Front Row Seats To NASA's Lunar Impact 132
itwbennett writes "Tomorrow morning at 7:30 EDT, NASA is going to crash a probe into the moon as part of its LCROSS (Lunar CRater Observing and Sensing Satellite) mission, the main purpose of which is to discover if there's any water on the moon. 'If you happen to have a 10-12" telescope (or larger) then you might be able to see the plume from your backyard,' says blogger Peter Smith. 'For the rest of us, the impact will be streamed live over the web in a few places. NASA will have a feed, beginning at 6:15 EDT. The NASA feed includes live footage from the spacecraft itself as well as expert commentary and other goodies. Astronomy service SLOOH is offering a double-shot of earth-bound feeds, with one feed from New Hampshire and the other from Arizona. The SLOOH feeds start at 6:30 am EDT.'" Update: Matt_dk adds a link to a viewing guide to the impact, writing that "Amateur astronomers need a 10-inch or bigger telescope to make observations."
Lunarian race ... (Score:4, Funny)
Flash!!!
Does anyone else have this wish? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Lunarian race ... (Score:4, Funny)
There, fixed that for you.
Re:Think of the Mooninites! (Score:1, Funny)
Furthermore, NASA is aiming directly at their frozen water reserves!
Re:Think of the Mooninites! (Score:4, Funny)
If the probe misses
Prayers would be the least of their worries, it would mean that NASA can't hit the broad side of a planet from 20 paces!
It is a conspiracy, (Score:5, Funny)
Looks like NASA has launched a large white glass plate and placed it in near earth orbit. It is sitting exactly in the line of sight from Earth to moon. People normally see through this the real Moon. But at the appointed time, NASA will project an image using lasers and create an illusion of a spacecraft crashing into moon, and then turn off the projection. Ha, haa, NASA, we got you. We got you all figured it out. Your jig is up. We will not be denied our meal ticket no matter what you do.
Re:Get pictures while you can! (Score:3, Funny)
When that probe hits deep within the crater, it will finally puncture the Moon's skin and we all know what happens to a water balloon!
Come on now, we all know that the moon is filled with cheese [theregister.co.uk].