Something Weird Is Happening On The Moon..

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Something Weird Is Happening On The Moon..
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Пікірлер: 1 400

  • @ronhutcherson9845
    @ronhutcherson98458 ай бұрын

    If you’ve ever played Atari’s Lunar Lander video game you’ll have no doubt about how hard it is to land with nothing but thrusters and limited fuel.

  • @libradragon

    @libradragon

    8 ай бұрын

    Spot on reference! Only IF successful, lol. That was a fun challenge, liked that game.

  • @robymaru03

    @robymaru03

    8 ай бұрын

    But apparently human did it 6 times in a row 50 years ago, the more we investigate the moon the more propestorous this moon landing tales get, I want to believe but the evidence is not helping at all.

  • @ronhutcherson9845

    @ronhutcherson9845

    8 ай бұрын

    @@robymaru03 The first couple of levels are pretty easy, actually, but pretty soon you’re supposed to make pinpoint landings on cliff ledges with very little fuel. I never had enough money to get good at it but plenty of kids did.

  • @Levitiy

    @Levitiy

    8 ай бұрын

    @@robymaru03 Yes, because it wasn't remote control. The Lunar Modules had actual pilots which increases landing success by orders of magnitude.

  • @stainlesssteelfox1

    @stainlesssteelfox1

    8 ай бұрын

    @@robymaru03 That's because the astronauts were handpicked combat or test pilots used to making split second decsions and staying calm under the most intense pressure who were then trained to the limits of human mental and physical fitness and intensively practiced this manouvre while still on Earth. Look up Lunar Landing Test Vehicle. I detect the unwashed stink of a moon landing hoaxer. Get over yourselves. It happened. The whole hoax idea was created by a delusional con artist named Bill Kaysing who had no scientific training and was a copy editor at Rocketdyne, wilfully misinterpreting some questions over the design of the F1 engine and building it up into a massive conspiracy to sell a book.

  • @bencoss7003
    @bencoss70037 ай бұрын

    It might be so hard to land on moon because it might be angry, you know it does have a dark side

  • @human_isomer

    @human_isomer

    7 ай бұрын

    Definitely! That's where all the pink Floyds live, and they can get a little aggressive every now and then.

  • @stevenmitchell6347
    @stevenmitchell63478 ай бұрын

    If these gravity anomalies are known and mapped, it should be possible to account for them and make appropriate adjustments.

  • @christianmgbike6188

    @christianmgbike6188

    8 ай бұрын

    On point bro

  • @malachiteofmethuselah9713

    @malachiteofmethuselah9713

    8 ай бұрын

    Yes, but the average smart human does not even get past big "G," as a constant. Constants are not variables.

  • @mynde-fuchefoundation2254

    @mynde-fuchefoundation2254

    8 ай бұрын

    You'd think.

  • @mynde-fuchefoundation2254

    @mynde-fuchefoundation2254

    8 ай бұрын

    ​@@malachiteofmethuselah9713but variables are a constant.

  • @malachiteofmethuselah9713

    @malachiteofmethuselah9713

    8 ай бұрын

    @@mynde-fuchefoundation2254 Variables "Can," be a constant. If you wanna knit pick something. o.0

  • @user-ed1mj5zk6f
    @user-ed1mj5zk6f8 ай бұрын

    The Indian mission to the South Pole did exactly what proposed to do" One moon day", 14 days on Earth. They did the science they proposed and It was an excellent achievement, congratulations are, in order hear; felicitations! .

  • @Xhydraulics
    @Xhydraulics8 ай бұрын

    India's first landing attempt was a failure(chandrayan 2).But India's 2nd lunar lander landed on moon southpole recently and deployed a rover (chandrayan 3).It was not designed to survive the freezy lunar night due to tight budget. Anyway it just completed its 14 day mission.

  • @baddyforall2568

    @baddyforall2568

    7 ай бұрын

    No man. First one was sent to orbit moon. Second one was sent to soft land but failed. 3rd one was successull

  • @Xhydraulics

    @Xhydraulics

    7 ай бұрын

    @@baddyforall2568 just read my comment carefully. I said first landing attempt. Not first mission

  • @4Everlast

    @4Everlast

    7 ай бұрын

    They promised hotels on the moon in 1969. = Every times, I mean EVERY time they promise they're going back, 15 wars "break out" and the space money is put into the war machine, for another election, another BS artist, and then suddenly we realize the US started the wars, as if there's a reason they can't/won't go to the moon. Ain't that interesting. Those India and China missions got ZERO main strem media space, I guess they can't fake it as well as the US did, and even they didn't do a great job mind you. You remember the blue screens? The zip lines in the ISS? The bubbles? I do.

  • @user-hn6eb3ng5z

    @user-hn6eb3ng5z

    7 ай бұрын

    Liar

  • @Xhydraulics

    @Xhydraulics

    7 ай бұрын

    @@user-hn6eb3ng5z who?

  • @user-ud6ui7zt3r
    @user-ud6ui7zt3r8 ай бұрын

    I went to hit the Like Button but my finger smashed into it with such velocity that it broke up before any useful data could be transmitted. 🌖💥

  • @richardnew1215
    @richardnew12158 ай бұрын

    I remember being taught in school that the uneven gravity in lunar orbit was from mass concentrations under the lunar surface--the remainders of cometary/meteorite bodies after the impact.

  • @oriraykai3610

    @oriraykai3610

    8 ай бұрын

    A wild guess by know nothing doofuses.

  • @ts-900

    @ts-900

    8 ай бұрын

    @@oriraykai3610 You are sooo correct -- the moon is obviously filled with marshmallow crème.

  • @omegaotaku1342

    @omegaotaku1342

    8 ай бұрын

    @@ts-900 we've gone from thinking the moon is made of cheese to thinking it's made of marshmallow crème, in a day and age where some people still think the earth is flat

  • @michaelg.294

    @michaelg.294

    8 ай бұрын

    @@omegaotaku1342 I've always wanted to ask a flat-earther if they thought the moon was also flat. Pretty sure I already know what they'd say.

  • @ts-900

    @ts-900

    8 ай бұрын

    @@omegaotaku1342 GASP! You mean it's not flat? Well, as long as it's not a dodecahedron.

  • @ccc_the_painful_truth
    @ccc_the_painful_truth8 ай бұрын

    Messing up in 2023, yet no problem in 1969?

  • @johnalcala

    @johnalcala

    7 ай бұрын

    Eggs actly!

  • @daryl9799

    @daryl9799

    7 ай бұрын

    Exactly horseshit he magically landed on his own intuition with seconds worth of fuel what a story lol

  • @martinnewtonholmes

    @martinnewtonholmes

    7 ай бұрын

    What`s your point ?

