PROOF Apollo 11 was 100% REAL!! 🤠Bitchute link. Start watching at 1:45
(www.bitchute.com)
You're viewing a single comment thread. View all comments, or full comment thread.
Comments (74)
sorted by:
How much electric power you think a radar back in 70's might have used? More than a car battery? That's all it had. And how much energy you think is needed to broadcast from the moon?
https://www.hq.nasa.gov/office/pao/History/alsj/ApolloLMRadarTND6849.pdf
https://www.quora.com/How-much-power-was-required-to-transmit-a-video-signal-from-the-Moon-to-Earth-in-1969
#owned
Interesting read. Still same question ( I could not find in info you linked) Everything I see to power a radar is measured in Milliwatts. Moon lander>>>> Power- 28 V DC, 115 V 400 Hz AC , Batteries - two 28–32-volt, 296 ampere hour silver-zinc.
Doesn't seem like anuff power.
Electricity doesn’t work in space, to much radiation
Electricity only works here on earth
296 amps a hour . Radar, broadcast video and sound. I don't buy that.
Can you explain to me how electricity works in space, without earth’s magnetic field?
You know a solar flare can act as an EMP and knock most of our electric grid off. So what type of Ozone layer does the moon has to block radiation from the sun so no electric equipment gets fried or humans don’t cook as of they’re in a microwave.
What type of cooling did they use?
I hope you understand the importance of an ozone layer
Earth’s ozone layer reach out from 15 to 40 km away.
The moon is 384.400 km away from earth.
Bingo.
Congrats for your diploma, I bet you worked your ass off for it.
Still now days there’s no technology that can explain how to go through the Van Allan Radiation Belt. Without harming humans and electric equipments. Or even sending signals through it…
I was accepted into MIT and a couple other places full scholarship before I could legally drive. Studied quantum mechanics, nuclear chemistry, biochemistry and other stuff to get multiple degrees, including programming. (Never applied to Brown, but then I wasn't looking at electronics.) Your pedigree is nice, but I still have the same question as OP above- how does electricity work out in space, in a vacuum? How does a planet with no atmosphere welcome a manned lander?
How does a rocket lander set itself down without making a new crater underneath?
How do we get treated to a live interactive feed from Mars when it takes a day for data to travel one way?
Why the heck does everybody in space walk like they're underwater?!
That's BS
Can you tell me where to find that?