This was fantastic I Was a few days b4 my 18th birthday when this happened and probably a world away in Australia and not interested in the moon landings.I was 71 just 2 days ago and watched and appreciated this so much
You and I are roughly the same age. I had just turned 16 when Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin walked on the moon. It was the most extraordinary day of my young life and I'll never forget it. Didn't sleep a wink that night and I remember being so relieved when they returned safely to earth.
Very inspiring…..maybe time to show these documentaries to our kids to create inspiration. I came to watch doubting we ever went to the moon. After watching this documentary I feel that people have lost the inspiration they once had.
@@jacqueswaahl5036 its because of the sun rays, but on the video you can see they landed on the part of the moon where these is no direct sunrays coming to them , so why stars are not seen shining from the space ?
@@malaremurilo8046because of the way cameras work. The moon is extremely reflective. There is no atmosphere to refract the light before it hits the surface. It is so bright that cameras do not pick up the starlight in the sky.
This cured my depression. Genuinely; who could watch this and not be moved to tears of joy? LOOK WHAT WE'RE CAPABLE OF! I think of the upcoming Artemis missions and can't help but feel that I'm missing out on an opportunity to play a role in the next step of the arguably most exciting project in human history... Then again... maybe it's not too late.
@danielleblanc8302 Maybe Orion mission - back to the Moon - had to be canceled, because you could not help. And those not very well organized guys in NASA say, they lost Apollo technology. Without your help, and decade by decade worse technology I can't see how it's not to late.
My soul is filled with Love, wonder and excitement when watching these videos💖💖💖 it never gets old. If I'm ever born again I pray I become an astronaut. I'm hoping one day I can meet one.
It's night 3:21 am night at my place....i got notification of this video 2 hrs ago...and I have been watching this since then..I am on my terrace watching moon...I m having goosebumps... I am emotional at the same time...this documentary is a gem.!!!
I was 8 years old at the time and was mesmerized by the whole thing. I got the books, the models, the merchandise. This video is beyond outstanding and I can only imagine ig I could have watched it back when I was 8.
Beautiful and daunting at the same time. It chokes me up watching. We are going to make it, and not break it, this opportunity. Hopefully I can help, I love this planet and everyone on it (Well, almost all 😂) and that will never change. We really are one big family ❤
I'm an Australian and I was only 14 years old when Challenger landed on the Moon at the Taurus Litrow landing site in late November 1972. At the same time, it saddened me when Apollo 17 astronauts lifted off the Moon at Taurus, Littlrow landing site aboard the second stage of the Challenger spacecraft for the very last an Apollo spacecraft would venture to the Moon in the Apollo program.
Z wielką przyjemnością i sentymentem obejrzałem film dokumentalny o wyprawie Apollo 17. Czas APOLLO, to moja młodość i nieustające interesowanie się postępami w dziedzinie lotów kosmicznych.
@kristoferzamojski7140Też tak miałem. W czasie Apollo 17 zostałem modelarzem lotniczym. Jakiś pomysł, kto zmienia pozycję, oraz zoom kamery w 4 i 24 minucie, gdy obaj są zajęci?
I must be a freakin' weirdo but this docu has been a sleep docu for me for months now. I love falling asleep hearing Jack & Gene walking on the moon 😂🤘
25:00 First time I've ever seen an astronauts face in the EVA suit, what a lovely humanizing moment. Look at that grin, can feel the joy 50 years and 283,900 miles away.
Why in the 1970s, with simpler technology, humans could and dared to land several times on the moon? Meanwhile, with more advanced technology, we were not as brave as before.