  • @UpperDarbyDetailing

    @UpperDarbyDetailing

    7 ай бұрын

    @@daryl9799 no one says that

  • @UpperDarbyDetailing

    @UpperDarbyDetailing

    7 ай бұрын

    So? You say it was “no problem” because you have no idea what you’re talking about. There are photos of the Apollo landing sites from lunar orbit and the surface.

  • @user-xh9pt8zu2l
    @user-xh9pt8zu2l8 ай бұрын

    Love the content in general but would prefer you didn't repeat errors about the first manned lunar landing. The navigation system was not wrong. The module was heading for the rather generous planned landing target. The human pilot recognised the planned landing area was a boulder field. Armstrong did not take manual control at any stage, He could not. He changed the landing place by redirecting the flight computer... the first real "fly by wire" system. There were no "Luke Skywalker" moments just solid engineering and a well trained crew using it.

  • @Warren-ec8oo

    @Warren-ec8oo

    8 ай бұрын

    LMFAO

  • @systemicsystems703

    @systemicsystems703

    8 ай бұрын

    It was fake!

  • @jbfiveash636

    @jbfiveash636

    7 ай бұрын

    Thanks

  • @aliloucreations1817

    @aliloucreations1817

    7 ай бұрын

    Totally agree ! Well said

  • @anonymike8280

    @anonymike8280

    7 ай бұрын

    You're no fun.

  • @ZMacZ
    @ZMacZ7 ай бұрын

    6:30 Despite a 2.5 second delay, you can extrapolate for that time, and still be fairly accurate when steering remotely. You'd need a piloting ace though, that has a feel for the extrapolation. (That also means virtual training with the same equipment before the actual landing.) Or, you can ask a gamer that has always struggled with lag.

  • @strikerorwell9232

    @strikerorwell9232

    7 ай бұрын

    A friend of mine played a multi-player game on the toughest level and was contacted by the US Navy?

  • @ZMacZ

    @ZMacZ

    7 ай бұрын

    @@strikerorwell9232 Can happen, if the game's stats are being recorded, and watched by naval Intelligence, while also regarding the game as a poll for expected results on a set of problems involving quick and/or rather exceedingly bright decision making skills. Basically, I'd make a game to recruit remote drone operators, which could then have a base of thousands of potentials. It's not a physical thing, it's a mental and hand/eye coordination thing, for which games are excellent proving grounds, barring cheating systems. (Cheats would be found out by not being able to produce the same results under overwatch.)

  • @tekmepikcha6830
    @tekmepikcha68308 ай бұрын

    The moon not having even gravity around its perimeter, is the most awesome novel piece of information about anything space exploration, that I've learned this year! 🤣👏👏

  • @robymaru03

    @robymaru03

    8 ай бұрын

    And Apollo mission going 6 times in the moon didn't even notice that somehow.

  • @stainlesssteelfox1

    @stainlesssteelfox1

    8 ай бұрын

    @@robymaru03 Please give evidence of that assertion.

  • @UpperDarbyDetailing

    @UpperDarbyDetailing

    7 ай бұрын

    @@robymaru03 the Apollo missions didn’t have gravimetric sensors as far as I know. These days every modern military submarine has multiple for gravity mapping. It’s almost like technology improves over time or something…

  • @mohammedrizwan9447
    @mohammedrizwan94478 ай бұрын

    India's Chandrayan 3 landed successfully on South pole of Lunar and manly become 1st Ever country to DO so... 🇮🇳 🇮🇳 🇮🇳

  • @user-gt3km8jk3z

    @user-gt3km8jk3z

    7 ай бұрын

    Ain't nobody got 2 the moon

  • @hcox1111

    @hcox1111

    7 ай бұрын

    I seen the cartoon, real impressive .

  • @mohammedrizwan9447

    @mohammedrizwan9447

    7 ай бұрын

    Like the US cartoon does, yes...🤔🤪

  • @hcox1111

    @hcox1111

    7 ай бұрын

    US had slightly better cartoon but cartoon none the less.@@mohammedrizwan9447

  • @WDGaster-sh3md
    @WDGaster-sh3md8 ай бұрын

    This is one of the best video you made,really clear something out.Keep up and the public can see more about real space exploration.❤

  • @infernoplexx9562
    @infernoplexx95628 ай бұрын

    Very informative video , good job

  • @davidroberts5602
    @davidroberts56028 ай бұрын

    Thanks for the updates that was very helpful david 👌❤️🇬🇧👍

  • @batmantherooster
    @batmantherooster8 ай бұрын

    Very good video thanks 🙏 for your long hour’s putting this video together!!!❤❤❤❤❤

  • @pruthuchauhan2159
    @pruthuchauhan21598 ай бұрын

    FYI the Chandrayaan-3 mission was a succes. The lander Vikram touched down near the Lunar south pole and a Rover named "Pragyan" completed it's 14 Day mission.

  • @ghost307
    @ghost3078 ай бұрын

    "Something weird is happening on the moon" sounds like the whole premise of 2001: A Space Odyssey.

  • @SegoMan

    @SegoMan

    8 ай бұрын

    I don't think so Dave.........

  • @st.charlesstreet9876
    @st.charlesstreet98768 ай бұрын

    Love this information on the landers ❤ Thank You!

  • @bakerfx4968
    @bakerfx49688 ай бұрын

    Your videos just keep getting better and better! Keep up the good work my dude!

  • @mmwaashumslowww7167
    @mmwaashumslowww71678 ай бұрын

    There is also a gravitational anomaly at the earth's South Pole where they know about a strange mass below Antarctica. Rather odd, don't you think?

  • @DesertSessions93

    @DesertSessions93

    8 ай бұрын

    I wonder if other planets have such anomaly...

  • @dr.jamesolack8504

    @dr.jamesolack8504

    8 ай бұрын

    @@DesertSessions93 Study Uranus closely…..you’ll find it chock-full of anomalies.

  • @UpperDarbyDetailing

    @UpperDarbyDetailing

    7 ай бұрын

    Yea, it’s called “Antarctica”.

  • @LordoftheCats
    @LordoftheCats3 ай бұрын

    Good info in an understandable format. Thanks for that.

  • @audegottoeaudegottoe363
    @audegottoeaudegottoe3638 ай бұрын

    Have a wonderful October ! N à great New Year's ! / / thanks

  • @BlueNETGaming
    @BlueNETGaming7 ай бұрын

    So back in the days we landed a moon lander with less tech then your average clock has but almost 50 years later we can’t replicate this??

  • @UpperDarbyDetailing

    @UpperDarbyDetailing

    7 ай бұрын

    Of course we can. China just did it. The US is doing it next year.

