GoneGaryT writes
"Wow! NASA has pulled another set of photographs, this time of Apollo 11's trip, out of the freezer and digitized them. They are glorious. I'm just checking out the first ever 'Earthrise' sequence and they are beautiful." I'll cherry-pick a few for you:
1,
2,
3.
zip files. (Score:5, Funny)
But for real any one know where I can get all the pics in a zip and/or a tar file.
But that earth rise is just a great sight, and also the pic of the earth from a distance is just
Re:Why don't you do it (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Why don't you do it (Score:3, Informative)
No foresight... (Score:5, Funny)
What JFK should have said was "I believe this nation should commit itself to achieving the goal, before this decade is out, of landing a man on the moon and returning him safely to the Earth with pictures that will scale properly as wallpaper on computer monitors not yet invented."
Re:No foresight... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:No foresight... (Score:2)
Astronomy Picture Of The Day Archives [nasa.gov]
Re:No foresight... (Score:2)
Re:No foresight... (Score:2)
Re:No foresight... (Score:3, Interesting)
They are all 1024x768. Some cutting and resize has been done to get them to fit.
They are hosted on platoon.dk [platoon.dk], which cannot take more then a couple of hits..
as11-40-5903.jpg [platoon.dk] Man walking on surface. ( 323 KB )
as11-40-5905.jpg [platoon.dk] US flag ( 254 KB )
as11-44-6547.jpg [platoon.dk] Earth Rising ( 118 KB )
as11-40-5863-69.jpg [platoon.dk] Landing POD ( 208 KB )
Re:No foresight... (Score:5, Funny)
Is anybody else unable to read this without hearing Mayor Quimby's voice?
Re:No foresight... (Score:2)
Hmm, 250kb images. (Score:4, Funny)
Houston (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Hmm, 250kb images. (Score:2)
Attention Conspiracy Nuts! (Score:5, Informative)
-aiabx
What Moon-Hoax Crap? (Score:5, Funny)
Documentaries such as Enemy of the State have accurately portrayed the elaborate, Byzantine network of surveillance satellites that the liberals have sent into space to spy on law-abiding Americans. Equipped with technology developed by Handgun Control, Inc., these satellites have the ability to detect firearms from hundreds of kilometers up. That's right, neighbors! The next time you're out in the backyard exercising your Second Amendment rights, the liberals will see it! These satellites are sensitive enough to tell the difference between a Colt
Of course, this all works fine during the day, but what about at night? Even the liberals can't control the rotation of the Earth to prevent nightfall from setting in (only Joshua was able to ask for that particular favor!) That's where the "moon" comes in. Powered by nuclear reactors, the "moon" is nothing more than an enormous balloon, emitting trillions of candlepower of gun-revealing light. Piloted by key members of the liberal community, the "moon" is strategically moved across the country, pointing out those who dare to make use of their God-given rights at night!
Yes, I know this probably sounds paranoid and preposterous, but consider this. Despite what the revisionist historians tell you, there is no mention of the "moon" anywhere in literature or historical documents -- anywhere -- before 1950. That is when it was initially launched. When President Josef Kennedy, at the State of the Union address, proclaimed "We choose to go to the moon", he may as well have said "We choose to go to the weather balloon." The subsequent faking of a "moon" landing on national TV was the first step in a long history of the erosion of our constitutional rights by leftists in this country. No longer can we hide from our government when the sun goes down.
hey whore how's it whoring (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:What Moon-Hoax Crap? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Attention Conspiracy Nuts! (Score:5, Informative)
"So why aren't they in the Apollo pictures? Pretend for a moment you are an astronaut on the surface of the Moon. You want to take a picture of your fellow space traveler. The Sun is low off the horizon, since all the lunar landings were done at local morning. How do you set your camera? The lunar landscape is brightly lit by the Sun, of course, and your friend is wearing a white spacesuit also brilliantly lit by the Sun. To take a picture of a bright object with a bright background, you need to set the exposure time to be fast, and close down the aperture setting too; that's like the pupil in your eye constricting to let less light in when you walk outside on a sunny day.
