Mysterious flashes of light observed on the moon’s surface | |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 66095272 United States 06/01/2019 01:01 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 77251717 Switzerland 06/01/2019 01:02 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Scientists have launched a bid to observe and understand mysterious flashes of light on the surface of the moon. The ‘transient luminous lunar phenomena’ occur several times a week and illuminate parts of the moon’s landscape for a brief period of time before disappearing. Quoting: Agent MIB ‘Such flashes could also occur when electrically charged particles of the solar wind react with moon dust.’ Moon lightning, moon quakes? In other words, scientists don't really know and want more funding. [link to metro.co.uk (secure)] This was first reported in 1966: Anomalous Lights Transiting The Lunar Surface. We know damn well what it is! YOU have been kept in the dark. The moon is inhabited by humans and non terrestrials. |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 76809044 United States 06/01/2019 01:03 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Scientists have launched a bid to observe and understand mysterious flashes of light on the surface of the moon. The ‘transient luminous lunar phenomena’ occur several times a week and illuminate parts of the moon’s landscape for a brief period of time before disappearing. Quoting: Agent MIB ‘Such flashes could also occur when electrically charged particles of the solar wind react with moon dust.’ Moon lightning, moon quakes? In other words, scientists don't really know and want more funding. [link to metro.co.uk (secure)] This was first reported in 1966: Anomalous Lights Transiting The Lunar Surface. We know damn well what it is! YOU have been kept in the dark. The moon is inhabited by humans and non terrestrials. NASA just keeps up with the smoke and mirrors and moving the goal posts all the time. |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 76809044 United States 06/01/2019 01:06 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 76871995 United States 06/01/2019 01:06 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Indeed. Planetary scientists and astronomers can't even agree on our moons origin. They have work to do in our solar system yet. But the clues are written in humanities history. Written, carved, created by an advanced human race that helped humanity when we needed it most. Here is the core of their destruction from 28 to 34:00. On either side of that 6 minute window there is the goods as it relates to what this advanced race left for us as evidences to what happened thousands of years ago in our solar system.. and what comes. [link to www.youtube.com (secure)] . |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 76809044 United States 06/01/2019 01:06 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
darth
User ID: 28178764 United States 06/01/2019 01:09 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | the Apollo Astronauts came back with all that data. Quoting: Anonymous Coward 76809044 and they are just now getting around to analyzing it? there's NASA for you. When I was a NASA contractor one of the interesting things I learned was that there was funding appropriated for various missions both manned and unmanned. However, the funds to study the data was sparse. It takes money to fund a bunch of PhDs and post docs to study the data and get useful insights from it. Analysis of the data can cost much more than the original mission. The government is run by lawyers, not engineers. For example, there is always money to build the airplane but no money to purchase spare parts when the tooling is available and in use. At the end of the build phase, the tooling is often scrapped. Then, they have to spend enormous sums to keep the airplanes and other equipment operational with spare parts. Another example: In 1987 we needed orbital calculation software for interplanetary trajectories. Turns out my aerospace company had been funded to the tune of over $100M to create such software in the 1960s. We went looking for the huge amount of code that had been written. It was on punched cards and had been stored in the original Project Manager's filing cabinet for decades. When we found his office, he had just retired. The punch cards with the expensive code had been dumped in the trash a couple of weeks later. All gone to the landfill. The government did not pay our company to STORE the products they had so expensively purchased. We don't do anything for free on government contracts. |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 76809044 United States 06/01/2019 01:14 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | the Apollo Astronauts came back with all that data. Quoting: Anonymous Coward 76809044 and they are just now getting around to analyzing it? there's NASA for you. When I was a NASA contractor one of the interesting things I learned was that there was funding appropriated for various missions both manned and unmanned. However, the funds to study the data was sparse. It takes money to fund a bunch of PhDs and post docs to study the data and get useful insights from it. Analysis of the data can cost much more than the original mission. The government is run by lawyers, not engineers. For example, there is always money to build the airplane but no money to purchase spare parts when the tooling is available and in use. At the end of the build phase, the tooling is often scrapped. Then, they have to spend