA should spend MORE money

                      NASA should skip moon: panel

                      NASA needs to make a major detour on its grand plans to return astronauts to the moon, a special independent panel told the White House Thursday.

                      Under current plans, NASA has picked the wrong destination with the wrong rocket, the panel's chairman said. A test-flight version of the rocket, the new Ares I, is on a launch pad at Cape Canaveral, awaiting liftoff later this month for its first experimental flight.

                      Instead, NASA should be concentrating on bigger rockets and new places to explore, the panel members said, as they issued their final 155-page report.

                      The committee, created by the White House in May to look at NASA's troubled exploration, shuttle and space station programs, issued a summary of their findings last month, mostly urging more spending on space.

                      On Thursday in a news conference, panel chairman Norman Augustine focused on fresh destinations for NASA, saying that it makes more sense to put astronauts on a nearby asteroid or one of the moons of Mars. He said that could be done sooner than returning to the moon in 15 years as NASA has outlined.

                      The exploration plans now under fire were pushed by then-president George W. Bush after the 2003 Columbia space shuttle disaster. The moon-Mars plan lacks enough money, thanks to budget diversions, the panel said in a 155-page report.

                      Starting in 2014, NASA needs an extra $3 billion a year if astronauts are going to travel beyond Earth's orbit, the panel said.

                      The Augustine commission wants NASA to extend the life of the space shuttle program and the International Space Station. Space shuttles are due to retire Oct. 1, 2010, but should keep flying until sometime in 2011 because they won't get all their flights to the space station done by that date.

                      Space station should operate at least until 2020
                      And the space station itself — only now nearing completion — should operate until at least 2020, allowing for more scientific experiments, part of its reason for existence. NASA's timetable calls for plunging it into the ocean in 2015.

                      However, the overall focus of the panel's report is on where U.S. space exploration should be headed.

                      The White House will review the panel's analysis "and then ultimately the president will be making the final decision," White House spokesman Nick Shapiro said in an email comment.

                      The committee outlines eight options. Three of those involve a "flexible path" to explore someplace other than the moon, eventually heading to a Mars landing far in the future. The flexible path suggests no-landing flights around the moon and Mars.

                      Landing on the moon and then launching back to Earth would require a lot of fuel because of the moon's gravity. Hauling fuel from Earth to the moon and then back costs money.

                      It would take less fuel to land and return from asteroids or comets that swing by Earth or even the Martian moons, Phobos and Deimos, Augustine said.

                      Eventually, Augustine said NASA could return to the moon, but as a training stepping stone, not a major destination, as the Bush plan envisioned.

                      Panel member Ed Crawley, a professor at MIT, said NASA should explore the inner solar system "to interest the American public in new destinations."

                      Plans well-conceived in 2005
                      He noted that so many new asteroids and comets are being discovered each year that the potential first landing spot "is probably one we don't know about yet."

                      Augustine said landing astronauts on such a near-Earth object could occur in the early 2020s.

                      In a news conference to discuss their report, Crawley and Augustine said the current NASA plans were well-conceived at the time, in 2005. But when money got diverted and launch dates delayed, NASA's new Ares I rocket began to look like it lost one of its major purposes: ferrying astronauts to the space station.

                      Crawley said the panel liked the idea of a commercially operated, more basic rocket-taxi to get astronauts into the low-Earth orbit of the space station. If NASA spent about $5 billion to help kick-start the embryonic commercial space business to do the people-carrying, then the space agency could concentrate on heavier rockets that do the real far-off exploring, he said.

                      Those commercial rockets should be ready in about six years, Crawley said.

                      NASA is slowly delaying some parts of the old moon program. It's rethinking its future annual $10-million spending on a still-unbuilt lunar lander as it awaits President Barack Obama's decision on the Augustine panel recommendations, said NASA spokesman Grey Hautaluoma.

                      http://www.cbc.ca/technology/story/2...el-report.html
                      "Nobody can give you freedom. Nobody can give you equality or justice or anything. If you're a man, you take it." ~Malcolm X

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