So the picture you take is set for bright objects. Stars are faint objects! In the fast exposure, they simply do not have time to register on the film. It has nothing to do with the sky being black or the lack of air, it's just a matter of exposure time. If you were to go outside here on Earth on the darkest night imaginable and take a picture with the exact same camera settings the astronauts used, you won't see any stars! "
Yeesh.
-aiabx
Re:Attention Conspiracy Nuts! (Score:5, Funny)
But still, NASA should GIMP in some stars in order to placate the consipracy theorists.
Pictures 1,2,3 mirrored (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Pictures 1,2,3 mirrored (Score:2)
Re:Pictures 1,2,3 mirrored (Score:2)
Re:Pictures 1,2,3 mirrored (Score:2)
Re:Pictures 1,2,3 mirrored (Score:3, Funny)
It looks like someone left a twinkie sitting on the side of the lander and it became one with the metal during launch!
In other news... (Score:4, Funny)
Behind the third rock from the left... (Score:4, Funny)
Here comes the hoaxers (Score:2)
These pictures are very clean BTW. Very nice BG for your desktop even.
If we can put a man on the moon ... (Score:5, Funny)
Keeping Space Alive (Score:4, Insightful)
GroupShares Inc. [groupshares.com]
Fake! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Fake! (Score:2)
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
Held by glue. (Score:2)
Re:Guts = Glory (Score:2)
As for presidents taking a chance like that today, how about Bush? Now before everyone yells at me that it's a political stunt consider this: Announcing any kind of space imitative has never been a political winner. Even Kennedy took flack for announcing such a ridiculous goal. He on
Re:Guts = Glory (Score:2)
The Strategic Defense Initiative was not and is not a space initiative. It's a political posturing, defense contract padding, pork barrel initiative. It's an even stupider idea now, in the era of stateless conflicts, than it was when the USSR was crumbling.
these have been altered! (Score:2, Funny)
wind?? (Score:2)
Re:wind?? (Score:2)
-great om
Re:wind?? (Score:2)
My point is with the bottom part which is not hanging flat as you'd expect from a windless environment
Re:wind?? (Score:2)
Re:wind?? (Score:2)
Re:wind?? (Score:4, Informative)
Mirror of Images (Score:5, Informative)
Apollo 11 Mirror (select images) [visorenterprises.com]
---------------
ChipotleLovers.com [chipotlelovers.com]
Chipotle food, locations, pics, links, polls and discussion!
is anyone else amazed? (Score:2)
reminds me of the Star Wars quote
"You came in that thing? You're braver than I thought!" - Princess Leia
Re:is anyone else amazed? (Score:2, Funny)
just imagine (Score:2)
panoramic moon landing sites (Score:2)
Earthling litterbugs! (Score:2)
This will surely impress the Intergalactic Council whenever we're up for membership.
Re:Earthling litterbugs! (Score:2)
Nice Work (Score:5, Funny)
The sky is falling! (Score:2)
Come on, people, click on that link! Don't just assume a slashdotting can happen without you.
My Father and My Grandfather Were At NASA Then Too (Score:5, Interesting)
http://www.ausoleil.org/exhibits/vlpinson
A little background:
My Grandfather, V.L. Pinson, was Chief Telemetry Officer as well as MIS Manager for Cape Kennedy in the 1960's, not to mention duties he performed in the 1950's at ABMA (Army Ballastic Missile Agency) in Huntsville, and White Sands prior to that. While it is very incomplete, mainly because he died in 1988, we're continue to work on this and those interested in some of the minutae of space history might enjoy reading through some of the peronal effects of someone who was there.
