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Japan First Back To The Moon!



 
 
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  #21  
Old November 22nd 07, 02:09 AM posted to sci.space.shuttle
BradGuth
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Posts: 21,544
Default Japan First Back To The Moon!

On Nov 16, 6:37 pm, "Jorge R. Frank" wrote:
André wrote:
MichaelJP plaatste dit op zijn scherm :
"MetroHenrik" wrote in message
y.dk...


"kT" skrev i en meddelelse
...
http://www.jaxa.jp/press/2007/11/20071113_kaguya_e.html


Heh heh heh ... Go JAXA! Go Japan!


To kill all conspiracy, it would be fun to se a picture of all the
leftovers
from Apollo.


Henrik


You really think so? To a conspiracy nut the Kaguya pictures are also
clearly fakes, note the complete absence of stars from the released
shots!


That is a normal thing. When a picture is taken from a planet (does not
matter if it is Jupiter, Saturn or Venus for example) the light
reflected by that planet is very bright compared to the light from the
stars.


Try to take a picture from an object with the sun behind or next to it;
the sun overexposes the picture.


Duh. MichaelJP was being ironic. Conspiracy nuts don't understand that
fact when applied to Apollo photography; why would they suddenly see the
light (so to speak) when it comes to Kaguya photography?


Is being such a brown-nosed clown of an official born-again infowar
rusemaster the best you can offer?

Why not share a fully 3D interactive orbital simulator that's
absolutely true to life, showing us how supposedly invisible Venus was
to the naked/unfiltered Kodak eye?

That moon of a nearly coal like albedo of 0.11 is exactly as imaged by
JAXA, even though they most recently had to exclude all image color
(except for Earth) because of those badly skewed secondary photons
making the moon look so bluish/violet tinted.
--
Brad Guth
  #22  
Old November 23rd 07, 07:20 AM posted to sci.space.policy, sci.space.history, sci.space.shuttle,sci.space.station
BradGuth
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Posts: 21,544
Default Japan First Back To The Moon!

On Nov 13, 6:34 am, kT wrote:
http://www.jaxa.jp/press/2007/11/20071113_kaguya_e.html

Heh heh heh ... Go JAXA! Go Japan!



Outside of Russia and our NASA, Japan is first and China is a close
second "back to the moon", and thus far with better technology than
anything within our NASA or DoD inventory. Perhaps we americans are
being treated much like Jesus Christ on a stick, in as much as go
figure as to how we're being so screwed by our own kind.

In addition to JAXA's Selene/KAGUYA mission doing exactly as planned
(pulling in those nifty 10 meter/pixel images and lots more to come),
it seems there's good old China that's acting extremely wise and fully
in charge of accomplishing their task of mapping and thus further
exploring the potential of our moon, with future intentions of their
robotically mining for those raw elements, including He3. Perhaps if
our moon is in any way hollow or with geode pockets of good enough
volume for accommodating a few brave humans, whereas China and quite
possibly their partnerships with Japan and India will seriously pay
off, while we're stuck with suppressing a few too many ****ed off
Muslims, as well as our having to pay through the nose for the likes
of terrestrial fossil, synfuels and even yellowcake.

Chang'e 1 sends back moon picture
http://www.china.org.cn/english/China/232774.htm

China's first lunar probe Chang'e 1 sent back its first moon picture
on Tuesday as scheduled, the National Space Administration has said.

Experts will later adjust cameras on the satellite according to the
moon picture's quality to ensure following photos are clear and
accurate, the Shaanxi-based West China City Daily reported today.

The first moon photo will be made public next week, the report cited
the administration as saying.

Tests on the orbiter's equipment showed that it is working normally
and in good condition, the administration said.

The probe had orbited the moon 168 times by 2 pm yesterday, the
administration said.

More tests will be conducted in the next few days that will help
ensure data transmissions continue. The satellite has gone through a
number of tests since it entered the moon's orbit on November 7.
Chang'e 1's position was adjusted on Monday so its probing equipment
faced the moon.

The satellite, named after a mythical Chinese goddess who flew to the
moon, is supposed to stay 200 km above the moon's surface to carry out
scientific explorations for one year.

Cameras on the 2,350-kilogram satellite are expected to photograph
every inch of the moon's surface by mid January.

The orbiter is expected to analyze the chemical and mineral
composition of the lunar surface and send data back to the Earth so
that scientists can better understand the moon's environment, Li
Guoping, the administration's spokesman, said in earlier reports.

Chang'e 1 blasted off on a Long March 3A carrier rocket on October 24
from the Xichang Satellite Launch Center in Sichuan Province, marking
the first step of China's ambitious 10-year moon plan, which will lead
to a moon landing and launch of a moon rover around 2012.

In the third phase, scheduled for 2017, another rover will land on the
moon and return to earth with lunar soil and stone samples for
scientific research.

In 2003, China became only the third country in the world after the
United States and Russia to send a human into orbit.

(Shanghai Daily November 22, 2007)
-

Perhaps China will have little if any perpetrated cold-war need of
such faith-based cloak and dagger distorting or excluding of the
truth, or otherwise holding back their new and improved science data
about our naked, physically dark, somewhat salty and unavoidably
reactive/anticathode moon that has such an electrostatic dusty surface
of unusual mascon considerations, as well as being continually
saturated in cosmic gamma and X-rays (especially by day when it's also
double IR roasting everything in sight), within such a nearly zero
atmospheric density means having insignificant if any attenuation from
all of that surrounding gauntlet of primary and secondary/recoil
radiation, not to mention the lack of moderating the velocity of
incoming physical debris that's arriving from all directions, that's
only speeding up prior to whatever near-miss or likely impact.

Too bad that our NASA team of supposed wizards without their original
semitic Third Reich team can't even manage to establish a station-
keeping platform of science instruments, as interactively halo orbited
within the moon's L1 (robotic Clarke Station), however it is most
likely that Japan, China or India should not have such difficulties.
Of course, the most educated of Americans don't even know of what or
where the moon's L1 is, much less having any clue as to it's
technological value as a space depot/gateway in addition to the
absolutely terrific science improvements on behalf of Earth and moon
planetology, and that's not to mention those improved detections,
trackings and best possible management of NEOs as potential Earth
killers.
--
Brad Guth
 




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