Watched Apollo 11 launch as a schoolboy at Woomera Rocket Range in South Australia. Less than 7 years later I was a shift tech at Orroral Valley tracking station outside Canberra and we supported the multiple ALSEP experiments installed on the lunar surface by Apollo astronauts.
@hakangustavsson353815 күн бұрын
People who believe the moon landings did not happen suffer grave mental problems, generally below par IQ, are often badly narcissistic and generally unhappy individuals. If they weren't so obnoxious one would really have to pity them. Although their self pity is generally enough.
@michaelkilgoresr.83616 ай бұрын
All the men from Mercury, Gemini and Apollo are some of my greatest heroes. They're the greatest pilots to ever live to alot of people... They certainly are in my book. The Crew of Apollo One will always hold a special place in my heart as well. I'm so grateful for their efforts aswell as all the Astronauts during that time.
@stronzer59Ай бұрын
takes nads of Iron to live in a diaper for months on end, me??, no way could I build the courage to soil my pants for weeks on end and still remain chirpy.
@standavis56395 ай бұрын
I was there, I worked on the throttle control of the Descent engine final testing !
@jonnny85 ай бұрын
On landing on the Moon would the engine be heard as it was about to land as we do not hear any noise from any engines on the lamb. Just commentary. Why was that?? Rockets make lots of noise
@jonnny85 ай бұрын
What was the weight ratio compared to Saturn 5 only being tested without a payload of the lamb and extra fuel to take it out of orbit towards the moon and to have fuel to get off the moon?Like would it be Top heavy and if the Saturn 5 worked so good why did they stop using it? Never understood that how they carried a moon buggy as well surely the Saturn 5 would have be unstable on take off. With all that weight at the top hope someone can answer this then I can understand how they did it. Lot of payload and fuel at the top mmmm. Saturn 5 would get astronauts to the space station instead of using Russians rockets?? Surely ???so is there or was there a Cold War between the USA and Russia when we use their Rockets to get to the space station don’t seem any differences there ?? To me
@technowarriorstv5 ай бұрын
WWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAATTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT OMG OMG OMG OMG THATS SUCH A W im obsessed with nasa stuff
@wimkuijpers13425 ай бұрын
@@jonnny8 Since there is no atmosphere on the moon, you would not hear any sound there, but inside the lunar lander you should be able to hear it and probably feel it too.
@ApolloKid19615 ай бұрын
@@jonnny8 First of all, the Saturn 5 was designed to go to the moon. Using it just to go to the ISS is overkill. Much simpler rockets like the Falcon are much much cheaper. There was quite a lot of testing before landing on the moon: January 27, 1967 Fatal plugs-out test Apollo 1. November 9, 1967 Unmanned test flight Apollo 4. January 22, 1968 Unmanned test flight Apollo 5. April 4, 1968 Unmanned test flight Apollo 6. October 11, 1968 First manned flight Apollo 7. Testing of Command and Service module. December 21, 1968 Apollo 8. First flight Saturn 5, First to the moon, First behind the moon. March 3, 1969 Apollo 9. Practice with the LM around the earth. May 18, 1969 Apollo 10. Practicing with the LM around the moon.
@clarencespears52536 ай бұрын
Outstanding presentation Well-researched and put together Includes rare video footage
@DrTWGАй бұрын
Apollo 11 will always be THE flight of Apollo but to my mind - the Xmas 1968 flight of Apollo 8 into Lunar orbit was stunning in it's concept , audacity and execution .
@gives_bad_adviceАй бұрын
Apollo 8 was awe inspiring.
@hakangustavsson353815 күн бұрын
Funny you say that. For me personally Apollo 8 was even greater than Apollo 11. I still shudder when I remember that "Go for TLI", sending man away from earth to another celestial boy for the first time ever. I was a young boy but I fully grasped the momentous importance of this event and the risks involved. Deep nostalgia for a now old man.
@pauldelcour4 ай бұрын
One of the better telling docs about going to the moon. Lots of nice high quality footage I never saw (or cannot remeber having seen before...). Thanks NASA for painstakingly filming everything!
@politicsuncensored56174 ай бұрын
Thank you for putting this up. I'm 71 & I watched all of this on my grandparents B/W TV back then in NC. Besides Apollo 11 I don't remember details. Now retired in N. Florida I have been to two Shuttle launches & only can dream of what it was like to watch some of the first manned rocket launches. Shalom
@daryllect66594 ай бұрын
Oy!
@nickfraser24343 ай бұрын
I often wondered why the incomplete and curtailed missions were ever considered "embarrassments". How could that be? They were doing things never done before! This is one of the best documentaries I have seen. Lots of footage I have never seen before and I thought I had seen everything! Absolutely marvellous !
@daryllect6659Ай бұрын
And someday, in the future, they may actually succeed in putting a human on the lunar surface.
@lifesahobby6 ай бұрын
Great document thsnks for sharing
@aok44186 ай бұрын
@@lifesahobby The Apollo 11 crews were exposed to 1.67 mSv per second as they crossed the Van Allen radiation belt. This amounts to a total exposure of 1.8 Sv in 3 hours of travel through the radiation belt during the mission. Any exposure to 1 Sv or more, however, brings about fatal injuries. The radiation readings for the Apollo 11 astronauts’ skin of 0.18 rad, significantly, did not differ from radiation readings from missions restricted to low earth orbit. Data clearly proves that the Apollo 11 astronauts were not sufficiently protected against radiation: Neither the spaceship nor the spacesuits contained lead. Aluminum is ineffective against gamma and neutron rays. The calculated exposure of the Apollo crew was 1.8 Sv, an amount associated with nausea, vomiting, bone marrow changes, and 20% mortality. Surprisingly, no Apollo astronaut showed any ill effects from radiation exposure. These inconsistencies seem to reflect either possible over-estimation or under-reporting of the health hazards summarized in Safe Passage. Furthermore, these medical inconsistencies seem to highlight the surprising observations that the Apollo 11 astronauts did not show any signs of space sickness from microgravity upon their return to Earth.
@dzlfiqar6 ай бұрын
people who say this is fake is mocking the blood, tear, and sweat of all the engineers, technician, and all staff of this program.
@kitcanyon6586 ай бұрын
@@sillybilly8028 : No, it's not. That's just uneducated people making things up because they feel less-than.
@robst2476 ай бұрын
@@sillybilly8028 You wouldn't recognize reality if it hit you over your empty head.