PS: I saw Apollo 11 launch in 1969. We lived in Titusville, and saw the launch from the Bennett Causeway. Dad had a better view: As Missile Commander in charge of astronaut safety, he was in a foreward blockhouse about one kilometer from the launch itself. He and his team were there to provide rescue services for the astronauts had something gone wrong and Armstrong, Aldrin and Collins had needed to escape the launch vehicle.
As it was, Apollo 11 broke windows in my house, which was 6.5 nautical miles from the launch pad. Most Saturn V launches did.
It was a great thing going to sleep at night by light of a floodlit missile that was pointed at the moon. Even better was going fishing as a young child with my Grandfather's buddies -- Debus, Armstrong, Grissom, Scott Carpenter, a few others.
You had to be there.
Apollo 11 Photographs Unfrozen (Score:2)
Buzz's attitude...Neil's professionalism (Score:5, Informative)
I'm a bit of a 60's/70's space nut. I read all the books recently published (Gene Kranz's "Failure is not an Option", Chris Kraft's "Flight" and Gene Cernan's "Last Man on the Moon" are all incredible) and think the boxed "From the Earth to the Moon" DVD set might be the best thing HBO ever did.
Anyway.
Did you notice there are no (or very, very few) camera shots of Neil, but loads of Buzz? That's because Buzz was a bit of a PITA about the mission. He whined for months about not being the first out of the LEM, even after Deke Slayton told him the mission schedule. He tried to take it higher, using his deep religious feelings with politicians to try and be the first man out, but failed.
He did bring along a tiny Communion set and did indeed take Communion just after landing. But he was still pissed, and this was reflected in his refusal to use his camera much, if at all. The only shots of Neil were frame grabs off the LEM mounted 16mm cam.
Neil however, took loads of pics of Buzz, using the belly mounted Hasselblads they both had. So, Buzz became immortalized because there were simply more photos of him...saluting the flag, that classic closeup, etc.
Interesting that the attitudes of the astronauts weren't discussed much till decades later, NASA wishing to preserve the "rock star" image of the men.
I highly recommend reading at least one of the above books, probably this one [amazon.com] which has a special if you buy it with Flight, Kraft's great book.
Both show just how amazing the Mercury, Gemini and Apollo programs were, and just how analog their equipment was.
Sadly the books will also give you a clue why a program like Apollo will never happen again in America, unless something radically changes.
Re:Buzz's attitude...Neil's professionalism (Score:5, Insightful)
"Rock star"? Neil certainly was not that. He was (and is) an exceptionally gifted engineer and pilot, and a man who did the job the best he could. He was also an humble man, as evidenced by his lack of visibility in the years after Apollo 11.
Neil was a brilliant man doing a tough, dangerous job. He did so cooly and with professionalism. That's why he was America's best civilian test pilot prior to his stint in NASA. That's also why he was the best choice to lead Apollo 11 into the rare air where the great explorers are.
Few people today realize the danger and risk that was involved in the moon missions. Think of this: look at how far technology, from it's most basic levels of materials science and mathematics have evolved *since* 1969. The Saturn V was arguably the most powerful machine built in all of recorded human history (that was not a bomb) and to this day, no launch vehicle has ever matched it's sheer lifting capaibility. It had the power of a small atomic weapon, and three men would climb on top and strap their butts to it. All with less computing power than your car.
They did it, and they did it with bravery. Not the kind of foolish bravery associated with a glory hound, but the kind of quiet bravery that marks a true HERO in every sense of the world.
I was there, and I said goodbye to Apollo 11 from five miles away as she lifted into the skies of a sunny Florida morning. I knew one of the men on the machine, and I had four family members who had important jobs that got them to the moon and back safely.
I am proud of them all, and they all had their roles. Aldrin may have been seeking glory, that is for history to decide. Nevertheless, the best choice was Armstrong, and as a result, his name belongs with Columbus, Erikkson and other great explorers who opened the doorway for all humanity to place that none had been before.
