amadeus
31-03-2007, 10:10 AM
Hello,
first of all thank you for this excellent forum!I've been reading your posts for a while now and decided finally to join the gang.:)
After searching the forum I didn't find anyone posting links to this quite well made(and long!)film about the 'moon hoax' on Google video.
So here goes:
What Happened On The Moon, Part 1: http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-7251089776146839385
Part 2: http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=8585273531105072202&q=what+happened+on+the+moon
I'm not totally convinced by all the facts in this film, but the most of it is pretty good reasoning in my opinion.As I see it(at least for now) it all comes down to two major issues:
1) Is the reflecting light from the moons surface(when you're standing on the moon) bright enough to light up particles/people even when they are standing in the shadow? Resulting in strange anomalies in the pictures.
*Interestingly NASAs own info states: "In fact, the moon is about the poorest reflector in the solar system..."
See Here:
http://liftoff.msfc.nasa.gov/academy/universe/moon.html
2) How strong and lethal is the Van Allen radiaton belt? It's hard to find neutral and well researched info about this.Anyone?
So at this moment I have to say: We didn't go...
Viribus unitis!
amadeus
first of all thank you for this excellent forum!I've been reading your posts for a while now and decided finally to join the gang.:)
After searching the forum I didn't find anyone posting links to this quite well made(and long!)film about the 'moon hoax' on Google video.
So here goes:
What Happened On The Moon, Part 1: http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-7251089776146839385
Part 2: http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=8585273531105072202&q=what+happened+on+the+moon
I'm not totally convinced by all the facts in this film, but the most of it is pretty good reasoning in my opinion.As I see it(at least for now) it all comes down to two major issues:
1) Is the reflecting light from the moons surface(when you're standing on the moon) bright enough to light up particles/people even when they are standing in the shadow? Resulting in strange anomalies in the pictures.
*Interestingly NASAs own info states: "In fact, the moon is about the poorest reflector in the solar system..."
See Here:
http://liftoff.msfc.nasa.gov/academy/universe/moon.html
2) How strong and lethal is the Van Allen radiaton belt? It's hard to find neutral and well researched info about this.Anyone?
So at this moment I have to say: We didn't go...
Viribus unitis!
amadeus