Ono GIA: Brave has nothing to do with it unless you mean the lack of it with politicians. This is a short history of why the Lunar Missions stopped in 1972. Also why it is taking so long to get back. Congress started cutting NASA's budget even before NASA got to the moon. 1966 was NASA's biggest budget year. They got approximately 4.6% of the U.S. G.D.P.. This is while they were still building the infrastructure for Apollo and they hoped an infrastructure to get them beyond the moon to Mars by 1981-2. After 1966 NASA's budget went on a steady decline. Originally the first phase of Lunar Exploration was to go to Apollo 20. NASA had built in the infrastructure for a continuous supply of CSMs LMs and SaturnVs. Plans were in the works for upgraded CSM, LMs and SaturnVs. NASA even built prototype pressurized LRVs for use on planned Lunar Colonies. There were plans for more then 1 Skylab as a stepping stone for larger Space Stations. Original plans for the Space Shuttle were for a much more elaborate system to ferry astronauts and equipment to and from the ever expanding Space Stations. They were even looking at plans for making the Saturn V's first and second stages recoverable and reusable. Originally Launch Complex 39 was to have 6 launch pads. Then it got cut to 3, then only 2 were built. They built 3 mobile launch towers, but only 2 were ever used. All the working plans and proposals are still there to be seen. With NASA’s budget being cut after 1966, bit by bit NASA’s ambitious plans started to dwindle. After Apollo 11 it was planned to have 4 Apollo launches a year till Apollo 20. This soon got cut to 2 per year and at the same time Apollo 20 was cancelled. In late 1970 future contracts to build more Apollo CSMs, LMs and Saturn Vs were cancelled. The remaining 5 CSM: 3 would be used for Skylab of which there would only be 1 Skylab now. One CSM was planned for the then hopeful Apollo Soyuz mission and the last CSM(now in a museum) was modified to hold 5 people as a potential rescue mission for Skylab crews. One of the remaining three SaturnVs would be used to launch Skylab, the last two are now museum pieces. NASA’s budget continued to get cut and along with it Space Shuttle kept being scaled back from what NASA wanted. In 1975 NASA started to redo Pad 39A for the coming Space Shuttle. But NASA kept begging to get Apollo going again and maintained Pad 39B for Apollo and tried to maintain as much of the Apollo infrastructure and talent as they could. But by 1977 it was clear Apollo was dead. So NASA let the Apollo infrastructure and talent atrophy away. Through the terms of Regan, Bush, Clinton, Bush and Obama, NASA was pushed and pulled in many directions with start and stop goals given and taken away. All of them with plans to return to the moon. Bush 2 laid out the most promising plan for a return to the moon in 2004 with the Constellation Program. It called for a return to the moon before 2014. In 2010 Obama cancelled Constellation after a lot of money and effort had been spent. All with budgets nothing like the had in 1966. The current Artemis plans which rose out of the ashes of Constellation are 12 years old and moving at a snails pace on a shoestring budget. Another reason it is taking so long. Go look up NASA’s plans and dreams. Would have been amazing had they been allowed to carry on. NASA was thinking exploration, human expansion and potential research science and resources to gain. The government thought, beat the USSR and not much more.
@@BadAtTeaDude LOL you lack of any kind of research is laughable. How do you mean untested. Every piece of major equipment was tested more then once. Both uncrewed and crewed. If would would read it, I would tell you the reason for the 5 year gap, but that would be like reading. What has you convinces it was, "Laughably fake"?
Great question! It’s being transmitted through the hammer, up through the glove and insulated from vacuum uniform to the microphone he’s speaking through.
@@anonymous-hz1mf They also photographed the Apollos 11 and 12 landing sites and low and behold there are the LM lower stages. Oh we are in another space race. May not have the urgency of the 1960s one, but indeed a race. NASA and it's partners are still currently in the lead. But China, India, Japan and even Russia have eyes on the moon.
Something I've always wondered about and would love to see a video of is the procedures to deal with all the equipment, dust and samples once they enter the lunar module after a long EVA.
It was a huge problem for the astronauts, one of them had a small heart attack and never fully recovered. Combating lunar dust will have the highest priority in future lunar missions.
I have yet to see footage of the lander leaving the surface and back up to the orbiter. The lander may still be sitting there for all I know. I can imagine they orbited and began wondering if they could get off the surface since they'd never practiced it . And decided to put down the lander and leave it. There's so many gaps in the narrative it makes you wonder.
Watching this in 2023 after Artemis finally went around the moon, I'm so hopeful that we (USA) will put another man or woman on the moon in next few years and I can't wait to hear about how much we learn from that, since it's been almost 60 years. Imagine the technology change. I hope this inspires the gen Z kids .
Why not, if they could fly to the Moon with 2500 tons rocket, instead of required 800 000 tons, and equipped with onboard computer of few dozens kilobytes? And carrying lightweight cameras better than Hollywood ones - look how their cameras were able to track and zoom them, while both are busy, e.g. 4", or 24"? That was amazing technology, not like modern 21st century junk, letting barely phone zombies to drop me off my bicycle, as they don't even know, they already left their walkway!
Agreed. I talked to my teenage daughters about it often and am so glad they haven’t been indoctrinated into the nonsense so many do now. They watch and research the science.
12:24 😂 “deadgummit” had a nice laugh The footage from Apollo 17 is amazing! Better quality cameras and it was quite the journey/exploration/sampling mission Seemed like a fun one 😃 Hope we get back to the moon soon.. it’s hard to believe we forgot how to get back there when we were comfortable doing it back in the 70s By this mission it was practically second nature.. we got good at it Imagine if we would have kept going back and built a base there🤔 Go NASA go SpaceX Potentially one day away from the second orbital attempt of Starship! Can’t wait! 🚀 I’m calling that starship makes it into orbit this time and attempts reentry 🤞
No. It burned out 27 hours after Apollo 17 lifted off. It was never designed to survive the heat of a lunar high noon. (In the case of Apollo 17, the camera even burned out prior to high noon. The Apollo 16 camera made it to high noon, though, then burned out.) It also ran on batteries that are long dead by now.