Perhaps it will take a century or more for history to truly appreciate the scope of that they did.
Hoax would have required Soviet cooperation (Score:4, Informative)
Hoax did require Soviet cooperation (sort of) (Score:3, Funny)
If only we had realized that Chinese communism was also a fake (perpetrated by the parents of today's Nigerian scammers).
Next up: The EU hoax
Re:No HQ? (Score:2)
Re:Apollo 11 (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Apollo 11 (Score:2)
What, exactly, about those two pictures indicates that something has been "CUT OUT"?
necessary (Score:2)
Re:necessary (Score:2)
Re:There is an american flag on the moon. (Score:4, Funny)
Re:There is an american flag on the moon. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:There is an american flag on the moon. (Score:2)
Re:There is an american flag on the moon. (Score:3, Informative)
-aiabx
Re:There is an american flag on the moon. (Score:2)
Re:There is an american flag on the moon. (Score:4, Informative)
The moon does not have a "light side" and a "dark side". It has a side facing us, and a side away from us, but those sides (as anyone who looks up at the moon from time to time will notice) go through a cylcle of light and dark every month. That flag planted by Apollo 11 spends a couple weeks at a time in near darkness, with only reflected light from Earth to illuminate it.
Re:There is an american flag on the moon. (Score:2)
The moon [wikipedia.org] has a side that always faces the EARTH, not the sun.
Re:There is an american flag on the moon. (Score:3, Informative)
The moon is tidally locked with the *Earth*, not the sun. The dark side is the side the Earth never gets to see, but it is fully illuminated by the sun once a month.
Uh, right?
Re:There is an american flag on the moon. (Score:2)
Re:There is an american flag on the moon. (Score:2)
Hmm, I guess you should send your textbook to NASA, because it seems that NASA doesn't know about this [nasa.gov]:
"People often refer to "the dark side of the moon", but there is no such thing. The sun shines on all sides of it in turn. However, there is a "far side of the moon" which is never seen from the earth. Over the eons, the gravitational forces of the earth have slowed down the moon's rotation about its axis until the rotational period
Re:There is an american flag on the moon. (Score:2)
Read this, [nasa.gov] especially the last two paragraphs.
Re:There is an american flag on the moon. (Score:2)
Well, in fact that happens at times, but this is not one of them.
Until we need to dispose of it (Score:2)
So do you go retrieve it, do you bring up enough atmosphere to burn it, or what? Any way you look at it, there's a lump exit fee on that car lease...
RETRACTION - yep, I'm dumb! (Score:4, Informative)
So, there is a light side and there is a dark side, but they change across a period of a month. If you have a textbook that says there is part of the moon that's always exposed to the sun, it's dead wrong.
Re:There is an american flag on the moon. (Score:2)
Yeah, it seems that you're the one who wasn't listening in junior high. The moon does indeed rotate. Its rotation period, and therefore its day-night cycle, is about 28 earth days long. The thing you're confused about is this: The rotation period of the moon is exactly the same as its orbital period around the earth. This causes the same side of the moon (with the exception of a bit of wobble)
Re:There is an american flag on the moon. (Score:2)
It's wrong... and there's NO point in linking to one of your own comments as proof
One of the reasons for the apollo missions was to see the far side (AKA. the "Dark" side) of the moon
This is because the moon rotates at the same rate as it orbits the Earth, thus, it only ever presents one hemisphere towards us
That hemisphere goes light and dark because of it's orbit around the Earth, so you can assume, that the other one does the same
I suggest that you either return to the book, you read when you were 14
Re:There is an american flag on the moon. (Score:2)
Now who is it who cant comprehend lol.
Re:There is an american flag on the moon. (Score:2)
Unless your textbook was written by Jehovah Himself, you have to consider the possibility that maybe the author just didn't know what he was talking about.