@VerenaBauer-j2g6 ай бұрын
The moon landings were FAKE AF! Get with the program, old fart!
@robertparr12566 ай бұрын
This is fake and the NDA by all involved is the only thing that is mocking.
@kitchenerleslie61776 ай бұрын
@@sillybilly8028 Real? Like your girlfriend's lips, eh?
@cronistamundano81896 ай бұрын
To me the Gemini program is underrated. And because they had a enournous test schedule and was a mission full of firsts Apollo 9 is also underrated
@UsuallyTrolling5 ай бұрын
Apollo astronauts are more enthusiastic when you ask them questions about Gemini rather than Apollo
@wildboar74735 ай бұрын
Yes how can your underrated the first HEO feat. As #8 and then #10 are :(
@DrTWGАй бұрын
I think it's more that it's largely unknown rather than underrated . Anybody with a clue knows how important Gemini was - rendezvous , EVA and honing techniques for working in 'zero-G' , long duration missions , not forgetting continued operational experience and discovery of excessive crumb with Cocoa Beach deli corned beef sandwiches.
@cronistamundano8189Ай бұрын
@ hear hear
@MoesDavis5 ай бұрын
Wow thank you for uploading. While it seemed intermidable, it was relatively comprehensive as well. Best documentary so far.
@gilbert1975nf3 ай бұрын
I like how music change from USSR to US mood!
@jol666jol3 ай бұрын
👍Facts are important, not propaganda, today Americans can't get into orbit, so they could hardly have been to the moon 55 years ago and returned safely in 17 missions. Today, an American gets into orbit only thanks to Russia.
@glenmiller4273Ай бұрын
@jol666jol Copy/paste Copy/paste Copy/paste At least you could ptetend to come up with some new mat'l... Typical lazy, ignorant hoaxster. 🫵😆
@therealzilchАй бұрын
Watching this again. Kudos to the USSR cosmonauts, NASA, and you Best Documentary folk. Well done.
@LarsGsangerКүн бұрын
@@therealzilch NASA is a factory of lies!
@asifansari34306 ай бұрын
I was in high school, in Lahore, Pakistan...I watched the landing in news...I still have my diary entry on this event
@gregoryjclark816 ай бұрын
Was there any appreciable reaction or opinion in Lahore?!?
@Atstudiotrev4 ай бұрын
@@asifansari3430 and you, like my father, have a unique perspective, like anyone that was there to watch it.. you KNOW that those wacky internet moon-landing conspiracy theories have confused so many younger people, and I for one, think it’s important that you tell people of your experience. Most fairly intelligent people can distinguish the difference between internet garbage and verifiable facts, but there are FAR too many people that believe the conspiracies for the simple reason that they want to believe that they know something that makes them FEEL special. This “Dunning-Kruger effect” symptom is one of the things that is disturbing to see in the people we encounter in life, but I think it’s important that people that have personal experience that refutes the conspiracy garbage, speak up, even if some will ALWAYS find the conspiracies more fun than reality. This is unfortunately, just the world we live in, but keep up the good fight for intelligence! 😎
@Владимир-ц7щ9г10 күн бұрын
Спасибо за Историю!
@northamericanpichu6 ай бұрын
The amount of brain rot and lack of critical thinking in this comment section is astounding
@danielecognome75016 ай бұрын
it's scary...
@JackThelRipper6 ай бұрын
Yah there are allot of special people running around in here, I bet allot of them are bots. The rest are just the crazies with no brain and no life who wish they could be the next famous person but will work their jobs sweeping and mopping the floors.
@jimparr01Utube6 ай бұрын
@@danielecognome7501 And so are our current times. The US is facing its most critical "launch" come 2024 year end. May you vote with your heart and test your decision against what your mind knows.
@stuartb36096 ай бұрын
They can’t understand it, so ‘it didn’t happen’. It’s quite incredible.
@c1ph3rpunk6 ай бұрын
These are the folks that rot their brains on TikTok all day and haven’t read a book, perhaps ever. The same ones that ask me how to cook ramen noodles when their microwave doesn’t work.
@amarjeetprasad145015 күн бұрын
awesome documentary. i honored all personal which are involved in successful mission
@daffidavit6 ай бұрын
Most people referred to the progroam as "Gem en eee" even though most people say "Gem en eye". It's been said that the German engineers would say "Gem en ee" and the name stayed that way during thoughs days. Also, at 1:16:03 I believe that's Neil Armstrong's Omega Speedmaster that he's wearing on his left wrist. He never wore it on the moon, so Buzz Aldrin was the first person to wear his Speedmaster watch on the moon. It's been said that Neil left his watch hanging on the instrument panel because the built-in clock on the panel stopped working.
@wildboar74735 ай бұрын
O well Some lament prononciation of LM with lem.... apparently ignorant to do so.
@daffidavit5 ай бұрын
@@wildboar7473 Maybe they don't realize that originally, the LM was referred to as the LEM for the Lunar Excursion Module. It was later shortened to the term LM, or Lunar Module.
@wildboar74735 ай бұрын
@@daffidavit no rather a anal antihoaxer of 20 years plus.... :) deldelahaye3811 (parts....) wildboar7473 More ignorance....the term LEM was dropped in 1967...The Apollo landers are always referred to as LMs ...pronounced LEM...but those who continue to use the acronym LEM just show they have little, or no in- depth, knowledge of the NASA Apollo missions. 😬 wildboar7473 Please pay attention....! The MIT quote is dated 1966. I very clearly pointed out that the name " LEM " was dropped NASA in 1967, although some sources say that the notice to change the name went out in June 1966...It is quite likely that the MIT program was made before that date...or they just used the old name LEM *because that was what the general public knew* ,, 🤒 The fact that some sources refer to " LM or LEM " is simply because many people do not know that the name was changed *early in the program* ..and the fact that LM is pronounced LEM does not help the willfully ignorant... 😝 The fact that other people use the term LEM is irrelevant and does not change the fact that the name was changed to LM over 50 years ago. And just because somebody referred to working on the original design of the LEMm as it was then called, *does not excuse the use of the wrong term now.* 🥵 It is not " VERY BAD " to call it the LEM now, it is just factually WRONG...and *when we are debunking conspiracy garbage we rely on getting the correct facts.. It is called attention to detail* - something conspiracy spouters continuously ignore.. 😵💫
@kma863 ай бұрын
@@daffidavit@daffidavit my thoughts exactly! When I was young (around age 10 or 11), we had this Encarta 95 (I think) Encyclopedia on the computer and I was very much interested in the space program after watching Apollo 13. The Lunar Excursion Module is one of the words I still remember clearly till this day after learning from that encyclopedia.
