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Old December 8th 17, 01:23 AM posted to alt.astronomy
Sarah Ehrett
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Posts: 119
Default Hagar still willingly bending over to let NASA do it to him

On Thu, 7 Dec 2017 18:47:16 -0500, "Bast"
wrote:



Sarah Ehrett wrote:
On Thu, 7 Dec 2017 01:03:29 -0500, "Bast"
wrote:

Perhaps he can still learn something, and let his hemorrhoids heal up

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BUZr0Wr0v-s

If you still miss the point hags,.....NASA faked Apollo


That is a lie. And I'm still waiting for your response to the
nagging radio signals to and from the moon which have become your
personal inconvient truth.

https://www.theguardian.com/technolo...-laser-funding

The Observer

After 40 years' reflection, laser moon mirror project is axed


Robin McKie, science editor

Saturday 20 June 2009 19.01 EDT First published on Saturday 20 June
2009 19.01 EDT



An experiment, begun when Apollo 11 astronauts Neil Armstrong and Buzz
Aldrin left a mirror on the lunar surface 40 years ago to allow
Earth-based astronomers to fire lasers at it, has been ended by
American science chiefs.


snip

I actually prefer that story about Goldilocks and the 3 Bears.
Talking bears that know how to cook poridge, is far more believable.


For a three year old. Are you actually admitting that your level of
comprehension is the same as a three year old?


As for your silliness about radio signals that you say went to the moon and
back.


They did go to the moon and back. Amateur radio operators * all over
the globe* tracked and listened to radio transmissions between Apollo
11, the Eagle, sitting on the lunar surface and NASA Mission Control
at the JSC in Houston.

You provide no proof that they ever did.


There are literally hundreds of transmissions you can listen to for
proof. Here is how two men cobbled together a receiver from surplus
WWII radio equipment.


http://www.arrl.org/eavesdropping-on-apollo-11

Aiming for the Moon

Baysinger says that on the night of the Apollo 11 landing, he and
Rutherford had to essentially aim the antenna at the Moon by getting
behind it and sighting it like a gun. This was difficult since the
weather was cloudy and the Moon not easily visible. The antenna, which
was originally built for Baysinger’s radio astronomy work, had a
motorized steering mechanism but it had to be manually guided.

Its “beam” or “field of view” was such that, once pointed at the Moon,
it could be let go for a little while, but pretty soon it would have
to be reaimed because the motions of the Earth and Moon caused the
Moon to drift out of the antenna’s field and the signal to be lost. In
fact, this was one piece of evidence that the Apollo 11 signals the
receiver picked up were indeed from the Moon — if the antenna was not
kept aimed at the Moon, the signal disappeared.

-----

Another fail for you Bast.