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Originally posted by ngchunter
You really don't get the difference between a flare and a plume do you?
Of course that theory is inconsistent with what I saw,
... Meanwhile we have optical confirmation from amateurs that the probe was on course where it was supposed to be, so how could it have missed?
What part of "19 times the force previously used" did you not understand (or are you just unwilling to admit)?
Originally posted by RoofMonkey
Originally posted by ngchunter
You really don't get the difference between a flare and a plume do you?
Let me guess, you are trying to imply idiocy by the specialized definition of technical terms that deviate from the publicly accepted common use ones eh?
Here, play with these: YIG oscillator ("yttrium iron garnet"), hysteresis loops, surface ducting, forward scatter. (no specific relation to the thread, but since you are going down that road I thought you could use the entertainment)
Then plainly state what you saw and get the chip off of your shoulder. how many responses did it take before you stated that? What? Three?
It's NASA.
Again... it's NASA. What the [expletive deleted] do you expect?
EDIT Add:
You mentioned: "Meanwhile we have optical confirmation from amateurs that the probe was on course where it was supposed to be..."
Which begs the question: How did they loose track? They had the target, they were tracking the target (the probe) yet they all lost it.
Originally posted by ngchunter
you're not qualified to call me delusional.
See above. I witnessed a flash in my telescope. It was dim, it was brief (faster than I can blink brief), it was located in the crater Cabeus, it coincided with the moment of Centaur impact, it's really that simple.
It's NASA
That didn't answer the question.
Again, that doesn't address the question. 19 times the force previously used means the experiment is on an entirely different level and the same outcome should not be assumed REGARDLESS of what the eventual final outcome is. You assume it anyway and handwave stating "it's NASA." That doesn't magically make the difference between 2000kN and 267kN trivial.
You mentioned: "Meanwhile we have optical confirmation from amateurs that the probe was on course where it was supposed to be..."
Which begs the question: How did they loose track? They had the target, they were tracking the target (the probe) yet they all lost it.
What the heck are you talking about? How did who lose track?
we have optical confirmation from amateurs that the probe was on course where it was supposed to be
Originally posted by RoofMonkey
Originally posted by ngchunter
you're not qualified to call me delusional.
An you have just demonstrated your superiority complex. Thank you for supporting my point.
So that leaves us with relying upon your word of it. No evidence, nothing finite... just some dude lurking in the bushes with a telescope.
Actually.. it does.
Actually, that is quite trivial. At "about one mile per second" you have roughly 1.6 km/s. Ramp it up to the typical 17 km/s (asteroids) or 51 km/s (comets) then you may have something to yammer about. Lacking that it's a trivial difference.
Ummm... okay, I'll repeat it... s l o w l y.
we have optical confirmation from amateurs that the probe was on course where it was supposed to be
And if they did not loose track.. then show me the imagery that they shot.
Okay.. "I" don't have to see it... just show it to somebody... anybody for that matter.
Like I said earlier... NASA would love to get their hands on something like that... as would a few newspapers. Talk about a scoop.
It would be really nice to have non NASA cooberating evidence... but your statements are begining to sound more and more like a typical UFO sighting... sans pictures.
Originally posted by ngchunter
I posted a very fine animation taken by an amateur showing LCROSS on course on this thread earlier,
do I need to relink it again? I gave you the corroborating evidence, you ignored it.
I have my own optical detecting which I recorded as a pair of digital images as well, but mine are not nearly as appealing photographically speaking (reason being that I was attempting to image it at lunar distances and near the moon in the sky, the least ideal condition possible). That didn't matter to me as the purpose was to obtain a detection, even a weak one, just prior to impact.
Originally posted by RoofMonkey
Originally posted by ngchunter
I posted a very fine animation taken by an amateur showing LCROSS on course on this thread earlier,
An animation is just that... an animation.
do I need to relink it again? I gave you the corroborating evidence, you ignored it.
What? More Animations?
Bravo Zulu, then let's see your imagery.
One thing you are failing to do, or are choosing not to do, is to realize that my beef is with NASA.
If you have this quantity of 3rd party evidence that is NOT sourced from NASA, then toss it or a sample of it out here.
BTW... I noticed earlier that the phrase "from amateurs" is bolded and possibly subject to misinterpretation. I have no beef with amateurs, in fact some of the best corroborating evidence comes from them.
This is also why I was very disappointed that Palomar, closely affiliated with Caltech, failed to catch any specular reflection (glint) off of either vehicle during the ~ 2 minute transit of their 12 minute publicly released imagery.
Show me a link or reference that is NOT SOURCED FROM NASA, that indicates an impact and I will be a believer just like you.
Edit Add: As for there not being enough fuel to adjust for a miss...
Originally posted by ngchunter
So because you have a beef with NASA your argument has more weight?
Originally posted by ngchunter[/i
You shouldn't expect to see such a dim source of light in a shot where the lunar surface is properly exposed, regardless of the size or resolving power of the telescope. No telescope on earth could come close to resolving the craft individually as more than a point light source, and shy of doing just that in the split second it entered the crater with the dark backdrop behind it, there'd be no way to see the actual impactor at the moment of impact.
Originally posted by RoofMonkey
reply to post by ngchunter
You... get a star. (forum type star) If I could tag more of 'em I would.
Thank You.
Which is nothing more than I was seeking. In the roughly two minutes of transit time in the Palomar image, I would have expected at least that from specular reflections.
I pushed those images until I was practically blind trying to find something.
Now... this leads to a question. The 1998 probe yielded no plume. LCROSS yielded no plume.
Why? Is the surface more loosely congealed in that area effectively making it have the consitency of clingy packing foam? Is it a pit of mud?
Originally posted by ngchunter
Thank you. To be honest I misjudged you; I didn't expect you to accept grainy images, but it's the best I can muster at those kinds of distances with an object that size and a bright moon nearby. I'm pleasantly surprised that we can come to an agreement on that.
Well here's a thought, what if there's a bit of liquid oxygen present there trapped in the regolith, just enough to make it muddy, especially just below the surface? We now know the temperatures in some of those craters are some of the coldest places in the solar system. Perhaps just beneath the outer layer of regolith is a slush of water ice and more volatile liquid compounds mixed together to make mud?