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15 answers

I saw this live on TV when it happened. The flag did move. Armstrong and Aldrin had to stand it up. When they stood it up, they started it swinging. It is swung like a pendulum. And, because there is no atmosphere on the moon, there is no air resistance to slow it down. Simple science.

2006-11-01 08:26:14 · answer #1 · answered by Otis F 7 · 4 0

No, no telescope on earth or in Earth orbit ought to try this. The flag is in basic terms too small in this manner of distance. many people think of distant galaxies are tiny products, even possibly smaller than the celebs interior the sky, yet rather, they are often the choice. The Andromeda galaxy is 7 situations extra effective in angular section interior the night sky, than the full moon. you in basic terms do no longer see a lot of it using fact it would not emit a lot mild - telescopes assemble mild with a great section and can strengthen it by capacity of concentrating it from that great aperture section on the sensor. And nevertheless you like long exposures for seeing maximum galaxies. The flag on the different hand is tiny. each and each Pixel, a Hubble image of the moon might have, is 82m great interior the terrific case. hundred situations extra effective than even the lunar lander. you does no longer even word a small substitute in coloration between landing internet site and ambient moon floor using lunar lander (yet we are able to be sure the place the lander had blown away airborne dirt and dirt throughout landing). yet quickly, a synthetic telescope would be waiting to be sure a minimum of the extra effective products on the moon - the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) is rather a small Hubble, that gets as close as 30 km to the lunar floor. it incredibly is going to be waiting to be sure with actuality issues as great as 50 cm, even possibly smaller products straight away below it. The LRO has already arrived there, it incredibly is now interior the commissioning area, interior of which the sensors would be activated and calibrated for measurements. additionally: The Lunar XPrize promises bonus funds for development a rover which additionally visits artifacts of manned lunar landings. it should not be effective yet, which communities will finally attempt it.

2016-10-21 02:39:19 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

The Flag is not moving. There is a wire sewn into the material to hold the flag out right and visible.

They had some trouble when they were planting the flag, anf the wire did not deply correctly, so it was bent into place causing the fabric to have a ripple effect as though it were being blown by the wind.

2006-11-01 08:19:13 · answer #3 · answered by Jorrath Zek 4 · 3 1

the flag isn't moving; how could you tell by a still picture that there was movement? there are wires or some sort of structure that keeps the flag in the open position

2006-11-01 08:22:43 · answer #4 · answered by soobee 4 · 1 0

The flag was bouncing due to the pole that it was attached to wobbling. It didn't move the entire time. There are actually entire websites decsribing both sides of these arguements. Some of them are highlighted at these links:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apollo_moon_landing_hoax_accusations
http://pirlwww.lpl.arizona.edu/~jscotti/NOT_faked/
http://www.apfn.org/apfn/moon.htm

2006-11-01 08:20:20 · answer #5 · answered by Kyleontheweb 5 · 2 0

No, there was no wind. He was rotating the flagpole into the ground to make sure it stayed there. No wind needed!

2006-11-01 08:41:32 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Wasn't there a thing about some of the stuff on the moon being filmed in a studio?
I can't remember.

2006-11-01 08:28:57 · answer #7 · answered by anonymouse 3 · 0 2

It is not actually moving. No gravity. It stands fairly straight as they planted the flag.

2006-11-01 08:21:27 · answer #8 · answered by cowgirl 2 · 0 2

Go to www.badastronomy.com for a complete debunking of that pseudo-scientific BS.

2006-11-01 12:52:19 · answer #9 · answered by Dave_Stark 7 · 0 0

It is held out by wires... it isn't moving unless the camera is shaking.

Aloha

2006-11-01 08:16:40 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 3 1

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