English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

7 answers

Cmon man do some research before asking such questions. A simple research on optics will tell you its not possible atleast right now.

2007-07-01 05:59:16 · answer #1 · answered by Abhinesh 4 · 1 0

no way man, there is not a such powerful telescope to see the flags planted onto the moon surface, YET, not even the landers lower parts, or the lunar rovers (that are bigger than a pole with a flag)

you need at least a 20-25 meters mirror to reach that resolution, I suppose
Here a link on reflecting telescopes
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reflecting_telescope

an astronomer might tell you some more details on telescope resolutions

want a proof of lunar missions ? use an astronomical laser pointer and point the mirror left onto the moon by one of the missions, the laser will rebound and your laser pointer will recive a nice laser flash from the moon.

2007-07-01 03:56:58 · answer #2 · answered by scientific_boy3434 5 · 2 0

Nowhere, buffoon.

There is no telescope powerful enough to even pick out the lunar rover or the base of the LEM, much less a flag about four feet wide. The technology isn't even close, and the telescope would weigh far too much to practically build.

You been watching "YouTube" again? Another fool in need of proof of six lunar landings? I been there, with a radio receiver aimed at the Moon and then away from it, and guess what happened? When we pointed the radio antenna away from the Moon while the astronauts were talking, we lost signal. Proof.

2007-07-01 03:53:21 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 4 0

You can't. There are no such pictures, nor will there ever be. It just isn't possible to view an object as small as those flags from a distance of 250,000 miles. There is absolutely no reason to doubt that the flags are there, though - six of them, not counting those which were mounted/painted on the sides of manned and unmanned landers. Six flags on the moon.....hmmmm, sounds like a good name for a theme park!

2007-07-01 09:41:30 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Nasa Apollo site

2007-07-01 03:51:29 · answer #5 · answered by Gene 7 · 0 4

google.com images
yahoo.com images
maybe nasa.gov
dogpile.com images
msn.com images
ask.com images
thats all i can think of...

2007-07-01 05:26:28 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

go to the nasa web site.

2007-07-01 03:52:12 · answer #7 · answered by Michael M 7 · 0 4

fedest.com, questions and answers