@CraigRodmellMusicАй бұрын
Another great documentary. Thank you for posting.
@plunder19566 ай бұрын
Project Apollo is still the most amazing memory if my teenage years & probably America's greatest achievement. They changed history in a way that will be remembered 500, even 1000 years in the future - people will still remember that Neil & Buzz walking on the moon in 1969.
@ophthojooeileyecirclehisha49176 ай бұрын
thank you so much for your true reporting, science, and generosity
@jackkomisar4586 ай бұрын
The narrator says at 3:38 "Coast-to-coast, citizens were watching" the failed Vanguard launch of December 6, 1957. In fact, the launch was not televised live. An article on page 76 of the December 16, 1957 issue of the magazine "Broadcasting" says, "WTVT (TV) Tampa-St. Petersburg, Fla. aired 400 feet of film of the explosion of the Vanguard missile one hour and 50 minutes after the earth satellite burst into flames Dec. 6 at Cape Canaveral, Fla., 110 miles from the station. Roger Sharp, a WTVT newscaster, and a 2-man camera crew...covered the explosion from four miles away and rushed the film to WTVT by chartered plane. WTVT supplied prints for stations in New York, Oklahoma City, New Orleans, Montgomery, Louisville and Miami in time for newscasts that same day."
@myayang8469Ай бұрын
Finch brings great energy to 4ra events, really enjoying it.
@advsonhere6 ай бұрын
"The result of an unprecedented surge in scientific and engineering activity with remarkable spin-offs… in less than 9 years the United States went from space amateur to technological hyperpower". That's proof of how humans could do amazing things, in a relatively short period of time, if they really put their mind to it. And that's why wise Jacque Fresco stated that we must put our mind to changing the socioeconomic organization system under which our society operates as we did to put a man on the moon. Watch "The choice is ours" documentary to learn about his proposal.
@JohnShields-xx1yk2 ай бұрын
That Apollo rocket sound was the best crackle, rumble rocket sound that man ever made.
@LucidDreamer543216 ай бұрын
To the moon, Alice!
@thrummer19536 ай бұрын
Honeymooners?
@maxxsee6 ай бұрын
satanic lies
@lawrencet836 ай бұрын
@@thrummer1953 Duh!
@lawrencet836 ай бұрын
@@thrummer1953 🙂
@ericcommarato77276 ай бұрын
loved the Honeymooners...
@philrabe9105 ай бұрын
58:20 I've always said that this is one of the most important photographs in human history, taken at a time of incredible instability on our fragile Earth..
@DanSheil3 ай бұрын
The most important phrase in human history. The eagle HSS landed
@markmerrell46555 ай бұрын
Excellent!
@lifesahobby6 ай бұрын
If you are reading some of the comments here , you will find so many people who lack conviction in their argument about humans not going to the moon . Thats why people argue , they want someone to do the homework for them.. until then they suffer the doubts . This us what happens when you are given choices to study physics , organic chemistry and you say " its too hard " you end up never developing a mind with conceptual capacity .. and you might always pick the easy way from that point on . Its just laziness to doubt and its crazy to argue with them . If you had some guy running across ten lanes of highway, it would be really silly to run across the road with them telling them theyre doing something stupid . So dont argue with them .. youll never change those who never took the ambitious subjects . Youll find behind them all is a lack of physics , science, objectivity , conceptual thought . And that's why they rattle like they do . Here to india .. with the first woman , here to christina cock , heres to the apollo program , vostok, gemini , and all the brave ones who risked it all to inspire us . Gods speed .. 77 tons all the way m may the force be with you and may peace be with those who just dont know .
@zollen1236 ай бұрын
If US won this round of space race against China, do you think US will continue the space exploration?
@lifesahobby6 ай бұрын
@@zollen123 Please explain better your question
@aok44186 ай бұрын
@@lifesahobby Yet, no human has ever walked on the moon. The only scary thing is that there are still people who believe it happened.
@aok44186 ай бұрын
@lifesahobby Can't get past the Van Allen Belts, bud. Do you honestly believe anyone and everyone who knows that the landings were fake are simply too lazy, uneducated
@aok44186 ай бұрын
@@lifesahobby Can't get past the Van Allen Belts, bud. That's just the tip of the iceberg. Do you honestly believe anyone and everyone who knows that the landings were fake are simply too lazy, uneducated or lack the understanding of physics, science, etc....? Is that why there are scientists, engineers etc.... all over the world who are very educated that agree NASA faked the landings. What do you say to that? Wake up!
@user23-7-x3lАй бұрын
Got to admit, Finch's involvement in 4RA made me a regular. Can't miss out on his match insights!
@ronaldgarrison84786 ай бұрын
It appears that, for an astronaut, having drama with Mission Control is especially bad for your career, as illustrated by Mercury-Atlas 7 and Apollo 7.
@LukiferXX6 ай бұрын
Wally thought he could dictate the rules to Nasa, they all got what they deserved for disobeying orders; besides, he made a career out of he's "stubborn" cold.
@briandunn63426 ай бұрын
Wally announced he’d retire after Apollo 7 but other 2 never flew but did ground staff duties.
@LukiferXX6 ай бұрын
@@briandunn6342 never heard that before, and it was made clear by Chris Kraft that the crew of 7 would never fly again due to disobedience.
@Nighthawke705 ай бұрын
Vanguard TV-3 bounced clear of the explosion and started transmitting, despite being damaged. It resides in the Smithsonian at the Udvar-Hazy annex.i Vanguard 1 is still up there, inert, but still trucking along at 60+ years.
@genehauser92175 ай бұрын
Who’s here on July 20th 2024?
@maymaypooch5 ай бұрын
He’d july 24 2024
@genehauser92175 ай бұрын
@@maymaypoochhuh?
@Williamhyperion45 ай бұрын
It's me,and I'm from AUSTRIA. 1969 I was 15 years old and until now i'm very impressed about the MOONLANDING.
