Something went wrong in the last 40 seconds of flight, leading SLIM to lose the nozzle of one of its two landing engines. The result was a "very acrobatic orientation on the surface of the moon," said Fujimoto. "This final 40 seconds is like giving us even more motivation for the next...
Kaysing thought he had a lot of reasons to believe the U.S. government needed to fake the Moon landing. First, he insisted that it simply wasn’t possible given the technology of the day. This argument was made through a lot of hand-waving and by suggesting that his firsthand knowledge...
How the AP reported moon landing, Armstrong steps
More than 10 years ago, Fox popularized the Moon landing conspiracy with a show called “Did We Land On The Moon?”. They revealed several pieces of evidence about the hoax and cover-up citing incorrect shadows on the Moon, lack of background stars, and more. Each of the pieces of evid...
See how the historic first manned moon landing worked in this SPACE.com infographic about Apollo 11.
how the earth changed how the garcia girls how the hell did we w how the new market le how the notes all ben how the solar system how to kiss how to made skin whit how to access a machi how to arrange how to be in unity wi how to be the perfect how to be true to you how ...
For First Man, director Damien Chazelle not only had to transport viewers to another decade, but he also had to transport them through outer space...
I am a software developer and a science enthusiast. I was graduated from the Istanbul Technical University (ITU), Computer Engineering. In the past, I worked at the Istanbul Technical University Science Center as a science instructor. I write about the planet Earth and science on this website...
Right now, technology has changed the lives of all Chinese citizens. We are looking at a society that uses facial recognition to make payments, enjoys paperless boarding, and even automated luggage check-in at airports, and operates already in a virtually cashless economy where ...
On July 31, 2019, former NASA administrator Jim Bridenstone announced that the agency wouldn't take any money out of its ISS budget to fund new lunar landing tech. "If you cannibalize science, if you cannibalize the ISS, you will never achieve the end state you desire," he opined [...