Dozy_production
10+ year member
Poel
theres a long way between the launch pad and the moon's surface.in all seriousness, i've seen the space shuttle lauch so thats true
theres a long way between the launch pad and the moon's surface.in all seriousness, i've seen the space shuttle lauch so thats true
you've never heard of the van allen radiation belt?Where are you getting your info from? Some left nut job's book you could buy for 6 dollars at Barnes N nobles? Are you getting it from an actual astronomist? Where is this coming from, beucase it sounds like out of your ***.
Orly? Cuz ive heard they come back with fiya w33d. //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/veryhappy.gif.fec4fed33b4a1279cf10bdd45a039dae.gifi heard all the monkeys they sent into space, came back with super intelligance.
i've posted proof where's yours? educated response FTW, or don't respond at all.scotsman is bullshiting
yea i mean come on now, isent there all sorts of radation in open space that would fry a human to a crisp in less than .0002 milliseconds... yet astronauts have gone out into open space in nothing more than a spacesuit and survivedfirst off this is the lounge, and almost anything goes, so your in no position to make demands //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/wink.gif.608e3ea05f1a9f98611af0861652f8fb.gif and i fail to see any proof you've provided other than saying there's a radiation band that humans cant survive through.
i also suppose the scientist at nasa wouldnt have thought of that and have some sore of shielding tho right?
lol. good point. If our atmosphere is what keeps us from being fried like bacon on a griddle, then how come astronauts can go out into space and beat off, and come back sound as a pound?yea i mean come on now, isent there all sorts of radation in open space that would fry a human to a crisp in less than .0002 milliseconds... yet astronauts have gone out into open space in nothing more than a spacesuit and survived
//content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/wink.gif.608e3ea05f1a9f98611af0861652f8fb.gifThe best rebuttal to allegations of a "Moon Hoax," however, is common sense. Evidence that the Apollo program really happened is compelling: A dozen astronauts (laden with cameras) walked on the Moon between 1969 and 1972. Nine of them are still alive and can testify to their experience. They didn't return from the Moon empty-handed, either. Just as Columbus carried a few hundred natives back to Spain as evidence of his trip to the New World, Apollo astronauts brought 841 pounds of Moon rock home to Earth.
Fortunately not all of the evidence needs a degree in chemistry or geology to appreciate. An average person holding a Moon rock in his or her hand can plainly see that the specimen came from another world.
"There are plenty of museums, including the Smithsonian and others, where members of the public can touch and examine rocks from the Moon," says McKay. "You can see the little meteoroid craters for yourself."