@augurseer5 ай бұрын
July 26th 2024
@georgschenkfilm5 ай бұрын
@@Williamhyperion4einen Bauhelm will er, der Wilhelm Bauer 👷♂️
@Neb21172 ай бұрын
Apollo 10 was huge. And what a crew! All three would command a mission. Cernan flew in the LEM in lunar orbit twice and would be the last man from Apollo to walk on the moon. Stafford was extremely intelligent, the ultimate test pilot, and would eventually become the father of stealth aircraft development. And John Young, the Astronaut’s astronaut, would eventually be chosen to command both Apollo 16 and the first flight of the Space Shuttle.
@claudiobrunetti12615 ай бұрын
The music is to loud…!
@yogeshpathak84783 ай бұрын
Very nice informatic ❤
@billyz50886 ай бұрын
~~ From the day JFK made the challenge in 1962 to put men on the moon before the end of the decade - NASA basically had a blank check to make it happen - but they also had the engineering talent ( and the drive & the discipline ) to make it happen - only when they had to make Apollo 17 the final manned mission in 1972 were the economic realities taking hold - the space shuttle was supposed to be the cost-saving alternative - but it never was that. Now it's just all about putting more satellites in orbit - making collisions an ever-increasing danger - and of course space tourism - for rich folks ..
@geoffreywardle21623 ай бұрын
Good documentary.
@ronaldgarrison84786 ай бұрын
1:08:20 There it is again. I think that's a MYTH. I cannot IMAGINE that crew trying to make an unauthorized landing. Your whole life is building to this moment, and you are going to BLOW it by performing some stunt, for which neither they nor the guys on the ground had made any plans. I think that's utter BS. I'm sure they short-fueled the LM because the extra fuel was simply unnecessary. On space missions, you're always looking for ways to save whatever weight you can, and I'm sure that was just one more of those cases.
@00govan006 ай бұрын
Gotta improvise sometimes, you overly skeptical post-truth zombie.
@ronaldgarrison84786 ай бұрын
@@00govan00 Bite me. Even if you were being sarcastic.
@kitemastercheok57946 ай бұрын
NASA is still dreaming that their Lie would come true AFTER China landed her astronauts on the Moon . Dream on NASA. Prices are going up and American GDP is crashing !
@villagegirl686 ай бұрын
There was more fuel than was specified and Armstring knew it. He was in command. Heck if it were me in that situation I'd have gone for it too.
@ronaldgarrison84786 ай бұрын
@@villagegirl68 Pay attention. My comment was about Apollo 10, not Apollo 11.
@mark7034 ай бұрын
Brilliant!
@yovtuubvfdcfrffg6 ай бұрын
These moon landing deniers are nuts. 😂
@wimkuijpers13426 ай бұрын
The worst part is that most of them are American.
@JordanST-n7r6 ай бұрын
So are you who believe in this crap.
@robst2476 ай бұрын
Hoaxnuts
@VerenaBauer-j2g6 ай бұрын
The moon landings were fake as f..k Grow some brain cells.
@nickfraser24346 ай бұрын
@@JordanST-n7r You could be right...
@chriscross90833 ай бұрын
Any concerns with Static Discharge when Arms makes contact I recall incident with Hindenburg.
@smash33946 ай бұрын
Only the need to overtake the USSR forced the USA to pump such huge funds into the lunar program
@yomommaahotoo2646 ай бұрын
You mean - pump so much money into the lunar frauds.
@zollen1236 ай бұрын
If US won this round of space race against China, do you think US will continue the space exploration?
@smash33946 ай бұрын
@@zollen123 гонка китая? у китая другие заботы
@nickfraser24346 ай бұрын
Only the need to stay ahead of the US forced the USSR to pump huge finds into their lunar program.
@MrLennymonАй бұрын
I'm an American and had some despair when realizing the Ussr was winning the space race in the beginning, and although wanting to be the best I immediately recognized what that Astra naught from the soviet union must had felt when he became the first man to free float in outer space and his air suit swelled up and could not reenter his capsule. This would immediately produce a rushing surge of freight, and anxiety and dread calling for some drastic actions. In my younger years when I had been exploring and caving I had found myself on a incline squeezing myself threw a narrow pathway and had wedged myself immobile. I was stuck and the more I panicked the more I struggled and the worst these emotions were heightened. Even know these thoughts are causing heart palpitations and invoking anxiety of these past memories. It would not be until I had excused myself with my futile efforts that I would relax with despair and release all my air in my lungs in defeat , with this submission I relaxed and was able to reposition. Finger push and wiggle 1/2 inch in every push seemed like a life time within 5 minutes I was confident I would live. Im glad that Astro naught lived. I know the feeling in being alone before you die and you never know what you will do until faced with the very scenario nightmares are made of
@SelwynRewesАй бұрын
it appears you learnt naught in your English lessons at school...
@roccorossetti75796 ай бұрын
JFK said the end of the decade. In this entire video the guy talks about 12-31-1969 being the deadline. However the deadline (decade) is actually 12-31-1970.
@ontheruntonowhere6 ай бұрын
That's not how decades work. Were you home-schooled? 🙄
@roccorossetti75796 ай бұрын
please explain how it works. The calendar was created by Catholic Romans who used Roman Numbers. The thought of “0” zero was not considered. The first year was “1”. There was never a 01-01-0000, instead it was 01-01-0001. Therefore a decade starts at every 20_1 and last for 10 years.
@ontheruntonowhere6 ай бұрын
@@roccorossetti7579 You WERE home-schooled. JFK's statement about reaching the moon "by the end of the decade" referred to the 1960s, meaning before the start of 1970. This aligns with the common understanding of a decade as a span of 10 years starting from a year ending in 0 and ending in a year ending in 9 (e.g., 1960-1969). The general modern usage defines decades this way. A pseudointellectual often engages in discussions in a way that seems knowledgeable but lacks true understanding or depth.
@respectdawildo_danjones5086 ай бұрын
@@roccorossetti7579JFK said the “60’s” which meant the 60’s, NOT 1970
@roccorossetti75796 ай бұрын
@@respectdawildo_danjones508 No where did JFK say 60's.