Can someone describe to me out the EVA worked at the very end? The one on the way home... since the Command Module didn't have an airlock, how did they perform an EVA?
They put their suits on before depressurizing the cabin, and took their suits off only after the cabin was repressurized. Can you tell me which video you watched that told you to ask this?
@@حيدرابوكرار-ن9ب pretty confident the flag did not have air in it. Just like flags on earth! What it did have was movement by the astronaut. An object when moved is going to move, regardless of atmosphere or not.
@@erac5855 الهبوط كذب امريكا لم تهبط على القمر هذا تصوير على الأرض. The landing is a lie. America did not land on the moon. This is a depiction on Earth
Sorry, the word "technology" doesn't work that way. You don't get to just say "technology" like it is supposed to mean something without clarifying. Can you name the EXACT technology you think they lacked? And, can you explain why none of the thousands of engineers who designed and built that particular technology ever realized that it wouldn't do what they designed it to do?
خدا کا بڑا احسان ہے کہ اُس نے ہماری زمین میں کششِ ثقل ( gravity power ) رکھی ہے ورنہ ہم زمین پر اسی طرح کوُد کوُد کر چلتے۔ جس طرح یہ خلاباز چاند پر اُچھل اُچھل کر چل۔رہے ہیں ۔ زمین پر زندگی گُذارنا اور کوئ کام دھندا کرنا مُشکل ہو جاتا ۔ اللہ تعالی کا لاکھ لاکھ شکر ادا کرنا چاہیے ۔ سید مہتاب علی نیندڑو انڈیا ۔
17:07 I don’t know how long this chamber on the astronaut’s chest is, but if the length of this chamber is 0.25 meters, then the astronaut’s height should be 1.25 meters. Even if it is 0.3 meters, then his height is 1.5 meters. This is also very little. The chamber would need to be about 0.4 meters long for an astronaut to be 1.8 meters tall. But I don't think this camera model is that big
I grew up during Apollo and I don't remember ever seeing any videos like these. Was I too busy playing with my matchboxes or was there some reason they were being withheld from the public? And if they were withheld why release them now?
Sadly, the later Apollo missions just weren't 'important' enough for the TV networks. With no Internet then you had no other way. I watched everything I could of Apollo as a kid, but much was never shown at the time.
@@daryllect6659 Yes when our only source of information has been corrupted you pretty much cant believe what is real and what is fiction.. They have destroid morals and in its wake an honest society. Now many people dont hesitate to rewrite history even when they werent there and have no idea what they are saying.
The question is valid if you do not know the history. But the answers are literally at your fingertips. The camera was mounted on and powered by the Lunar Roving Vehicle(LRV) It was controlled from Earth in Mission Control by Ed Fendell. There are 3 of those cameras on 3 LRVs on the moon still.
The one shot on location 240 thousand miles away where there is no atmospheric pressure, no wind, no weather, no air, nothing that would keep dust in the air like here on earth. No floating dust. Kick it up and it will stick, but it will not suspend in the air.
Well, they covered about 20 miles total across the 3 EVAs. But, to answer your question more directly, the greatest distance from the lunar module on Apollo 17 was around 4-5 miles. You can get a better understanding by looking at the Apollo 17 rover traverse map.
@@rockethead7 4-5 miles is still pretty far, though. Quite scary. Luckily you cannot really get lost because the tracks you made are still there. But what if the space suit conks out? You must always trust the equipment.