  • @robertboeckmann1111
    @robertboeckmann11118 ай бұрын

    Thank you for this episode. Despite understanding that there is uneven gravity on the moon, I had not realized it was strong enough to affect navigation. It occurs to me that both automated and pilot controlled landing attempts would benefit from sensitive real time gravity sensors (not sure if this is currently possible at the scale to fit in a landing craft!

  • @Patrik6920

    @Patrik6920

    8 ай бұрын

    ...depends of the craft... modern sensors can be the size of 2 car batteries ..can probably be shrunk down...but since thers no real market or incentive doing so faast, the equippment are usually one of a kind custom builds... closest i belive u come to off the shelf sensors are a 19 inch rack module + external tube of .5 meters or so with a 5-6 inch diameter... ...but size isent really the issue anyway, its the weight... thers a high cost launch things into space... depending of launch rocket the cost varies alot bigger rocket - less cost/kg ... but then the rocket itself cost massive ...the proble is as said the weight not the size... cost in dollars from a small rocket costing 17k/launch the cost per kg is 41k/kg (unable launch more than small cube sattelites low orbit) to something costing 1 800 000 (almost 2 million dollar/launch) able to carry a space wehichle into space... 65k/kg payload but can carry tonnes... (also takes years to build and cant be reused) or the more resonable Quinguan (China) at 5 million dollars/launch 17.5k/kg cost ...for shooting up instument into orbit either in peaces(modules) or parts of and assemble in space smaller rochets r a viable alternative... but it would req assemble them in space

  • @lsmith6378

    @lsmith6378

    8 ай бұрын

    India and Pakistan are nuclear countries and flying in space so why are they advertising for more money on TV.

  • @andymouse

    @andymouse

    8 ай бұрын

    I don't believe the moon can change gravity in a short period of time and to any extent that would bother any modern sensors today. We have magnetometers and accelerometers in kids toy drones that demonstrate the tech ! and that's the tech we know about !

  • @Patrik6920

    @Patrik6920

    8 ай бұрын

    @@andymouse ...yes...ther are actually alot of accelerometers and magntometers that about the size of an integrated circuit... ..but when it comes to measuring precise gravity there isent rly many options... not yet... there are chip sized once but those r to inprecise atm...

  • @andymouse

    @andymouse

    8 ай бұрын

    My point is the gulf between a kids toy and what NASA have on hand is enormous and I'm sure the precision is too@@Patrik6920

  • @simondavis750
    @simondavis7507 ай бұрын

    I love how we were basically just firing things in the direction of the moon and hoping it hit. And somebody said strap me in, I'm going up.

  • @UpperDarbyDetailing

    @UpperDarbyDetailing

    7 ай бұрын

    It’s a bit more precise than that, but there was speeches written in case of mission failure.

  • @NicholasNerios
    @NicholasNerios8 ай бұрын

    Spectacular, always good work

  • @britz3864
    @britz38648 ай бұрын

    Thank you for such a concise and comprehensive explanation. It makes it so much easier to understand and retain information. Thumbs up and subscribe.

  • @UpperDarbyDetailing

    @UpperDarbyDetailing

    7 ай бұрын

    This isn’t very good information, I’d recommend someone better. Everyday astronaut has good info

  • @robertf3479
    @robertf34798 ай бұрын

    Just want to note here that the RANGER missions launched by NASA were all intended to be impactors, none were to soft land.

  • @TommyTippy598
    @TommyTippy5987 ай бұрын

    Wonderful video, very interesting and clear. Thank you so much. I had been wondering about this topic. Uneven gravity and no atmosphere whatsoever. Makes sense! 👋

  • @halweilbrenner9926
    @halweilbrenner99268 ай бұрын

    What's the criteria for assigning the poles i.e. southpole/ northpole?

  • @chammockutube
    @chammockutube8 ай бұрын

    Wouldn’t the sky-crane “portion” of a lunar landing be very similar to its use on Mars or perhaps easier as I think the moon’s gravity is about 44%-ish of Mars gravity?

  • @AZA6819
    @AZA68198 ай бұрын

    Good content. So nice to hear stuff that doesn't sound like everyone's else. 🎉

  • @mobayguy
    @mobayguy2 ай бұрын

    Good insight Thx

  • @MrMarkar1959
    @MrMarkar19598 ай бұрын

    back in late 1990's An Astral Traveler materialized in a brilliant white orb! like a TV without the cabinet!! hopefully it happens again,,i'll ask for proof next time.

  • @bertilandersson6606
    @bertilandersson66068 ай бұрын

    Amazing video, you gained a subscriber! Just wondering, isnt electromagnetic storms an issue as well? Maybe it makes sense to land on the moon when the moon is at certain position relative to the sun and earth in order to midgate gravitational and electromagnetic effects.

  • @BurgertAPotgieter

    @BurgertAPotgieter

    8 ай бұрын

    Apparently there is no Magnetic field present on the moon and then again, nothing has been proven what the moon exists of. NASA the biggest liars in the Universe just touching the levels of the Democrats.

  • @kend6693
    @kend66938 ай бұрын

    Learning by failing? Well everyone except Dr. Evil

  • @scottbegley1719
    @scottbegley17197 ай бұрын

    Put magnetic landing pad that allows you to control the strength to guide landers and help with speed as it might reverse for launches all despite unstable gravity

  • @DmitriKoslov1
    @DmitriKoslov17 ай бұрын

    Maybe by using a gravity map to plan the descent, but actually control it with optical range sensors it would be easier not to crash the landers?

  • @jeffp346
    @jeffp3467 ай бұрын

    I so much love you're video, being so very well made and informative like I've never heard before.... you are awesome dude, and you rock !!!!!!!!!!

  • @Anuchan
    @Anuchan8 ай бұрын

    The LRO has been orbiting since 2009 at a height of 50 km. It calculated an orbit that took the gravity anomalies into effect.

  • @connecticutaggie
    @connecticutaggie8 ай бұрын

    Spacecraft are (mostly) open space surrounded by a thin shell. They are much lighter than rock so it is not a buried spacecraft. It seems it would more likely be a metallic meteor.

  • @gantzthegreat8998

    @gantzthegreat8998

    7 ай бұрын

    it was a rock people ship, all rock

  • @connecticutaggie

    @connecticutaggie

    7 ай бұрын

    @@gantzthegreat8998 LOL, even if they were rock people, they would need a way to move around and moving through solids is really not practical so the interior would need to be mostly gas or liquid which would also be less dense than rock. I guess rather than rock, they could be heavy metal, maybe that could work. 😄

  • @gantzthegreat8998

    @gantzthegreat8998

    7 ай бұрын

    or they were liquid meal terminators from the future@@connecticutaggie

  • @charlescouncill
    @charlescouncill8 ай бұрын

    Those landers that crashed were shot down by the resident aliens.