@paulcook87005 ай бұрын
great doc thanks
@polnoeceloe5 ай бұрын
56:17 56:42 56:53 58:05 1:00:49 1:17:18 I like that when filming flights from inside a spaceship, there is always a blue sky outside the window. There was always good weather in space lol
@Hiram10005 ай бұрын
I know you're obviously trolling, but just in case you are new to general Space Science, or have read little on the matter ( I'm 52, so was educated at a time when you needed to read on subjects extensively, unlike today), let me try to explain. The Blue Sky, as you call it, is apparent because the camera, or window, is looking DOWN at the earth below. The atmosphere of the earth, especially in Low Earth Orbit, always looks blue. If the camera was looking out into the blackness of space, you would see nothing. The astronauts would see stars, but the Camera, and by extension we the viewer, cannot resolve stars, so the sky looks black. Go outside tonight and snap off one pic of the sky and look at the image. You will see no stars. Maybe Venus, or the moon if its bright enough, but no stars. You need a long exposure of more than a second to see any stars. Some phones, on night mode, will do it automatically, but generally no.
@matthewmcinnis93684 ай бұрын
@Hiram1000 "The Astronauts would see stars"? Wonder why Neil Armstrong and Michael Collins couldn't see them while they went to the moon and back with Apollo 11. Nor did others from Apollo 12 through 17! THEIR own words! Look into it!
@RichardinNC12 ай бұрын
@@matthewmcinnis9368Any time you have a significant light source, sun, interior lights, ambient light pollution, the light overwhelms the dim stars, plus your pupils adjust smaller and the stars become hidden, even in space. That’s why the astronauts could not see the stars, even on the surface of the moon, given its reflective surface.
@matthewmcinnis93682 ай бұрын
@RichardinNC1 my point was there are different answers from the Astronauts who went to the moon regarding seeing stars or not. Why the discrepancies between those involved in the same "mission"?
@markissboi35836 ай бұрын
Lost count how many times ive watch this Nasa to the moon . A bit help from aussie space honeysuckle creek You got look it up this was a new area of tech that change the world .
@jackkomisar4586 ай бұрын
Aussies should also know about the 64-meter radio telescope at Parkes, New South Wales, which was responsible for receiving the signals from most of the 2 ½ - hour Moonwalk.
@nickfraser24346 ай бұрын
Foir a good, almost true, story and a good laugh, watch THE DISH! Love it!
@briandunn63426 ай бұрын
A correction in Gemini 3 flew March 23 1965 but video script says July. In Gemini 4 closing Ed White hatch after the EVA was the problem.
@traveler14219 күн бұрын
still just a dream...
@Aurora666_ytКүн бұрын
Actually no. Been 55 years since the first moon landing, try to keep up with the rest of us.
@traveler142Күн бұрын
@@Aurora666_yt nothing living can leave Earth... other than in Hollywood. the rest of you are as deluded as the Government intends you to be.
@traveler142Күн бұрын
@@Aurora666_yt hollywood is not real...
@DanSheil3 ай бұрын
The most important phrase in human history
@fransschepens35 ай бұрын
From dream to dream
@Goettel3 ай бұрын
The music ruins it.
@ophthojooeileyecirclehisha49175 ай бұрын
thank you
@moeluv6 ай бұрын
Bring back 1960s technology I guess. 🤥
@seanbeukman95635 ай бұрын
Y'kno? Lol.
@christopheryoder82924 ай бұрын
I think it's less an issue of technology and more an issue of will.
@moeluv4 ай бұрын
@@christopheryoder8292 I was being sarcastic. The US has never landed humans on the moon in the 60s - 70s. 🇺🇲
@seanbeukman95634 ай бұрын
@@christopheryoder8292 Thats not what NASA or Elon or anyone is saying. The will is very strong but the tech is not there. imagine? How is THAT possible? China, Russia, India, Europe, Japan, everybody cannot land men on the moon and bring them back safely. WE DO NOT HAVE THE TECHNOLOGY. We never did. The moon is too much of a challenge. Danger beyond imagination. Lets see when they can do it again. They want to build a moonbase to get to Mars? Lets wait and see. Impossible in our lifetime. I will apologise when I am wrong.
@glenmiller4273Ай бұрын
@@moeluv ...and you clearly dropped out of school at an early age. Thats ok....the world needs ditch diggers too.
@JerrSpud2 ай бұрын
1:08:12 this has been debunked. And if they did land.. the ascent motor was completely separate. However, this was an excellent video and I learned some new things 👍.
@JasonGarber-n9y3 ай бұрын
He was also the first russian to poop in space .....😂
@getsmarter5412Ай бұрын
Buzz Aldrin is the first to urinate while standing on the moon.
@shibadattapanigrahi45094 ай бұрын
what's the background music during Soviet rocket scenes
@Awwe1267518 күн бұрын
Are u serious in 2025 still people believe NASA wtf
@LarsGsangerКүн бұрын
@@Awwe12675 ❤️
@robbedontuesday3 ай бұрын
58:20 Please excuse my ignorance, but should not the Moon surface be as lit as the Earth itself?
@aliensoup24203 ай бұрын
It could be the difference between reflectivity of the Moon's grey soil and the Earth's white clouds.
@robbedontuesday3 ай бұрын
@@aliensoup2420 Are You Sure ???
@aliensoup24203 ай бұрын
@@robbedontuesday No I'm not sure... I'm taking a stab at a solution. I'm not instantly assuming it is fake. Are you sure you are not a harebrained conspiracy nut?
@robbedontuesday3 ай бұрын
@@aliensoup2420 yes, I am sure I am not.
@galvanaut71193 ай бұрын
It is as lit as the Earth. The camera exposure is making it look darker. Everything depends on the camera exposure.
@nxtgen2b4162 ай бұрын
One day the truth will surface. And those whom lied will hold their heads down in shame.
@richardblanke5521Ай бұрын
Maybe you will believe the 🌎 is round
@nxtgen2b416Ай бұрын
@richardblanke5521 I know the world is round moron. Use that insulting rhetoric on someone like yourself....useless.
@frankh.rockel58116 ай бұрын
What is the music starting at 48:00?
