November 22, 20223 yr 9 hours ago, VaBeach_Eagle said: The moon is made of Cheese. Everyone knows that.
November 22, 20223 yr 16 hours ago, VaBeach_Eagle said: FYI, pretty sure this is a fake livestream from a known clickbaiter. They're all over youtube. Artemis isn't streaming from orbit as far as I'm aware.
November 22, 20223 yr Author 9 minutes ago, Arthur Jackson said: FYI, pretty sure this is a fake livestream from a known clickbaiter. They're all over youtube. Artemis isn't streaming from orbit as far as I'm aware. Could be, I found that video through a news website and according to this news site, they are live streaming (at least some): https://www.kq2.com/news/nasa-releases-livestream-of-artemis-1-mission/article_7e26c1c8-6a81-11ed-80bd-3f33058fe52a.html
November 22, 20223 yr 1 minute ago, VaBeach_Eagle said: Could be, I found that video through a news website and according to this news site, they are live streaming (at least some): https://www.kq2.com/news/nasa-releases-livestream-of-artemis-1-mission/article_7e26c1c8-6a81-11ed-80bd-3f33058fe52a.html ok cool! News to me. If I can find a legit stream I'll post - I still think that channel is running old orbiter footage on a loop. On the case...
November 22, 20223 yr @VaBeach_Eagle Here's the official... https://video.ibm.com/channel/b4dEcL3bJKW Enjoy the color bars everyone!
November 23, 20223 yr 13 hours ago, Arthur Jackson said: clickbaiters should die of gonorrhea and rot in hell That would probably require them to have sex with another person. Unlikely.
November 25, 20223 yr Author Stunning images of lunar surface captured by NASA's Artemis 1 Orion spacecraft Quote The Artemis I Orion spacecraft was on the sixth day of its mission NASA's Artemis I Orion spacecraft's camera snapped some stunning new images of the moon and its crafters this week. Using the Optical Navigation Camera on the sixth day of the mission, the black-and-white images highlight billions of years of history. "Orion uses the optical navigation camera to capture imagery of the Earth and the moon at different phases and distances, providing an enhanced body of data to certify its effectiveness under different lighting conditions as a way to help orient the spacecraft on future missions with crew," NASA said in a caption alongside the photos. Scientists have learned about the conditions of our early solar system by studying the composition, size and distribution of the craters, created long ago by collisions with asteroids. Orion flew just over 81 miles above the lunar surface during its closest approach on Monday morning, traveling at 5,102 mph. On the sixth day of the Artemis I mission, Orion’s optical navigation camera captured black-and-white images of craters on the moon. (NASA Johnson) At the time of the lunar flyby, the spacecraft was more than 230,000 miles from Earth. Using the European Service Module, Orion is currently preparing for a critical maneuver that will send the capsule into a high and "distant" orbit around the moon. The moon's craters as seen by Orion's camera. (NASA Johnson) It will remain in this orbit for about a week to test spacecraft systems before returning to Earth. The moon shown on the sixth day of the Artemis I mission. (NASA Johnson) On Thursday afternoon, the capsule was traveling 222,993 miles from Earth and 55,819 miles from the moon. It will not splash down in the Pacific Ocean until December. Link
November 29, 20223 yr Cool view of Orion looking back at the Round Moon eclipsing the Round Earth. Quite the selfie.
November 29, 20223 yr 3 hours ago, jsdarkstar said: Cool view of Orion looking back at the Round Moon eclipsing the Round Earth. Quite the selfie. Except run that image through programs to remove artifcats, and zoom in on the moon, and you can see they are reusing the CGI.
December 6, 20223 yr Author NASA's Orion spacecraft captures stunning video of moon, Earth Quote Artemis I mission Orion spacecraft will splashdown over the weekend NASA's Orion spacecraft captured breathtaking shots of the moon and the Earth as it returns home. It's on course for its return on Sunday and made its second and final close approach to the moon at 10:43 a.m. CT on Monday before its return-powered flyby burn. The burn was the final major engine maneuver of the flight test. The spacecraft passed more than 80 miles above the lunar surface. On Dec. 5, 2022, Orion completed the return powered flyby burn, committing the spacecraft to a Dec. 11 splashdown in the Pacific Ocean. (NASA) "The lunar flyby enabled the spacecraft to harness the moon’s gravity and slingshot it back toward Earth for splashdown," NASA Administrator Bill Nelson said in a Monday statement. "When Orion re-enters Earth’s atmosphere in just a few days, it will come back hotter and faster than ever before – the ultimate test before we put astronauts on board. Next up, re-entry!" On the 19th day of the Artemis I mission, Dec. 4, 2022, a camera mounted on the Orion spacecraft captured the Moon just in frame as Orion prepared for its return powered flyby on Dec. 5, when it passed approximately 79 miles above the lunar surface. (NASA) The mission team polled "go" to deploy recovery assets off the coast of California ahead of Orion's splashdown. As Orion splashes down, divers, engineers and technicians will secure the capsule, using a winch line cable to pull Orion into a specially-designed cradle. NASA’s uncrewed Orion spacecraft reached a maximum distance of nearly 270,000 miles from Earth during the Artemis I flight test before beginning its journey back toward Earth. (NASA) As of 5:29 p.m. CT on Monday, Orion was traveling 244,629 miles from Earth and 16,581 miles from the moon, at a speed of 668 miles per hour.
