http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hMBCfuKs9i8EMFCRACKSHOT said:the flag waving in the breeze that should be impossible on the moon for one thing
You need to watch the mythbusters take on this myth. They took a flag in a vaccuum and one in open air. The flag moved in the vaccuum stayed swinging for longer, and more vigorously. The moon is in a vaccuum.EMFCRACKSHOT said:the flag waving in the breeze that should be impossible on the moon for one thing
And yet, this very project birthed inventions that went on to change the world. Not only that, it still represents the most improbable feat of engineering to date, especially when you consider the calculations were done by hand with the assistance of slide rules and my computer right now has more power than all the computing devices in use by NASA at the time combined.george144 said:Hooray we spent millions to conquer a barren rock, go humanity.
The flag moved due to the force with which it was pushed into the ground. The flag does not wave in the breeze it just has some riples.EMFCRACKSHOT said:the flag waving in the breeze that should be impossible on the moon for one thing
Most definately.The infamous SCAMola said:The flag moved due to the force with which it was pushed into the ground. The flag does not wave in the breeze it just has some riples.EMFCRACKSHOT said:the flag waving in the breeze that should be impossible on the moon for one thing
Do you think they would have a wind machine in a studio trying to re-create lunar conditions anyway?
Yet the end result was still, well a big rock, to be honest all the planets near us our just uninhabitable wastelands, I don't see why were so keen to go find them, I'd rather we put our resources towards helpful scientific areas then towards a useless pursuit of travelling long distances to no purpose other then to prove we can.Eclectic Dreck said:And yet, this very project birthed inventions that went on to change the world. Not only that, it still represents the most improbable feat of engineering to date, especially when you consider the calculations were done by hand with the assistance of slide rules and my computer right now has more power than all the computing devices in use by NASA at the time combined.george144 said:Hooray we spent millions to conquer a barren rock, go humanity.
Space exploration is about expanding our knowledge of the universe. What better way than to experience it first hand? Humans can do much more than any robots or rovers and more efficiently, and they can think on their feet and act opportunistically.george144 said:Yet the end result was still, well a big rock, to be honest all the planets near us our just uninhabitable wastelands, I don't see why were so keen to go find them, I'd rather we put our resources towards helpful scientific areas then towards a useless pursuit of travelling long distances to no purpose other then to prove we can.Eclectic Dreck said:And yet, this very project birthed inventions that went on to change the world. Not only that, it still represents the most improbable feat of engineering to date, especially when you consider the calculations were done by hand with the assistance of slide rules and my computer right now has more power than all the computing devices in use by NASA at the time combined.george144 said:Hooray we spent millions to conquer a barren rock, go humanity.
Yeah, pretty much, and I strongly dislike people who yell it's a hoax. Come on, they worked very hard for that and I don't know how many people died in the early tests.Homicidal Hobbes said:It's been proven real so many times by people smarter than conspiracy theorists, there simply is no sane way of denying it.
Mythbusters did an episode on it too.
Perhaps to expand out of the solar system. Think about it.george144 said:Yet the end result was still, well a big rock, to be honest all the planets near us our just uninhabitable wastelands, I don't see why were so keen to go find them, I'd rather we put our resources towards helpful scientific areas then towards a useless pursuit of travelling long distances to no purpose other then to prove we can.Eclectic Dreck said:And yet, this very project birthed inventions that went on to change the world. Not only that, it still represents the most improbable feat of engineering to date, especially when you consider the calculations were done by hand with the assistance of slide rules and my computer right now has more power than all the computing devices in use by NASA at the time combined.george144 said:Hooray we spent millions to conquer a barren rock, go humanity.
Nonsense, the moon is a very valuable rock. It's full of helium 3, véry usefull for nuclear fusion, wich is quite rare on Earth but plentyfull on the moon. It will be the home of plenty of research labs dedicated to all kinds of things regarding space travel. Long term exposure to low gravity, extraterrestial agriculture and mining, psychological/sociological experiments, you name it. Heck it can even act as a launching pad for future deep-space missions. Really big space ships are much easier to launch from the moon, since it's gravity is much lower. Assemble all the parts on the moon, and you're ready for take-off.george144 said:Yet the end result was still, well a big rock, to be honest all the planets near us our just uninhabitable wastelands, I don't see why were so keen to go find them, I'd rather we put our resources towards helpful scientific areas then towards a useless pursuit of travelling long distances to no purpose other then to prove we can.