@das2502506 ай бұрын
It's used way too much ,
@sarkissati12176 ай бұрын
❤ Слава Советской космонавтики ❤
@christianetstu6 ай бұрын
❤
@jakepopalo6 ай бұрын
4 запуски Н1,і всі провальні😂😂😂.Який Слава?😅
@sarkissati12176 ай бұрын
@@jakepopalo Советский Луноход в ноябре 1970 первым прилунился на Луне и забрал на Землю содержимое лунной поверхности. Советский космонавт первым в космос полетел, Советский спутник первым был выведен на орбиту
@jakepopalo6 ай бұрын
@@sarkissati1217 в 69году Аполлон11 прилунился,два астронавта погуляли по Луне и уже вернулся с Луны,доставил десятки кг.реголита. А ты тычешь свой лохоход🤣🤣🤣 А фейк о "полете" Гагарина своей бабушке расскажи. Все космические достижения ссср благодаря украинцу С.П.Королеву ,группе немецких ученых создавшие А4( ФАУ2) Где доказательства "полета " Гагарина!?Их нет,нет ни видео ,нет ни Гагарина...🤣
@viliOS576 ай бұрын
@@sarkissati1217Sovjeti su čestitali amerikancima kad su se spustili na mjesec. To ne bi napravili da spuštanja nije bilo. Inače, Lunohod je prvi automat koji je "šetao" mjesecom, i sve ostalo ste u pravu, ali amerikanci su jedini slali ljude.
@apolloskyfacer58423 ай бұрын
*A FUNNY THING HAPPENED* WHEN NASA SENT NINE APOLLO MISSIONS OUT TO THE MOON eight successfully completed their missions, six of which landed two of their crew on the Lunar surface. Those were Apollos 11, 12, 14, 15, 16, and 17 Now how about that !
@Marvinfj324 ай бұрын
I read back a ways and didn't see anything about it, but there is a boomerang shaped object on the right side spinning from bottom to top at 57:10 there abouts. it's not hard to see. looks out of place but I guess there was junk up there already.
@aliensoup24203 ай бұрын
That was an Australian spacecraft.
@ApolloKid19615 ай бұрын
Over more than 10 years, Project Apollo involved 400,000 people working at major contractors such as Boeing, North American Aviation, Douglas Aircraft Company, IBM, Motorola and MIT University. Converted to today, the costs were 341 billion dollars and this is the main reason why 'we' didn't go back. After Apollo 11 there were 5 more other landings. Apollo 12 to 17 except 13 Kubrick? No film director is going to make the same film SIX times from the same set with bad camera equipment and only different actors. Also CGI didn't exist yet. Van Allen? Astronauts are protected by their spacesuits and by the metal shell of the rocket. Moreover, they fly shortly through the least strong belts. Why no stars? All films and photos were taken during daylight. Trying to get stars in a photo will result in an overexposed photo. Are all the data lost? No. The Apex tape recordings of the TV broadcast and telemetry were overwritten but all the 16mm films and photos are still in the NASA Archive. Can we still see the landingsites? Both the dual rover tracks and the footprints are clearly visible in the images, which were captured and beamed back by NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO).
@maxsmith6953 ай бұрын
80,000 people can be claimed to make a car. If they fake drive the car onto a football field, do all 80,000 need to witness it?
@michelcoutu63323 ай бұрын
@@maxsmith695 Dear Max, Radar Stations And Dish for Communications FROM Around The World Were Pointed Towards Apollo Staging Travels All The FKN WAY to The Moon. So You Think Only A Few People In One State in The USA Was Involved In Tracking This ENORMOUS Rocket? REALY???. That Indicates To Me THAT you Never Left The Tiny Village of 2 Square Miles You Live In... AND your Entire Schooling (all Grades) Occured in The Same 12'x'12' Class Room. That Is how your UNIVERSE of Knowledge is.... I'm Not Even convinced that You Can Gather up "some" Courage to go in the Town Next to the One "you" Live In... That Is HOW Small your Understanding of What The Mercury, Gemini, Appollo And Sky Lab Missions Were... Totally Utterly ClueLess. The FKN Entire World was Involved To Land Missions On Our Moon. If You Don't Realize THIS, Then You NEVER LEFT the Back Yard of the Home You LIved FFS!
@jol666jol3 ай бұрын
Facts are important, not propaganda, today Americans can't get into orbit, so they could hardly have been to the moon 55 years ago and returned safely in 17 missions. Today, an American gets into orbit only thanks to Russia.
@ApolloKid19613 ай бұрын
@@jol666jol After the last Apollo 17 mission it was decided to focus on scientific research in a low orbit around the earth, which meant that a rocket like the Saturn 5 was no longer necessary and therefore the Space Shuttle was developed and no, it is not designed to travel to the moon but could certainly go into orbit. After the Space Shuttle was retired, the Russians used it for a while, but in the meantime SpaceX has taken it over and they have started project Artemis, which will take us back to the moon. 17 missions? Only 8 missions have gone to the moon, of which 6 have landed.
@jol666jol3 ай бұрын
@@ApolloKid1961 the space shuttle ended because it didn't deliver on what it promised, hellishly expensive and extremely unreliable, 14 carbons for about 160 missions, that's one dead astronaut for every 10 launches, the video also does not say that Von Braun was a Nazi criminal
@dougball3286 ай бұрын
At 51:22 that is not a Saturn -1B, that is a block 1 Saturn. Get it correct, guys, or leave it out. So much for "best documentary".
@lifesahobby6 ай бұрын
An empty vessel makes the most noise .
@martinmendez6953 ай бұрын
1:16:08 Can someone confirm if that is real moon footage, or the a fake moon made for the simulators?
@Neb21172 ай бұрын
The landing footage is actual and taken from a fixed camera over the LMP (Lunar Module Pilot’s) right side window. All 6 landing videos are available on KZbin. Pay special attention to 15 and 17. 15 touched down near an enormous canyon and 17 between huge mountains.
@LarsGsangerКүн бұрын
@@martinmendez695 It’s only one, the f a k e 0 n e⚠️
@FrederickArthurs-hv3hb2 ай бұрын
说一个谎言,你需要无数个谎言去掩盖他
@therealzilch2 ай бұрын
That's exactly why denying the Moon landings is not tenable.
@tonemarieantonsen15973 ай бұрын
What is the Russian songs called 🤔
@BuzzC-t3l3 ай бұрын
Never happened
@TheWokeFlatEarthTruthАй бұрын
Absolutely no one who claims that the Apollo Program was fake ever backs up their claims with any actual evidence. Most just "post & ghost". Perhaps you will be the first to provide some evidence. Take care.
@japjoem40776 ай бұрын
Elon said that his company will have humans on the moon by 2023,that didn't happen, smh
@stargazer57846 ай бұрын
Musk is a homophobic snake oil salesman.
@nickfraser24346 ай бұрын
SO?
@christopheryoder82924 ай бұрын
Eh Space and Rockets are hard. It's still phenomenal that SpaceX can land and reuse the Falcon 9. Something no one thought was possible.
