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Do you think it would have been possible to pass the radiation belt without any lead suits?

2007-03-01 20:34:04 · 8 answers · asked by Anonymous in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

8 answers

Of course. It all depends on how much time you spend in it - and the less time, the smaller the radiation dose you get. The astronauts also went through the thinnest portion of the belt, known as the southern polar anomoly, which gave them a dose in an hour equal to what you would get in a day on Earth. No problem.

A solar flare, however, would have been a HUGE problem. They got lucky with that one.

2007-03-01 20:44:15 · answer #1 · answered by eri 7 · 0 0

1) Twelve 12 American astronauts have walked on the moon.

Apollo 11: Neil Armstrong & Buzz Aldrin
Apollo 12: Pete Conrad & Alan Bean
Apollo 13: << failed to land on the moon >>
Apollo 14: Alan Shepard & Edgar (Ed) Mitchell
Apollo 15: David Scott & James Irwin
Apollo 16: John Young & Charles Duke
Apollo 17: Eugene (Gene) Cernan & Harrison Schmidt


2) Why haven't we been back?

a) American astronauts visited the moon on six occasions.

b) The "moon race" was an extension of the cold war. It was mostly about national prestige. We got there first and achieved our primary objective. There was some good science: surveys, measurements, sample collection. But it was mostly about being there first. Once we achieved our primary objective, there was no political will to go back. There still isn't. Perhaps, if we discover He3 or something else valuable, there will be.

c) I used to travel to Crested Butte, Colorado every year to ski. Because I don't go anymore, does it mean that I never went?


3) What about the Van Allen radiation belts? Wouldn't it have killed the astronauts?

The existence of the Van Allen radiation belts postulated in the 1940s by Nicholas Christofilos. Their existence was confirmed in *1958* by the Explorer I satellite launched by the USA.

The radiation in the Van Allen radiation belts is not particularly strong. You would have to hang out there for a week or so in order to get radiation sickness. And, because the radiation is not particularly strong, a few millimeters of metal is all that is required for protection. "An object satellite shielded by 3 mm of aluminum will receive about 2500 rem (25 Sv) per *year*."

"In practice, Apollo astronauts who travelled to the moon spent very little time in the belts and received a harmless dose. [6]. Nevertheless NASA deliberately timed Apollo launches, and used lunar transfer orbits that only skirted the edge of the belt over the equator to minimise the radiation." When the astronauts returned to Earth, their dosimeters showed that they had received about as much radiation as a couple of medical X-rays.


4) The U.S. government scammed everyone?

In 1972, there was a politically motivated burglary of a hotel room in the Watergate Hotel in Washington, D.C. There were only about six or eight people who knew about it. However, those people, including Richard M. Nixon, the President of the United States, failed to keep that burglary a secret. It exploded into a scandal that drove the President and a number of others from office.

If six or eight people couldn't keep a hotel room burglary a secret, then how could literally thousands of people could have kept their mouths shut about six faked moon landings? Not just one moon landing, but six of them!


5) What about the USSR?

Even if NASA and other government agencies could have faked the six moon landings well enough to fool the general public, they could NOT have fooled the space agency or military intelligence types in the USSR. The Soviets were just dying to beat us. If the landings were faked, the Soviets would have re-engineered their N-1 booster and landed on the moon just to prove what liars Americans are. Why didn't they? Because the landings were real and the Soviets knew it.


6) Why does the flag shake? Where are the stars? Who took the video of Neil Armstrong?

Take a look at the first two websites listed below. They deal well with all of the technical questions.


7) Finally, please tell us what you would accept as definitive evidence that the six moon landings were real. Is there anything?

2007-03-02 08:48:23 · answer #2 · answered by Otis F 7 · 2 0

I do not "think" we went to the Moon, I KNOW we did.

The Van Allen radiation belt is not that intense. Lead shielding is not required, merely the metal outer skin of the Apollo system. And the astronauts did not spend very long in the radiation belt, so they got little more dose than a common chest x-ray. No sweat!

2007-03-02 09:02:28 · answer #3 · answered by Dave_Stark 7 · 0 1

I think different things on different days--I'm like totally paranoid and sometimes I go on rants one them being that it was filmed and it's all fake. I also watch tons of science shows on space and when they show pictures, I think they're fake too, but I still watch the shows, so I'm conflicted.......I am not believing anything until I'm actually ON the moon.

2007-03-02 05:52:05 · answer #4 · answered by specialone18 5 · 0 0

I think there's a good chance but I also think there was a lot of motivation to fake the whole thing. I think we went at some point. It may have not been as early as Apollo 11 though.

2007-03-02 04:42:37 · answer #5 · answered by George T 2 · 0 1

Yes we did go to the moon. All the conspiriceis can be explained and prooven false. And we are going back, 2015 (planned).

2007-03-02 05:20:23 · answer #6 · answered by A C 1 · 0 0

NO;-) We are bullshitted by the government

2007-03-02 04:44:27 · answer #7 · answered by ? 1 · 0 4

no

2007-03-02 04:42:52 · answer #8 · answered by dNv 2 · 0 2

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