  • @pikifrino
    @pikifrino8 ай бұрын

    A very interesting video!.. Thank you very much!...

  • @Joseph_Omega
    @Joseph_Omega8 ай бұрын

    This really explains it! Makes _PERFECT_ sense why the *Moon,* though MUCH closer and accessible than *Mars,* has had so many failures. Maybe modern AI can finally now stand in for real-time human intelligence.

  • @SousukeAizen421

    @SousukeAizen421

    8 ай бұрын

    Mars is still harder to reach than the moon, the amount of fuel, logistic, and calculation is like many times greater than the moon landing , US doesnt not even try to land on the moon anymore seeing that there's no new groundbreaking discovery to befound in there, they have 2 actice rovers and a small helicopter on there already, same with China

  • @ts-900

    @ts-900

    8 ай бұрын

    My theory is that we are using standard and metric measurements, but the moon uses lunar units.🌙🧀

  • @CoryPavicich
    @CoryPavicich8 ай бұрын

    This was a really informative and well-produced KZread documentary! Subscribed! Thank you!

  • @keithmcknight7646
    @keithmcknight76468 ай бұрын

    ❤ your videos!!!!! 👍🏽

  • @rukuram2031132
    @rukuram20311327 ай бұрын

    Very niece information Sir Thank you.

  • @martinnewtonholmes

    @martinnewtonholmes

    7 ай бұрын

    How is your Niece BTW ?

  • @travislangevin6319
    @travislangevin63198 ай бұрын

    Maybe someone can explain to me how human astronauts got through the Van Allen radiation belt that is in between Earth and the moon without dying

  • @YDDES

    @YDDES

    7 ай бұрын

    Travislangevin319. Yes, the van Allen belts are not nearly so dangerous to just pass in a few hours, that the silly conspirasists say.

  • @riog8082

    @riog8082

    7 ай бұрын

    Travis you are 💯. Especially since nasa says they havent built a craft yet capable of deflecting the radiation to protect humans. Look it up yourself. It’s nasa’s own video on youtube. The van allen belts Arranged like two nested donuts, the inner belt is mainly energetic protons, while the outer belts contain both protons and electrons. These belts have long been known as 'bad news' for satellites and astronauts, with potentially deadly consequences if you spend too much time within them. Now does that sound dangerous to you? People who say otherwise are trying to keep up with the lies. And in case you get someone that says, Astronauts are safe because they were moved quickly thru the belts, here is an even greater risk. What poses a greater risk, then? The galactic cosmic rays represent a greater risk because we know we can’t protect against them. Solar radiation storms also pose a more challenging risk because these are not easily predicted and they affect all of geospace with increasing severity, the further one is from the protective shield of the Earth’s magnetosphere. Here’s what Piers Jiggens, an engineer from the European Space Agency’s Space Environment and Effects section, and a member of ESA’s Heliophysics Working Group, based at ESA’s technical heart ESTEC in the Netherlands. Originally from the UK, Piers graduated in aeronautics and earned a PhD in astronautics specialising in solar particle radiation and spacecraft design related to the threat posed from solar flares and solar eruptions. He says as stated above “We can’t protect”

  • @peterclarke3020

    @peterclarke3020

    7 ай бұрын

    The answer is - rather quickly…

  • @user-lw6rh9rr5v

    @user-lw6rh9rr5v

    7 ай бұрын

    Astronauts have never traveled thru the Van Allen radiation belt.

  • @user-lw6rh9rr5v

    @user-lw6rh9rr5v

    7 ай бұрын

    If facts bear something out weather or not it may be a conspiracy really does not matter.@@YDDES

  • @cliffordcurry2045
    @cliffordcurry20458 ай бұрын

    Picture was entirely misleading and I'm done with this BS.

  • @ZeeSA-no2zh

    @ZeeSA-no2zh

    7 ай бұрын

    Thank you,I will just stop before I even watch. Im glad I went through the comments first.

  • @dr.astro.hutchins

    @dr.astro.hutchins

    7 ай бұрын

    The photo was taken in 1968. Most people didn't have smart phones back then

  • @davidsheckler4450

    @davidsheckler4450

    7 ай бұрын

    That won't happen until you can admit to yourself that space is Santa Claus for adults

  • @davidsheckler4450

    @davidsheckler4450

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@dr.astro.hutchinsYou can't prove a "photo" you weren't there

  • @user-lk8qt1gy2z

    @user-lk8qt1gy2z

    7 ай бұрын

    Theses people think are being lied to I don't believe what they're telling the Americans lies to scare people

  • @Fuff63
    @Fuff637 ай бұрын

    Enjoyed this, thx. True, in failure comes learning and is the path to success. It will be interesting to see how modern AI tech affects space exploration going forward. Being able to learn and pilot in the moment. Open the pod bay doors HAL….Cheers.

  • @donaldbullock9718
    @donaldbullock97187 ай бұрын

    THE GOVERNMENT WOULD NEVER TELL THE PEOPLE WHAT THE GOVERNMENT IS REALLY DOING

  • @maxsmith695

    @maxsmith695

    7 ай бұрын

    bingo

  • @johnmiskimins4104

    @johnmiskimins4104

    7 ай бұрын

    10:20 $$$$$$$

  • @maxsmith695

    @maxsmith695

    7 ай бұрын

    @@johnmiskimins4104 would you step into a rocket headed to the moon if the experts told you the risk of TMF - Total Mission Failure - was 98%. Seems NASA found 3 who would and after 6 missions , no failures. How nice.

  • @jessicalouise1580

    @jessicalouise1580

    7 ай бұрын

    That's exactly right. They think we're stupid. Little do they know. People are beginning to see the world for what it is.... everything is being exposed and there's nothing any of the world's governments can do about it.... I wait for the day for total public anarchy!!!! Our general population standing up to these asshats giving them a taste of their own medicine 😂

  • @UpperDarbyDetailing

    @UpperDarbyDetailing

    7 ай бұрын

    @@maxsmith695 really, 98%? I have a very low expectation of that number being correct, since you can’t even get the number of astronauts correct.

  • @lebowskiduderino89
    @lebowskiduderino898 ай бұрын

    Neil Armstrong was a strange man. I don't mean that in a negative way, but there was something about the guy that I always found.....mysterious. After he came back from the moon he went on some bizzare quests, looking for something. But I don't want to come across as thinking he was a bad guy. I think he was a real hero.

  • @hcox1111

    @hcox1111

    8 ай бұрын

    He lived right down the road from me in Lebanon, Ohio.

  • @Based_Is_Best

    @Based_Is_Best

    8 ай бұрын

    Why would it say there were two replies, but I could only see one?