@joseimpact2 ай бұрын
I dont think this is the original documentary. Think it was clipped and was re narrated. Regardless good video
@DanHintz4 ай бұрын
and no return for 52 years and counting.
@gives_bad_advice4 ай бұрын
No reason to return.
@jonfarthings51343 ай бұрын
Is this Martin Clunes narrating..??
@rgp80386 ай бұрын
I love watching comedies on Saturday morning.
@kitcanyon6586 ай бұрын
@user-ky5dy5hl4d : Spoken like the jealous boy you are. What? Was math that difficult for you, son?
@robotsonrockets6 ай бұрын
I love reading insubstantial comments from non educated and not very intelligent people who will never achieve anything in their poor life
@robotsonrockets6 ай бұрын
@user-ky5dy5hl4d Are you a bit limited in your intelligence?
@robotsonrockets6 ай бұрын
@user-ky5dy5hl4d a you a little bit depressed because you will never achieve anything like a masters degree or a Phd in your life?
@robotsonrockets6 ай бұрын
@user-ky5dy5hl4d are you a little sad because you will never achieve anything like a masters degree or a Phd in your poor life?
@BruceCarrollАй бұрын
Charlie Brown and Snoopy. Subsequent crews were asked to choose names with a little more gravitas. Today there would be licensing issues.
@JordanST-n7r6 ай бұрын
There should be at least a live camera on the moon. People believe in politicians and leaders, they would believe every lie served.
@Hobbes7466 ай бұрын
We already have live cameras watching Earth from a much better vantage point: geostationary orbit. Weather satellites take photos of the entire hemisphere every 10 minutes.
@JordanST-n7r6 ай бұрын
@@Hobbes746 And the reason is they can't go further than that.
@Hobbes7466 ай бұрын
@@JordanST-n7r No, that’s not the reason. DSCOVR operates at 1.5 million km from Earth and takes regular photos. But the photos taken from geostationary orbit are of much higher quality: the closer you get the higher the resolution. We’ve launched more than 200 spacecraft that have left Earth orbit entirely. More than 30 successful missions to the moon including 8 manned ones, of which 6 landed.
@JordanST-n7r6 ай бұрын
@@Hobbes746 Now I am persuaded.
@wimkuijpers13426 ай бұрын
I have more confidence in science.
@kevinharte36363 ай бұрын
Now I wonder how this compares to the current Artemis missions.
@ApolloKid19613 ай бұрын
The budget.
@kevinharte36363 ай бұрын
@@ApolloKid1961 Yeah I think that's a big one!
@nickfraser24343 ай бұрын
Artemis is fantastic but for some reason it doesn't quite hold the allure Apollo had! My age obviously has something to do with that. This is a young person's game and I wish all people working on the Artemis, good luck and godspeed!
@manggfcvgj6 ай бұрын
KENYA TO LAND ITS FIRST MAN ON THE MOON BY 2032
@LucidDreamer543216 ай бұрын
Bad Joke
@Ronobuildstech6 ай бұрын
usituaibishe buda delete
@mfgt45956 ай бұрын
You mean the UK, it means the same thing!
@gives_bad_advice3 ай бұрын
"raisin barriers were impossible" Tell it to the Polaris Dawn astronauts who crossed into the Van Allen Belts last week.
@philiphorner316 ай бұрын
Now instead of science in the White House we have baggies of cocaine.
@lawrencet836 ай бұрын
And Hunter sitting in the White House meetings.🙄
@ontheruntonowhere6 ай бұрын
The Trump admin was chock full of drugs. I think that's why they're so unpleasant and detached from reality. Their brains are literally swiss cheese.
@kitcanyon6586 ай бұрын
Or lists of political targets that a small child is obsessed with taking revenge on.
@das2502506 ай бұрын
Settle now children
@vannpatrickjr13534 ай бұрын
Trump a convicted criminal
@AkulaSpawnАй бұрын
The 60's, when people were smarter and anything was possible.
@kennielsen65056 ай бұрын
Noone sees curvature from low Orbit..
@Hobbes7466 ай бұрын
That is incorrect. Earth’s curvature is visible, even to the naked eye, from an altitude of 10 km. We have thousands of photos from the ISS that clearly show curvature.
@SelwynRewes6 ай бұрын
@@Hobbes746 he's talking about when the lead singer of Hermans Hermits Peter Noone went up to the ISS...
@nickfraser24346 ай бұрын
Of course they do. Where did you get that from?
@kennielsen65056 ай бұрын
@@Hobbes746 No its not.. Who gave u that crazy idea..a
@kennielsen65056 ай бұрын
@@nickfraser2434 no they really dont.. You watch to much Nasa tv
@oliverhwd5 ай бұрын
A time when we the human race, thought anything was possible. Sadly those days are long gone.
@cpcnw6 ай бұрын
"Nobody has been [back] to the moon [since]" - Kubrick made a great job of staging the landing.
@Hobbes7466 ай бұрын
Kubrick’s best efforts can be seen in 2001: A Space Odyssey. The scenes in space and on the moon are immediately recognizable as fake: they’re recorded in 1 G here on Earth. The Apollo videos show perfect 1/6 g gravity instead.
@ApolloKid19616 ай бұрын
Ask Chris Nolan if he wants to make the same TV series 6 times with the same set and bad equipment and only different actors, what do you think his answer will be?
@joshua14625 ай бұрын
I remember when mom gave me my first computer and couldn't wait to talk nonsense to my buddies over the interwebs.
@LarsGsangerКүн бұрын
@@cpcnw 🍏❤️
@fransschepens32 ай бұрын
All lies
@TheWokeFlatEarthTruthАй бұрын
Absolutely no one who claims that the Apollo Program was fake ever backs up their claims with any actual evidence. Most just "post & ghost". Perhaps you will be the first to provide some evidence. Take care.
@gregorygomes12676 ай бұрын
Gemini 10 was not launched in December of 1966, but July of 1966.
@OttoSturhahn2 ай бұрын
From Dreams to Movie set of BS
@TheWokeFlatEarthTruthАй бұрын
Absolutely no one who claims that the Apollo Program was fake ever backs up their claims with any actual evidence. Most just "post & ghost". Perhaps you will be the first to provide some evidence. Take care.