enormous sums to keep the airplanes and other equipment operational with spare parts. Another example: In 1987 we needed orbital calculation software for interplanetary trajectories. Turns out my aerospace company had been funded to the tune of over $100M to create such software in the 1960s. We went looking for the huge amount of code that had been written. It was on punched cards and had been stored in the original Project Manager's filing cabinet for decades. When we found his office, he had just retired. The punch cards with the expensive code had been dumped in the trash a couple of weeks later. All gone to the landfill. The government did not pay our company to STORE the products they had so expensively purchased. We don't do anything for free on government contracts. so, it really is just like a kid bringing a bunch of rocks home. |
darth
User ID: 28178764 United States 06/01/2019 01:25 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | the Apollo Astronauts came back with all that data. Quoting: Anonymous Coward 76809044 and they are just now getting around to analyzing it? there's NASA for you. When I was a NASA contractor one of the interesting things I learned was that there was funding appropriated for various missions both manned and unmanned. However, the funds to study the data was sparse. It takes money to fund a bunch of PhDs and post docs to study the data and get useful insights from it. Analysis of the data can cost much more than the original mission. The government is run by lawyers, not engineers. For example, there is always money to build the airplane but no money to purchase spare parts when the tooling is available and in use. At the end of the build phase, the tooling is often scrapped. Then, they have to spend enormous sums to keep the airplanes and other equipment operational with spare parts. Another example: In 1987 we needed orbital calculation software for interplanetary trajectories. Turns out my aerospace company had been funded to the tune of over $100M to create such software in the 1960s. We went looking for the huge amount of code that had been written. It was on punched cards and had been stored in the original Project Manager's filing cabinet for decades. When we found his office, he had just retired. The punch cards with the expensive code had been dumped in the trash a couple of weeks later. All gone to the landfill. The government did not pay our company to STORE the products they had so expensively purchased. We don't do anything for free on government contracts. so, it really is just like a kid bringing a bunch of rocks home. Very funny. NO, we learned an enormous amount from the 200 lbs. or so of Lunar material returned by Apollo. How can you have planetary science when you only have data on ONE planet? For example, the rocks contain remnants of past Solar micro-novas as has been discussed extensively on GLP. If we are facing another micro-nova that could wipe out humans, is that not important? BTW, my oldest son used to drive me crazy bringing rocks home from our camping trips. Now thirty years later, he is a highly respected geologist. |
glp-smilies
User ID: 18811905 United States 06/01/2019 01:25 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 76871995 United States 06/01/2019 01:27 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | the Apollo Astronauts came back with all that data. Quoting: Anonymous Coward 76809044 and they are just now getting around to analyzing it? there's NASA for you. When I was a NASA contractor one of the interesting things I learned was that there was funding appropriated for various missions both manned and unmanned. However, the funds to study the data was sparse. It takes money to fund a bunch of PhDs and post docs to study the data and get useful insights from it. Analysis of the data can cost much more than the original mission. The government is run by lawyers, not engineers. For example, there is always money to build the airplane but no money to purchase spare parts when the tooling is available and in use. At the end of the build phase, the tooling is often scrapped. Then, they have to spend enormous sums to keep the airplanes and other equipment operational with spare parts. Another example: In 1987 we needed orbital calculation software for interplanetary trajectories. Turns out my aerospace company had been funded to the tune of over $100M to create such software in the 1960s. We went looking for the huge amount of code that had been written. It was on punched cards and had been stored in the original Project Manager's filing cabinet for decades. When we found his office, he had just retired. The punch cards with the expensive code had been dumped in the trash a couple of weeks later. All gone to the landfill. The government did not pay our company to STORE the products they had so expensively purchased. We don't do anything for free on government contracts. so, it really is just like a kid bringing a bunch of rocks home. Very funny. NO, we learned an enormous amount from the 200 lbs. or so of Lunar material returned by Apollo. How can you have planetary science when you only have data on ONE planet? For example, the rocks contain remnants of past Solar micro-novas as has been discussed extensively on GLP. If we are facing another micro-nova that could wipe out humans, is that not important? BTW, my oldest son used to drive me crazy bringing rocks home from our camping trips. Now thirty years later, he is a highly respected geologist. . |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 77563072 Canada 