  • @wrodrigues08

    @wrodrigues08

    7 ай бұрын

    He was hiding a terrible secret…there was no moon landing!

  • @erictaylor5462
    @erictaylor54628 ай бұрын

    Landing on the moon is really very hard. Lots of things have to work perfectly to make it happen. If something vital breaks, or someone made a small math error, rather than a soft landing, you have a crash. It's damn lucky we didn't lose an Apollo mission. Even then, one of the missions that intended to land failed.

  • @biser1901

    @biser1901

    7 ай бұрын

    Being able to land on something that is not a solid body that is apparently clearly visible against the blue sky as a transparent semi-self-luminous cold plasma with a silvery white light quite unlike the warm yellow Sun, and is by no means seen as solid a rock during the day against the background of the blue sky is not only impossible and absurd, but also an infinitely insane and childish belief for ignorant people with perverted programmed thinking, as well also for ideological people having a huge illusion of real knowledge. Only NASA and modern astronomy claim and defend the cause that the Moon is a solid, spherical, Earth-like abode that man has actually flown to and stepped on. Only they claim that the Moon is a non-luminous planetoid that receives and reflects all its light from the Sun. The reality, however, is that the Moon is apparently not a solid body, it is certainly round, but not spherical, and it is by no means an Earth-like planetoid that humans could step on. The moon cannot physically be both a spherical body and a reflector of the Sun's light at the same time. In order to reflect the light, the reflectors must inevitably be flat or concave like a car headlight, gathering in focus the light rays from any angle of incidence, but if the surface of a given reflector is convex, then any incident ray will be reflected in a straight line with the radius perpendicular to the surface, resulting in scattering of light. In fact, the Moon is proven to be largely transparent and completely self-illuminated, glowing with its unique silver-white light. In many cases the moon is observed half-illuminated from early at night to late in the day with the same angle of illumination, and in the unillumined part, where it should be a dark mass of rock, we see the blue sky and stars in the early morning without changing the angle of the lunate part of the Moon, which part is supposed to be reflected by the Sun until late in the day at the same fixed and unchanging angle of the lunate part of the Moon! When the waxing or waning Moon is visible during the day, it is possible to see the blue sky right through the Moon. And on a clear night, during waxing and waning, it is sometimes even possible to see stars and "planets" directly across the surface of the Moon! Throughout its history, the Royal Astronomical Society has documented many such cases that do not obey the Heliocentric model. The light of the Sun is golden, warm, drying, protective and antiseptic, while the light of the Moon is silvery, cool and damp, putrid and septic. The sun's rays reduce the burning of the pyre, and the moon's rays increase the burning. Vegetable and animal substances exposed to sunlight quickly dry up, shrink, coagulate and lose their tendency to putrefy and putrefy: grapes and other fruits become hard, partially candied and preserved, such as raisins, dates and prunes, animal flesh coagulates , loses its volatile gaseous components, becomes hard, dry and difficult to putrefy. When exposed to moonlight, however, plant and animal matter tends to show symptoms of decay and decay. This proves that Sunlight and Moonlight are distinct, unique and opposite, as they are in the geocentric flat model. A thermometer exposed to direct sunlight will read a higher temperature than another thermometer placed in the shade. But exposed entirely to direct moonlight, a thermometer will read a lower temperature than one placed in the shadow of the moon. That is, in the shadow of the Moon, the temperature of the thermometer is higher than the temperature of the thermometer exposed to direct Moonlight. If Sunlight is concentrated, through large lenses, then at the focal point it creates considerable heat, while Moonlight similarly collected does not create heat. In the Lancet Medical Journal of March 14, 1856, several experiments were detailed which proved that the rays of the moon, when concentrated, could actually lower the temperature of a thermometer by more than eight degrees. Thus Sunlight and Moonlight undoubtedly have quite different properties. This single and irrefutable fact alone, which is supported by experiment, destroys and demolishes the Heliocentric theory, and this elementary experiment can be done by every single person on earth without requiring or needing any education or knowledge of physics or other sciences. Many people believe that the ability of modern astronomy to accurately predict solar and lunar eclipses is a result and unequivocal proof of the heliocentric theory of the universe. The fact is, however, that eclipses were accurately predicted by various cultures around the world for thousands of years before the "heliocentric ball-Earth" even flashed in Copernicus' imagination. Ptolemy in the First Century accurately predicted eclipses, based on the hexagonal annual pattern of the flat, fixed Earth with the same precision as today. As early as 600 BC Thales accurately predicted an eclipse that ended the war between the Medes and Lydians. Eclipses occur accurately regularly in 18-year cycles, so regardless of geocentric or heliocentric, flat or spherical earth cosmologies, eclipses can be accurately calculated regardless of such factors.

  • @ccc_the_painful_truth

    @ccc_the_painful_truth

    7 ай бұрын

    So "lucky" 🤣

  • @JorgeLausell
    @JorgeLausell8 ай бұрын

    Oh MY! I want go check out what's down there!

  • @MikeBurns-bi5xj
    @MikeBurns-bi5xj8 ай бұрын

    How come the USA landed on the moon 24 times without any problems

  • @jamesgeorge4874

    @jamesgeorge4874

    8 ай бұрын

    The US is pretty awesome at space stuff.

  • @esmenhamaire6398

    @esmenhamaire6398

    8 ай бұрын

    experience learnt from initial failures

  • @curtisquick1582

    @curtisquick1582

    8 ай бұрын

    Actually, the US landed without problems only 11 times on the Moon. 5 robotic Surveyor probes and 6 Apollo crews safely soft-landed on the Moon. Still pretty awesome, however.

  • @DRU1421

    @DRU1421

    7 ай бұрын

    oh you didnt hear? "they would go back to the moon in a nanosecond but they lost that technology and its a painful process to build it back again".so there just going to mars instead.

  • @randywilliams9531
    @randywilliams95318 ай бұрын

    Magnetic variables could be tracked by engineers and recorded. Maybe watch the path for a landing craft say for about 6 months to register fluctuations and gain insight into what they need to do

  • @mrgcav
    @mrgcav7 ай бұрын

    Very well explained.

  • @timothystockman7533
    @timothystockman75338 ай бұрын

    This IS rocket science! As I understand it, Armstrong took PARTIAL control during the landing. The only time the descent engine was fired under full manual control was a course correction burn during Apollo 13.

  • @alanb3267
    @alanb32678 ай бұрын

    Considering the recent attempts to land vessels on the moon, resulting in failures, kind of brings light the ever wondering conspiracy. Did we really land on the moon back in the 60s. You would think that 60 years later with the technology improvements it would be second nature for the aerospace industry.