December 13, 20223 yr 40 minutes ago, EagleVA said: When are you guys going to catch on to NASA's LIES. Around the same time you move out of your mom’s basement. So…never.
December 13, 20223 yr 7 hours ago, EagleVA said: When are you guys going to catch on to NASA's LIES. Quote The BANKS have frozen our money - Please take a moment to read what has happened Quote Source: Eric Dubay: https://www.****ute.com/channel/TCgwKoAf3Y9z/ 🚨LEARN HOW TO EXIT THE MATRIX: http://howtoexitthematrix.com http://trickedbythelight.com 🚨LEARN HOW TO DETOXIFY YOUR PINEAL GLAND FOR GOOD HEALTH: https://soljourney.com/blogs/blog/way… MORE Category Spirituality & Faith Sensitivity Normal - Content that is suitable for ages 16 and over Please watch the video. Comedy gold!!
December 13, 20223 yr 13 hours ago, VaBeach_Eagle said: Is the Artemis taking pictures of anything that hasn't already been mapped by the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter?
December 13, 20223 yr And for anybody that has really followed this thing, why are they still landing in the water rather than on land?
December 13, 20223 yr Just now, Mlodj said: And for anybody that has really followed this thing, why are they still landing in the water rather than on land? All those Navy pukes in NASA?
December 13, 20223 yr 26 minutes ago, Toastrel said: All those Navy pukes in NASA? I can't find anything other than a 2008ish Space.com article saying they were getting ready to pick which method to use soon.
December 13, 20223 yr 9 hours ago, vikas83 said: Around the same time you move out of your mom’s basement. So…never. The real question is, does he have a special sock.
December 13, 20223 yr Author 3 hours ago, Mlodj said: Is the Artemis taking pictures of anything that hasn't already been mapped by the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter? I'm sure they mapped specific landing sites that they're planning to go to in a few years, but also they may be using different sensors (I don't know that though). I think this was basically just a dry run for future missions, so even if they didn't map anything new, they needed to test the systems at lunar distances anyway. 3 hours ago, Mlodj said: And for anybody that has really followed this thing, why are they still landing in the water rather than on land? This is just a portion of an article: Quote But why not simply land on land? On dry land there is no risk of a spacecraft sinking, as one Mercury capsule did after splashing down, nearly drowning an astronaut. A Boat Can Float Anywhere Landing on dry land turns out to have some complications. Landing on uneven ground could lead to a capsule tipping over or even rolling down a slope. And "dry land” can’t be counted on to be dry. As Air and Space also reports, one Soviet-era Russian space mission happened to come down on a freezing lake, and the cosmonauts aboard were lucky to survive. Moreover, even with parachute braking, space capsules hit the ground pretty hard — hard enough to risk injury to the crew. Russian spacecraft use a short final blast of retrorockets to slow enough for a gentler touchdown, but the landing is still pretty bumpy. The rockets also add weight. As Space.com reported at the time, NASA originally favored landing on land for the Orion moonship, but later, per Air and Space, went back to water landing to avoid the extra weight of retrorockets. Landing on water is also fairly abrupt, but the splash provides a final stretch of relatively smooth braking. One factor that further affected the decision — then and now — to splash down at sea is that US launch sites are coastal, and their launch paths stretch out over the ocean. In the event of an emergency abort, an American space capsule would thus almost certainly come down over water, so the design needed to float and be suited to water rescue. https://now.northropgrumman.com/splashdown-why-spacecraft-return-by-sea/
December 13, 20223 yr 4 hours ago, Mlodj said: And for anybody that has really followed this thing, why are they still landing in the water rather than on land? Because they don't anyone seeing that the contraption with balloons connected to it is painted PVC.
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