@OttoSturhahnАй бұрын
@@TheWokeFlatEarthTruth I know they used their Texas instrument Pocket calculator to mage any course corrections. Computers where just in their Baby Shoes at that time. As you know, they supposedly made three rounds around Planet Earth to pick up speed. They would have to leave Earth orbit a precisely the right Time and have precisely the right Trust. Any slight miscalculation would miss the Moon by hundred of Miles.
@TheWokeFlatEarthTruthАй бұрын
@@OttoSturhahn Thank you for your reply. Unfortunately personally incredulity does not count as evidence. So do you have any actual evidence or is it all just personal incredulity? Take care.
@OttoSturhahnАй бұрын
@@TheWokeFlatEarthTruth You got fife Fingers, do you need more evidence? Its total BS. Apollo means just an observation mission. Always remember, in order to get somewhere in Space, you need the same pressure inside than that here on Earth. If you fly somewhere, where there is no Air pressure outside, your craft will Explode like a Submarin will implodes from Pressure outside.
@OttoSturhahnАй бұрын
@@TheWokeFlatEarthTruth The Earth is only flat, if you consider, being born in the Morning in the east and you die in the Evening in the West, where you fall over the Edge of the Earth into Oceanus. The Place that goes from Portugal beneath the Earth all the Way to India, where you will rise again, just as the Sun rises in the East.
@gives_bad_advice4 ай бұрын
"he flew over South America at night" It is suspicious but not strong evidence unless combined with other inconsistencies. Gagarin was not a geographer and may have confused one mountain for another.
@casio0076 ай бұрын
imagine we haven't been there for another 52 years. We never went to the Moon for sure!
@Hobbes7466 ай бұрын
After the first manned dive to the deepest point of the ocean, it took another 50 years for another human to get there. Does that mean that first dive was a fake? Apollo was the most expensive engineering project in history. Repeating it will require a similarly gigantic investment. NASA’s current budget is only 1/10 of what it was during Apollo.
@wimkuijpers13425 ай бұрын
'We' have been there. 6 times.
@DaveKeenan19565 ай бұрын
Just a thought, it's been over 20 years since Concorde last flew commercially.
@joshua14625 ай бұрын
As evidence......The term "numb nuts" was created for a reason.
@SteveT-03 ай бұрын
Indias Chandrayaan-2 took images of two of the Apollo landing sites. Go google the images and see
@majobedric74324 ай бұрын
sa obzirom na rast tehnologije u odnosu na prije 60 godina, danas bi trebali imati kolonije na planetama koje nas okružuju, ali, činjenica je da čovjek nije bio na mjesecu zadnjih 60 godina jer kako bi rekli, mi neznamo kako to izvest... da se čovjek zapita, nazadujemo li ili napredujemo????
@gives_bad_advice4 ай бұрын
What would be the motivation to put men back on the moon? What could men do there that a robot could not?
@MrNorma776 ай бұрын
Hollywood movi
@Hobbes7466 ай бұрын
nope, reality.
@ApolloKid19616 ай бұрын
Ask Chris Nolan if he wants to make the same TV series 6 times with the same set and bad equipment and only different actors, what do you think his answer will be?
@SteveT-03 ай бұрын
Indias Chandrayaan-2 took images of two of the Apollo landing sites. Go google the images.
@madmikemackas5 ай бұрын
Love the “cue the Soviet music” portions. My favorite part. The sound of tyranny at its finest
@michael.forkert6 ай бұрын
From Dream to Science Fiction.
@Hobbes7466 ай бұрын
Reality, as proven by a ton of evidence. You have nothing to support your claims.
@michael.forkert6 ай бұрын
@@Hobbes746 _Verbosity about evidence, are no evidence at all. Videos even less._
@Hobbes7466 ай бұрын
@@michael.forkert As evidence for the moon landings, we have: - 382 kg of lunar rock samples available to any geologist, - hours of live TV and film, - more than 8000 photos, - scientific results from every experiment they did, - thousands of technical documents that show how they did it. We can analyze this evidence, and have been doing that for 50 years now, In all that time, not one of these items has been found to be fake. For example, the Apollo videos show they're in 1/6 g gravity, which we cannot replicate on Earth today, which proves those videos were not recorded on Earth, but on the moon. In addition, we have confirmation from multiple independent sources: - amateur astronomers could see the CSM/LM on their way to the Moon. - in several countries including the USSR, people monitored Apollo spacecraft radio transmissions. Radio astronomers used their telescopes to monitor transmissions, confirming they were transmitting from the moon. - in the 50 years since the landings, thousands of geologists all over the world have examined lunar rock samples and found they don't look like the rocks we find on Earth. - The NASA Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter and India's Chandrayaan 2 orbiter has photographed the Apollo landing sites, with enough resolution to show the foot tracks of the astronauts. - Japan's Selene lunar orbiter has mapped the Apollo landing sites and found the topography matches that seen in Apollo photos. - laser reflectors were left on the moon by the Apollo missions, and can be pinged from Earth by anyone with a powerful laser.
@ezequielponce4416Ай бұрын
4ra makes every IPL match thrilling My brother knew it was the best.
@robertbolding41825 ай бұрын
Where was the lunar lander tested unmanned on the moon surface. Had The landings been real they would have carried a lunar lander to the Moon by Apollo and landed it unmanned on the surface as a test. If that never happened don't ask me to believe that we went to the Moon.
@DaveKeenan19565 ай бұрын
Why? The lander was test flown in Earth orbit and in lunar orbit. What would have been learned by landing a unmanned module on the Moon? The landing struts, which were designed to compress, had been extensively tested on Earth, so I ask again, what would have been learned by landing an unmanned module on the Moon? To me, your assertion that an unmanned landing on the Moon was necessary is simple ill informed.
@MrMa19814 ай бұрын
The Shuttle never been tested. The first mission is the actual test. Isn't that scarier?
@Ruda-n4h2 ай бұрын
From June 1966 to January 1968, NASA sent seven robotic spacecraft called Surveyor to the surface of the Moon. The primary goal was to demonstrate the feasibility of soft landings. On June 2nd, 1966 Surveyor 1 landed on the Moon using a rocket engine fired against the direction of motion to reduce the speed and a closed loop control system of the radar guided descent with throttleable engines, similar to that of the later lunar landers.
@MrMa19812 ай бұрын
Ehi... NOBODY CARES ask something to you. Ouh, no single unmanned lunar lander has never been tested on the Moon. Guess what? We went. Oh if we went.