  • @user-gt3km8jk3z

    @user-gt3km8jk3z

    7 ай бұрын

    N do u really think there's a rover on mars?😂

  • @joerodriguez3002

    @joerodriguez3002

    7 ай бұрын

    No,,we didn't. When in doubt there is no doubt. Overwhelming evidence shows that we didn't.

  • @Obshowersyndicate

    @Obshowersyndicate

    7 ай бұрын

    You think the government would lie to us??? I can't believe that ..... is the next booster shot available yet

  • @timothyhine2258

    @timothyhine2258

    7 ай бұрын

    Seems to be easier to land on Mars.

  • @UpperDarbyDetailing

    @UpperDarbyDetailing

    7 ай бұрын

    @@joerodriguez3002 Overwhelming evidence shows we did. For one thing, if we didn’t the Soviets would have called bullshit. For another the flight was followed by universities and civilians all over the globe.

  • @johnc007
    @johnc0078 ай бұрын

    So NASA wants Space X to land their bullet shaped starship on the moon vertically despite the moon having varying gravity, no atmosphere and an uneven surface? Sounds like a difficult task!

  • @robinkelly1770

    @robinkelly1770

    8 ай бұрын

    It is run by musk so an impoosible task...

  • @curtisquick1582

    @curtisquick1582

    8 ай бұрын

    After landing hundreds or large Falcon boosters on Earth, the Moon, with its lower gravity, will be so much easier for SpaceX. And besides, the computer on board is much more capable than humans at landing.

  • @johnc007

    @johnc007

    8 ай бұрын

    @@curtisquick1582 It’s nothing like landing on Earth. There’s no atmosphere so you can’t use wing flaps to correct the orientation of the upper section. You would need retro thrusters. The surface of the moon is not flat. The video even mentions how hard landing the reusable rockets on earth is. So on the moon it’s a lot more difficult.

  • @pmeyer2019

    @pmeyer2019

    8 ай бұрын

    @@robinkelly1770 how so? He’s succeed at everything he’s done including perfecting reusable rockets. Just you hate him because you’re a liberal. Lol

  • @biser1901

    @biser1901

    7 ай бұрын

    Being able to land on something that is not a solid body that is apparently clearly visible against the blue sky as a transparent semi-self-luminous cold plasma with a silvery white light quite unlike the warm yellow Sun, and is by no means seen as solid a rock during the day against the background of the blue sky is not only impossible and absurd, but also an infinitely insane and childish belief for ignorant people with perverted programmed thinking, as well also for ideological people having a huge illusion of real knowledge. Only NASA and modern astronomy claim and defend the cause that the Moon is a solid, spherical, Earth-like abode that man has actually flown to and stepped on. Only they claim that the Moon is a non-luminous planetoid that receives and reflects all its light from the Sun. The reality, however, is that the Moon is apparently not a solid body, it is certainly round, but not spherical, and it is by no means an Earth-like planetoid that humans could step on. The moon cannot physically be both a spherical body and a reflector of the Sun's light at the same time. In order to reflect the light, the reflectors must inevitably be flat or concave like a car headlight, gathering in focus the light rays from any angle of incidence, but if the surface of a given reflector is convex, then any incident ray will be reflected in a straight line with the radius perpendicular to the surface, resulting in scattering of light. In fact, the Moon is proven to be largely transparent and completely self-illuminated, glowing with its unique silver-white light. In many cases the moon is observed half-illuminated from early at night to late in the day with the same angle of illumination, and in the unillumined part, where it should be a dark mass of rock, we see the blue sky and stars in the early morning without changing the angle of the lunate part of the Moon, which part is supposed to be reflected by the Sun until late in the day at the same fixed and unchanging angle of the lunate part of the Moon! When the waxing or waning Moon is visible during the day, it is possible to see the blue sky right through the Moon. And on a clear night, during waxing and waning, it is sometimes even possible to see stars and "planets" directly across the surface of the Moon! Throughout its history, the Royal Astronomical Society has documented many such cases that do not obey the Heliocentric model. The light of the Sun is golden, warm, drying, protective and antiseptic, while the light of the Moon is silvery, cool and damp, putrid and septic. The sun's rays reduce the burning of the pyre, and the moon's rays increase the burning. Vegetable and animal substances exposed to sunlight quickly dry up, shrink, coagulate and lose their tendency to putrefy and putrefy: grapes and other fruits become hard, partially candied and preserved, such as raisins, dates and prunes, animal flesh coagulates , loses its volatile gaseous components, becomes hard, dry and difficult to putrefy. When exposed to moonlight, however, plant and animal matter tends to show symptoms of decay and decay. This proves that Sunlight and Moonlight are distinct, unique and opposite, as they are in the geocentric flat model. A thermometer exposed to direct sunlight will read a higher temperature than another thermometer placed in the shade. But exposed entirely to direct moonlight, a thermometer will read a lower temperature than one placed in the shadow of the moon. That is, in the shadow of the Moon, the temperature of the thermometer is higher than the temperature of the thermometer exposed to direct Moonlight. If Sunlight is concentrated, through large lenses, then at the focal point it creates considerable heat, while Moonlight similarly collected does not create heat. In the Lancet Medical Journal of March 14, 1856, several experiments were detailed which proved that the rays of the moon, when concentrated, could actually lower the temperature of a thermometer by more than eight degrees. Thus Sunlight and Moonlight undoubtedly have quite different properties. This single and irrefutable fact alone, which is supported by experiment, destroys and demolishes the Heliocentric theory, and this elementary experiment can be done by every single person on earth without requiring or needing any education or knowledge of physics or other sciences. Many people believe that the ability of modern astronomy to accurately predict solar and lunar eclipses is a result and unequivocal proof of the heliocentric theory of the universe. The fact is, however, that eclipses were accurately predicted by various cultures around the world for thousands of years before the "heliocentric ball-Earth" even flashed in Copernicus' imagination. Ptolemy in the First Century accurately predicted eclipses, based on the hexagonal annual pattern of the flat, fixed Earth with the same precision as today. As early as 600 BC Thales accurately predicted an eclipse that ended the war between the Medes and Lydians. Eclipses occur accurately regularly in 18-year cycles, so regardless of geocentric or heliocentric, flat or spherical earth cosmologies, eclipses can be accurately calculated regardless of such factors.

  • @ronnyb5890
    @ronnyb58908 ай бұрын

    there's also the fact that these new landings are being done on the other side of the moon, thus out of the LOS (line of sight) where the earth cant give direct instructions anymore, the only way a landing could be more feasable, is to give command for landing the craft over to AI, that way it can automatically changes trajectory and velocity accordingly

  • @bigboss-tl2xr

    @bigboss-tl2xr

    8 ай бұрын

    Or put up a cubesat to be a relay.