And you know what? He didn't. A little empirical observation would demonstrate that to you. Did they bother mentioning that in your junior high science class, or was it all just overly-trusting appeals to authority?
damnit, again with the misuse of trillion (Score:2)
That's still a shitload but trillions it's not. If it were trillions, we would have spent every single dollar we had as the US is around a $10 trillion dollar economy today. Clearly we did not.
Why the Hell not? (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm sorry everyone else but this is a clear instance of the US setting a noble goal and kicking ass at it. We deserve to be proud and make note of who it was who did it.
Re:Why the Hell not? (Score:2)
Re:Why the Hell not? (Score:3, Insightful)
The rockets were surplus US Air force ICBMs for Mercury and Gemini and Apollo was launched on American rockets so I'm not sure how the German rocket thing holds up.
As for British brains, who were these brits that the US hired?
A capacity for quotation is not the same as forming an argument.
Re:Why the Hell not? (Score:4, Informative)
Wernher von Braun was brought to the US, along with hundreds of his best scientists and engineers, at the end of WWII. The Army set him up in Texas and later at Huntsville, where he built the Redstone rockets-- that's "Redstone" as in "Mercury Redstone", as in "MR-3", as in the mission that put the first American into space. Had von Braun not fought to delay the attempt for reasons of additional testing, Grissom would have entered space in the MR-BD mission and beaten Gagarin by a few weeks, to become the first person in space period.
von Braun could have put the first American satellite into orbit in the IGY, months before Sputnik, but Eisenhower wanted the Navy team to do it (for a variety of excellent reasons, not least of which was that von Braun's team was a bunch of captured Nazis).
When NASA was formed, von Braun directed Marshall Space Flight Center-- where he built the Saturn V, which was the launch vehicle for every single moon shot.
Sorry, but American rocketry, and the American space program, was built by imported Germans.
Re:Why the Hell not? (Score:3, Insightful)
Roketry was only a part of the space program and Van Braun didn't really contribute much more than rocketry.
Van Braun might have been a good rocket scientist but his ideas for space exploration were unworkable. His single craft plan for the Moon mission was thrown out. His plan for a Mars mission was backwards. In fact it's because of his Mars plan that any Mars mission is automatically labeled with a trillion dollar price tag by the pre
Re:Why the Hell not? (Score:5, Informative)
I'm not saying that the United States wouldn't have eventually built a decent space program without von Braun and his team. But to say that they didn't contribute much simply because we would have gotten there eventually without them is absurd for two reasons: 1) they actually got us there, and 2) it was the Germans' use of rockets during WWII that made the US actually want to develop rocketry. The US was more or less happily ignoring Goddard til the V-2s started hitting Britain.
I have in my notes from Dr. John Krige's [gatech.edu] "History of Rocketry" course at Georgia Tech the following text of a telegram sent immediately from Germany to Washington upon the debriefing of the captured von Braun and his personnel (emphasis mine):
And the guy was right. It was a hell of a "kick start" the Germans gave us.
Re:There is an american flag on the moon. (Score:2)
Daniel
Mod parent up! (Score:2)
Re:There is an american flag on the moon. (Score:2)
Re:fake (Score:2)
Re:fake (Score:2)
Re:fake (Score:2)
-aiabx
Re:fake (Score:2)
Don't you get it? NASA wants people to think the moon landings were faked. The reason? Due to a little-known patent, NASA receives micropayments every time someone types in all caps.
Ask and be answered... (Score:2)
Re:slashdot effect (Score:2)
Site metrics, robbing the remote site of advertising revenue, blah blah blah. These are all forces that could be brought to bear against Slashdot if they turned to caching stories and/or images from remote sites.
Re:Earthrise???? (Score:4, Informative)
-aiabx
Re:Earthrise???? (Score:3, Informative)
Tonight (22 July) on UKTV History is part two of the Apollo 8 story, 10pm UK time for anyone with access to UKTV History channel.
Baz
Re:Those pics are fake! (Score:2)