06/01/2019 01:28 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 76809044 United States 06/01/2019 01:30 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | the Apollo Astronauts came back with all that data. Quoting: Anonymous Coward 76809044 and they are just now getting around to analyzing it? there's NASA for you. When I was a NASA contractor one of the interesting things I learned was that there was funding appropriated for various missions both manned and unmanned. However, the funds to study the data was sparse. It takes money to fund a bunch of PhDs and post docs to study the data and get useful insights from it. Analysis of the data can cost much more than the original mission. The government is run by lawyers, not engineers. For example, there is always money to build the airplane but no money to purchase spare parts when the tooling is available and in use. At the end of the build phase, the tooling is often scrapped. Then, they have to spend enormous sums to keep the airplanes and other equipment operational with spare parts. Another example: In 1987 we needed orbital calculation software for interplanetary trajectories. Turns out my aerospace company had been funded to the tune of over $100M to create such software in the 1960s. We went looking for the huge amount of code that had been written. It was on punched cards and had been stored in the original Project Manager's filing cabinet for decades. When we found his office, he had just retired. The punch cards with the expensive code had been dumped in the trash a couple of weeks later. All gone to the landfill. The government did not pay our company to STORE the products they had so expensively purchased. We don't do anything for free on government contracts. so, it really is just like a kid bringing a bunch of rocks home. Very funny. NO, we learned an enormous amount from the 200 lbs. or so of Lunar material returned by Apollo. How can you have planetary science when you only have data on ONE planet? For example, the rocks contain remnants of past Solar micro-novas as has been discussed extensively on GLP. If we are facing another micro-nova that could wipe out humans, is that not important? BTW, my oldest son used to drive me crazy bringing rocks home from our camping trips. Now thirty years later, he is a highly respected geologist. nahhhh. i joke around about Science a lot, but Science is really my Religion. thanks for the interesting input. |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 76809044 United States 06/01/2019 02:32 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 77696506 India 06/01/2019 02:42 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 76809044 United States 06/01/2019 02:54 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 77688283 United States 06/01/2019 03:46 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | I can tell you why. Quoting: Anonymous Coward 77013656 Light is locked into rotation around the Moon. Electric flux is locked in rotation around an atom. Inertia is locked in rotation around a Planet. The Moons linear electric and spherical inertia fields produces rotational magnetic field. When that mag field breaks out of rotation, light is produced. Please post the relevant mathematics and equations to backup this supposition. |
deplorable scottfree
User ID: 77693814 United States 06/01/2019 03:52 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Scientists have launched a bid to observe and understand mysterious flashes of light on the surface of the moon. The ‘transient luminous lunar phenomena’ occur several times a week and illuminate parts of the moon’s landscape for a brief period of time before disappearing. Quoting: Agent MIB ‘Such flashes could also occur when electrically charged particles of the solar wind react with moon dust.’ Moon lightning, moon quakes? In other words, scientists don't really know and want more funding. [link to metro.co.uk (secure)] Baffled, huh? J 17:15: "I pray not that Thou shouldst take them out of the world, but that Thou shouldst keep them from the evil. Truth, beauty and virtue ... all the things that THEY hate. All the things God loves. |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 77026850 United States 06/02/2019 12:25 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | The flashes have been seen since the invention of the telescope. Quick more funding lol. Quoting: R&y so what its an observed phenomenon that they want to know exactly what causes it there's nothing wrong with that. That's exactly what science is supposed to be about. The problem isn't so much funding it's that stupid shit gets funded instead of stuff like this. Have you absolutely no sense of curiosity? |
Agent MIB
(OP) User ID: 37471024 Philippines 06/02/2019 01:23 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | The moon's atmosphere is primarily sodium and leaves a comet like trail behind it due to the solar wind. Moon dust itself is extremely abrasive, formed of sharp crystals similar to fiberglass. NASA was concerned it might damage the astronauts suits and contaminate the LEM. All of the Apollo missions that landed on the moon left behind mirrors for laser ranging and even seismometers. As an amateur radio op, we've done EME bounce (Earth-Moon-Earth) on 1.2 GHz band. Haven't tried lasers yet, but it was cool to hear your own signal 5 seconds later. You had to compensate your receiver frequency due to doppler shift (Earth's rotation and Lunar's orbit). Last Edited by Agent MIB on 06/02/2019 01:32 AM You are born with the truth, then taught a lie. |