  • @rodrigovidela273
    @rodrigovidela2734 күн бұрын

    What is strange is that someone was videotaping the moon landing with WI-FI while Neil Armstrong was exiting. There must have been a lot of editing with camera shots and lighting effects to make this landing look real. Remember in those days TVs were black and white and the quality of the picture was not the greatest.

  • @rustusandroid
    @rustusandroid8 ай бұрын

    Russia was first object in space, first man in space, first spacewalk, first spacestation, first lunar lander, first Venus lander, first Mars lander... plus many more. Trust me, they don't suck at space.

  • @curtisquick1582

    @curtisquick1582

    8 ай бұрын

    Political stunts mostly. NASA did much better planned exploration programs. Most of the Russian firsts were nearly tragedies. They may have been slower, but NASA made it work for real.

  • @rustusandroid

    @rustusandroid

    8 ай бұрын

    @@curtisquick1582 Wow, moronic.

  • @harashylander1321
    @harashylander13218 ай бұрын

    India is constructing Willa’s on the moon 👍👍👍🌹

  • @bobross3172
    @bobross31727 ай бұрын

    We have a " lumpy gravitational pull " as well. Neil touched on it recently.

  • @jameswest4819
    @jameswest48195 ай бұрын

    That is not garbage, that is a priceless artifact.

  • @radarw64
    @radarw648 ай бұрын

    No matter how you try to explain this chunk of stuff under the South Pole, it may explain why the Moon stays in an unusual orbit.

  • @bigboss-tl2xr

    @bigboss-tl2xr

    8 ай бұрын

    Huh? What is unusual about it?

  • @radarw64

    @radarw64

    8 ай бұрын

    @@bigboss-tl2xr i think one side always faces the Earth

  • @bigboss-tl2xr

    @bigboss-tl2xr

    8 ай бұрын

    Yeah, I just don't understand what is "unusual" about that. Many moons are tidally locked. 🤷🏼‍♂️

  • @radarw64

    @radarw64

    8 ай бұрын

    @@bigboss-tl2xr Ok, so maybe unusual is the wrong word then. The Earth rotates, and the Moon does not. That is the usual way moons do I guess. haha

  • @weldtheheckoutofitcorporat7823
    @weldtheheckoutofitcorporat78238 ай бұрын

    Gabo estoy de acuerdo contigo con relacion a los inmigrantes. Todos tenemos derecho a soñar con una vida mejor, pero para nosotros los inmigrantes que vinimos legales, y como americanos que pagamos impuestos, recibir un tren lleno de personas todos los dias, se hace insostenible para cualquier Pais. A parte del hecho de una Frontera abierta donde entran indeseables aparte de la droga. Me gustan tus videos ya que igual que tu tenemos el mismo hobby. Buen vuelo y buenas tomas

  • @geofflewis8599
    @geofflewis85998 ай бұрын

    ..I liked that mission that was a collaboration between Nasa and the European Space Agency, someone did the calcs in inches and feet and the others did them in metrics. The probe is now in a hole ..somewhere..

  • @warrengage9536
    @warrengage95368 ай бұрын

    With all due respect. The Apollo 11, as with all missions, was completely fly by wire. Neil did not fly the lander, all he could do was request the computer to seek another landing site by moving the joystick until he was satisfied with the landing site. The computer flew the lander.

  • @tonyhaslam186

    @tonyhaslam186

    8 ай бұрын

    You apparently don’t understand what fly by wire is, and it isn’t the computer making decisions.

  • @sonnyburnett8725

    @sonnyburnett8725

    8 ай бұрын

    @@tonyhaslam186Well, actually it is. The control stick sends impulses to a series’s of computers and they interpret those impulses and move the appropriate device, in this case the descent engine and RCS thrusters. More and more transport aircraft today are fly by wire.

  • @jeremydennis6988

    @jeremydennis6988

    8 ай бұрын

    With all do respect but he still flew it if he wouldn't not of take over the so called computer it would have killed them. Landing in a rock fild

  • @UpperDarbyDetailing

    @UpperDarbyDetailing

    7 ай бұрын

    @@JennyJackson-zp7xu That is a lie based on a cherry picked piece of footage. He said we never went back, not that we didn’t go. Which is entirely true, after the last Apollo mission humans haven’t gone back. Until next year anyway.

  • @lancasterhypnotherapy
    @lancasterhypnotherapy8 ай бұрын

    Incorrect- The 9 NASA Ranger missions were never designed to "soft land on the Moon". Rangers were designed to remain fully functional with cameras returning photos until impact

  • @DavidHauka

    @DavidHauka

    8 ай бұрын

    Exactly right! Thanks for letting folks know!

  • @samscalz
    @samscalz7 ай бұрын

    The mass is a solid core that is being pushed towards the surface. It has a massive electrical charge

  • @sunayocarissime5309
    @sunayocarissime53097 ай бұрын

    From what my uncle told me, whom I might add was an Air Force veteran, he said landing on the moon is NOT as easy you think. The electro magnetic field around the moon makes logistics insane. "I think it was designed that way but that's a whole different beast," he said and its better NOT to ask. One thing though the Apollo missions don't get the credit they deserve because those were a logistical nightmare. Props to the original Apollo missions, their crews were basically told, "we need you to land on a the head of a pin blindfolded and navigating with your tongue to get it the Lunar lander to land on a spec of dust!" It's not as easy as it sounds. RIP Uncle Miquel, I miss your stories tio.

  • @maxsmith695

    @maxsmith695

    7 ай бұрын

    The Apollo mission was faked. Nixon was delusional, until he realized his stupidity resulted in him getting into a big jam.

  • @ArndBrugman
    @ArndBrugman8 ай бұрын

    Please leave out political statements in your videos, you're better than mainstream media. Thx.

  • @meatgoat4084
    @meatgoat40848 ай бұрын

    "We know that India is home to many of the best-educated and smartest engineers on the planet." It goes without saying that the best-educated and smartest engineers from every nation form the set of the best-educated and smartest engineers on the planet. But you seem to be implying that Indian engineers are extraordinary in some regard. Who is "we" and how do we know this?

  • @javiervasquez29

    @javiervasquez29

    8 ай бұрын

    America has the best.

  • @ArupRatanMitra

    @ArupRatanMitra

    8 ай бұрын

    Nothing extraordinary about Indian engeniers they do good in certain fields but suck at others mainly because of a lack of capital I believe

  • @davidvomlehn4495

    @davidvomlehn4495

    8 ай бұрын

    I will not say the have *the* best, but note that India has centuries of matematical and engineering traditions. I'm jealous of ISRO's success and welcome them into the club with open arms. Now it gets *really* fun! (Fingers crossed for iSpace). And, please spend little time debating who's the best and more time on being the best.

