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Originally posted by Nip
I am writting a paper in my Anglish class about the moon landings (if i think they happened or not) and i was wondering If you pointed a powerful enough telescope towards the landing site could you see the Flag and foot prints? and/or have you done it yourself?
Originally posted by SG-17
wasnt the us flag made of nylon? or something strong like that, they wanted it to last for a while
Originally posted by Nip
I am writting a paper in my Anglish class about the moon landings (if i think they happened or not) and i was wondering If you pointed a powerful enough telescope towards the landing site could you see the Flag and foot prints? and/or have you done it yourself?
Subject:
Re: Images
From:
Scott Kardel
Date: Wed, 06 Dec 2006 09:34:36 -0800
To: Ron Schmidt
Hi Ron,
I haven't seen any images of the Moon from Palomar either. It is possible that some were taken long ago, but astronomers would rather explore the Moon with spacecraft and use the big telescopes for observing much, much fainter objects.
Clear skies,
- Scott
W. Scott Kardel
Public Affairs Coordinator, Palomar Observatory
Telephone: (760) xxx-xxxx
E-mail: [redacted].caltech.edu
WWW:www.palomar-observatory.org
Originally posted by 30 Seconds
Explain to me how something would magically deteriorate in space.
maybe a little sunbleached,
deterioration comes from elements
Originally posted by 30 Seconds
there is no atmosphere on the moon, atleast not a strong one. The flag should still be there unless it was hit by a meteor.
I watched a tv program awhile ago that said the footprints should last for about 2 million years, unless they are hit.
Explain to me how something would magically deteriorate in space. maybe a little sunbleached, but thats about it. deterioration comes from elements
Originally posted by 30 Seconds
Explain to me how something would magically deteriorate in space. maybe a little sunbleached, but thats about it. deterioration comes from elements
Originally posted by ngchunter
Over the course of millions of years, dust from impacts will gradually cause the footprints to be covered up.
Originally posted by zorgon
Originally posted by ngchunter
Over the course of millions of years, dust from impacts will gradually cause the footprints to be covered up.
So your not buying NASA's dust storms huh?