Where do I start. First, there were over 400,000 people that were involved in the Apollo program, so don't you think one of them would of talked by now? Second, with NASA talking about going back to the Moon and on to Mars they have gone back to Apollo ******** and had to reverse engineer it because the original drawings and plans were not kept, so someone at NASA must think that we got there, because they are using some of the ******** to get back. Third, The Moon is probably one of the worst vantage points for star gazing because of the amount of reflection coming off it's surface; the dark side of the Moon on the other hand would be a good place to set up an observatory. The best place for star gazing is still in space because it offers nothing for light to reflect off of. Fourth, We have been cooling spacesuits since the Gemini program and in space you have to both heat and cool the astronaut, not the air; they cool the air in the spacecraft with sun shielding and insulation materials, a good example is Skylab, when it was launched a solar panel and thermal shield were lost about a minute into the flight, when the first crew got to the station they were able to ***** a parasol that was made basically out of aluminized mylar and bring the temperature inside the station ...
Where do I start. First, there were over 400,000 people that were involved in the Apollo program, so don't you think one of them would of talked by now? Second, with NASA talking about going back to the Moon and on to Mars they have gone back to Apollo ******** and had to reverse engineer it because the original drawings and plans were not kept, so someone at NASA must think that we got there, because they are using some of the ******** to get back. Third, The Moon is probably one of the worst vantage points for star gazing because of the amount of reflection coming off it's surface; the dark side of the Moon on the other hand would be a good place to set up an observatory. The best place for star gazing is still in space because it offers nothing for light to reflect off of. Fourth, We have been cooling spacesuits since the Gemini program and in space you have to both heat and cool the astronaut, not the air; they cool the air in the spacecraft with sun shielding and insulation materials, a good example is Skylab, when it was launched a solar panel and thermal shield were lost about a minute into the flight, when the first crew got to the station they were able to ***** a parasol that was made basically out of aluminized mylar and bring the temperature inside the station down from over 100 degrees down into the 70's, so they in effect cooled the air with a parasol or umbrella. Fifth, during the Gemini program we used the Agena target vehicle to boost it's orbit to 739 miles and that was in 1966. Finally, I think you need to broaden your horizons and get some of your information from other places besides youtube!
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