  • @meatgoat4084

    @meatgoat4084

    8 ай бұрын

    @@davidvomlehn4495 What debate? It's a forgone conclusion according to this streamer. "We know" it to be true! I've worked with engineers from many nations for over 30 years including many from India and I never knew this fact. I have learned something new today. I am now in the "we" club!

  • @zeltron-qk2iu

    @zeltron-qk2iu

    8 ай бұрын

    He was proving the point dimwit That even with best of all team, tech & brains it's still hard Low iq

  • @MYOB990
    @MYOB9908 ай бұрын

    It will be interesting to see how Starship does when landing on the moon.

  • @joseeduardobolisfortes
    @joseeduardobolisfortes8 ай бұрын

    Perhaps there is a group of local bureaucrats deciding who can or not get the Gray Card...

  • @kennethpole2439

    @kennethpole2439

    8 ай бұрын

    "... it could, in theory, could be just about anything ..." 😂

  • @thisguy35
    @thisguy358 ай бұрын

    i think it's more americans that are not really popular these days

  • @zmblion

    @zmblion

    8 ай бұрын

    Thanx to our lovely government

  • @michaelholbert191
    @michaelholbert1918 ай бұрын

    I think you should have said something about Apollo 13, it was supposed to land on the moon and failed because of an explosion in the service module on the way to the moon.

  • @georgiaobserver
    @georgiaobserver8 ай бұрын

    So, the moon has a big unknown mass at its south pole? Does that mean we are gonna have a moonsectonmy? Keep me abreast of the status.

  • @McLovinSB84
    @McLovinSB848 ай бұрын

    @spacerace there is an editing error check your caption for your first segment.

  • @jcollinsg3

    @jcollinsg3

    8 ай бұрын

    I saw that too and was confused. This video has nothing to do with the SpaceX investigation.

  • @therealzilch
    @therealzilch8 ай бұрын

    Oh come on. Let's just acknowledge that it's hard to land on the Moon and luck plays a role, as usual.

  • @rentechpad
    @rentechpad7 ай бұрын

    Given that we do not exactly know how the moon was formed but if it was formed from a collision between earth and another large body, as the left overs caught in earths gravity came together to create the moon its also possible that debris of different densities settled in under the effect of earths gravity to form a moon that did not arrange the material available in a pattern of even distribution.

  • @rogerjoseph2532
    @rogerjoseph25327 ай бұрын

    we never landed people on the moon yet, even today, nasa admits they don't have the technology to do it.

  • @Nicklan1961
    @Nicklan19618 ай бұрын

    I love it you're claiming the remote controlled were robots in 1966 what year were you born.

  • @supamatta9207
    @supamatta92078 ай бұрын

    I wonder if you could go up and down to slow enough velocity , maybe the un even gravity could make a good approach orbit with the moons vounter spin .. i realised unfortunately that velocity is 99% the problem of landing

  • @davidvomlehn4495

    @davidvomlehn4495

    8 ай бұрын

    There is also the minor part about having the leg-y part down, but I quibble.

  • @av_kovko
    @av_kovko8 ай бұрын

    The cause of the crash of the Luna 25 station became known. Luna 25 has been crashed due mulfiction acceleration mensure unit integrated at Angle Velocity of Mensure Unit (Block Izmereniya uglovoy skorosri) (BIUS-L), zero readings were received in the on-board computer. The computer, without knowing the data, controlled the braking engines up to a time cut-off of 127 seconds, and not according to the speed data. As a result, the spacecraft came out of the perelune 18 km, and deorbited. Spacecraft impacted on Moon surface after 43 minutes after deboost.

  • @davidrobertson5700
    @davidrobertson57007 ай бұрын

    The thumbnail shows the same shape as Great Britain , well done GB you colonised the moon too, anything you didn't take over ?

  • @MrHalvnir
    @MrHalvnir8 ай бұрын

    Someone must have just woke up. They were talking about "Masscon;s" back when Apollo 11 was landing,

  • @michaelblizzard8801
    @michaelblizzard88018 ай бұрын

    Very good Selene / geo-potential maps are now available for the moon. They are in the form of associated Legendre polynomial expansion. You may recall that Katherine Johnson felt that her greatest achievement was the Apollo lunar trajectory with Lunar geo-potential. Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter LRO has laser ranging and very good Doppler shift measurements. (I think that the range delay measurement is off by 12 meters, bur I'm alone in that.) LRO ranging requires an onboard clock as accurate as an Atomic Clock. LRO engineers have synthesized an accuracy at that level. I'll give them that. LRO would crater without Orbital Maintenance thrusts. Good maps for the Ares / Mars geo-potential do exist.

  • @patrickbuechel2599
    @patrickbuechel25997 ай бұрын

    Landing in a horizontal approach would allow for errors like a plane, landing on skids or even wheels. As for lack of gravity downward thrust vectoring,,,figure it out

  • @ashleysilver5594
    @ashleysilver55947 ай бұрын

    You spoke about Chandrayaan 2 failing but left out Chandrayaan 3 that was successful a few months back. In fact that successful landing explained exactly why its so difficult to land.

  • @MaxB6851
    @MaxB68517 ай бұрын

    The Anunnaki mined gold on Earth but left when their creation Man, became a threat to them. Perhaps they went to the Moon and mined gold from its core causing it to be out of balance resulting in one side of the Moon constantly facing Earth.

  • @UpperDarbyDetailing

    @UpperDarbyDetailing

    7 ай бұрын

    You’re either an idiot or crazy. Or a crazy idiot. That was all nonsense. Stop listening to people dumber than you.

  • @charlessoukup1111
    @charlessoukup11117 ай бұрын

    Hah!! You don't need to go all the way to the moon Alice to find something weird going on!!

  • @patrickbuechel2599
    @patrickbuechel25997 ай бұрын

    Back in the day the TI-59 had a moon landing game, you had to calculate the landing to be 0 speed at 0 altitude. It was not easy, plus it had different lander scenarios,,,this was in the mid 70's

  • @Mrbokario
    @Mrbokario7 ай бұрын

    Just love the 60's technology!

  • @cmilkau
    @cmilkau8 ай бұрын

    so what's hard about the south pole now? just the misalignment of orbital planes alone doesn't make the mission significantly harder with modern computing technology.

  • @derekkerr6158
    @derekkerr61587 ай бұрын

    this sounds like gravity anomalies like those we have in the uintah basin

  • @gasperstarina9837
    @gasperstarina98377 ай бұрын

    It makes sense if you canculate in the fact that moon is constantly under the earths gravitational pull

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