Lasko123
Kraken
- Joined
- Jan 1, 2019
- Posts
- 3,227
- Reputation
- 3,465
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: this_feature_currently_requires_accessing_site_using_safari
Do you believe in American moon landing?do you believe in the moon landing
You're legit so low IQ it hurtsDo you believe we live under a dome and do you believe in the moon landing ?
Simpson is a cartoon, doesn't mean anything.
Do you believe in American moon landing?
Yes. The facts add up, and I live on the Space Coast. It’s hard to miss those launches.
Why or why not? How is it possible for them back then to pass through the organic lethal Van Allen belt?
The Apollo astronauts and NASA used three techniques to minimize the dosage:
Per Table II in reference 1, average Apollo mission dosage (~40 mSv) was comparable to 3 months on the ISS during solar maximum, or 6 weeks on the ISS during solar minimums (pg. 24 reference 2).
- The Apollo flights skirted the edges of the belts. Space is 3D - you can go around radiation belts. (See figures 7 and 8 in reference 1, below.)
- The Apollo flights passed through the edges of the belts when they were moving at their fastest, minimizing exposure time.
- The crews were restricted to the thick-skinned command capsule, which was clad in heat shielding up to an inch thick, until they passed the worst of the radiation belts.
REFERENCES
https://arxiv.org/ftp/arxiv/papers/1805/1805.01643.pdf
https://www.nasa.gov/sites/default/files/atoms/files/space_radiation_ebook.pdf
look up yo yo spin nasa btw you dumb anime watching loser
Simpson is a cartoon, doesn't mean anything.
Do you believe in American moon landing?
Yes. The facts add up, and I live on the Space Coast. It’s hard to miss those launches.
Why or why not? How is it possible for them back then to pass through the organic lethal Van Allen belt?
The Apollo astronauts and NASA used three techniques to minimize the dosage:
Per Table II in reference 1, average Apollo mission dosage (~40 mSv) was comparable to 3 months on the ISS during solar maximum, or 6 weeks on the ISS during solar minimums (pg. 24 reference 2).
- The Apollo flights skirted the edges of the belts. Space is 3D - you can go around radiation belts. (See figures 7 and 8 in reference 1, below.)
- The Apollo flights passed through the edges of the belts when they were moving at their fastest, minimizing exposure time.
- The crews were restricted to the thick-skinned command capsule, which was clad in heat shielding up to an inch thick, until they passed the worst of the radiation belts.
REFERENCES
https://arxiv.org/ftp/arxiv/papers/1805/1805.01643.pdf
https://www.nasa.gov/sites/default/files/atoms/files/space_radiation_ebook.pdf
What does that have to do with the topic?dumb ass how do you think we are receiving our internet signal's?
Nobody said anything about being intellectually superiorThe fact that you need to go to such lengths as to compare yourself to flat earthers to feel intellectually superior shows how low iq you are
It's a joke put in by the developers, I'm assuming.
What does that have to do with the topic?
The main takeaway from this is that, due to the rotation of Earth, the atmosphere gets ‘dragged’ along the surface of the planet, as opposed to being stationary. Why can’t airplanes go straight up and let the Earth pass beneath?
Nobody said anything about being intellectually superior
Made the original post because I read some flat earth comments that pissed me off.