Sure, but, ya know, these guys were going to the moon, not taking a commercial airliner flight. There were risks all over the place. Most of them were test pilots (and that's not exactly a "safe" career). Prior to being an astronaut, Cernan's last job was to train for WWIII, to fly along the tree line with nuclear bombs strapped to the bottom of his plane, get to the city he was supposed to bomb, pull up into a vertical climb, release the bomb (flinging it upward), then to pull out of that at top speed and get away before the bomb blows him to smithereens. Armstrong had 78 combat missions, including one where he was shot down behind enemy lines. Aldrin had 2 combat kills under his belt. The list goes on. These guys weren't exactly afraid to take risks. The rover traverses were planned to hit the furthest point in the traverse toward the beginning of the EVA. They may have one or two stops before getting to the furthest point. But, basically, the idea was that they would first go far, then snake their way back, thus allowing the most oxygen remaining in their backpacks for the furthest distances, and would go closer and closer to the lunar module as they used their oxygen supply. What happens if there are suit problems? Well, each PLSS backpack had an OPS system on top (which included a small spare supply of oxygen, good for around 1/2 hour). They could also share air between the two astronauts if they needed. Those hoses you see on the suits could be plugged and unplugged, and if one guy's PLSS failed completely, they could share with the other one's PLSS to get back safely. The suits themselves had 13 layers of ripstop fabrics in the outer garment, plus another half dozen layers under that, including a self-sealing layer (a lot like WWII fighter planes had self-sealing fuel tanks in the wings if they get hit by bullets). And, if somehow all of that failed, they were trained on how to patch small holes. A large hole that instantly depressurizes the entire suit would render the astronaut unconscious in about 2 minutes, and dead a few more minutes after that. But, that's a lot of time (relatively) for the other astronaut to try to patch something together to pressurize his partner's suit again. And, yeah, of course, beyond that, sure, it would be fatal if none of those things worked. But, I think the engineers designed things to be more resilient than you might know (?).
@@rockethead7 You are correct. Being a test pilot is very risky. As you correctly state, all the equipment for the space missions is top-level, as well as the training of the astronauts. It is still not 100% foolproof but it is very close. The astronauts also needed a very high level of mental and emotional toughness as well. They must possess so many qualities and abilities on so many levels. They are the elite of humanity in many respects.
So, you don't know something as simple as how the camera worked, yet, you know enough to declare that the entire planet's aerospace engineers are wrong about their own expertise, and you're right?
@@yassassin6425 Yep, Yaasin ... Alan got a Birdie and an Eagle. Neil Armstrong may have been the FIRST MAN on the Moon, but Good Ol' Al was the FIRST to finish 8 Under Par.
I don’t think that’s what this video was. But if you want to chat about test pilots who at that point were pretty tired of telling the same story and same details and knowing you still have a world tour coming up…
@@erac5855 He didn't say, what he means by "press conference". However all three of them look weirdo sad all the very long time rather than tired. All three exactly same deep level of sadness. Not like any average man looks after coming back from such crazy excurision, all of them in one piece! They weren't forced to go thru many press conferences. It could be only one, or very few for sure, then no one publicly spoke a single word for years.
i enjoyed the part 1 and the last piece of the documentary, hard to believe this was 50 years ago!! Shame they never continued with it until the end of the 70s, They could have pushed for mars in the 80s with a manned landing in the 90s or the 00s at latest. But for mars, i think all space programs on the planet need to unite for that one. Thanks fellas for the ride!
Whoever said that the moon has dust like the earth. Watch as they jump how the soil scatters. They are now in the ground. They film. Lie they're in on the moon. من قال ان القمر به تراب مثل الارض. شاهد وهم يقفزون كيف تنتشر التربة. هم الآن في الأرض. هم يصورون. أكذب أنهم على القمر .
"Hard to believe" - because it never happened, ever...& never will... The world is an amazing place, why "explore" out of this world myths, when we have so much unknown on earth?? I'll wait...
Here none believers were going back so sit and wait. mission, Artemis II, is scheduled to take place in November 2024 with the four-person crew circling the Moon but not landing on it. As part of the Artemis program, NASA aims to send astronauts to the Moon in 2025 - more than five decades after the historic Apollo missions ended in 1972.
The moon missions are more than technological work. They are amazing feats of humans being on another world, & doing research into early history of our solar system. The deniers in my opinion, need to be taught what they denied on this actually happened. I am in awe of the moon landings. I wish I was there with them, but I was too young.
Oh yeah. The tech is only one piece of the puzzle. A necessary piece, but not sufficient to get to the moon. The social and psychological aspects are also necessary.
I can see why someone could question that. As the LM is approaching the CSM the RCS are constantly firing around the LM lining up to dock. Every firing send vibrations through the LM causing items not totally locked down to move.
@@JoeRivermanSongwriter Correct, no corrosion. Thermal cycling means the rover is exposed to big changes in temperature. Materials expand and contract at different rates when the temperature changes. So in anything made of a combination of materials, e.g. a printed circuit board, you get large forces pulling components apart. I suspect you’d have to completely replace the electrical system, and all moving parts with tight tolerances (wheel bearings, for instance) to get an LRV to run again.
Especially the broken fender part in the script and the Apollo 13 drama. The director had been biting his nails he couldn't not get an Oscar. And the Earth is not round - it's flat!
@@jazemkrzysio Depends. Are you talking about TV video? Film video? Distance to objects in the background? Apparent horizon or real horizon? What was the camera focused on? Result vary depending on details.
Well, no. Listen to the original recordings, and you can hear the pauses before the astronauts reply to Mission Control. This is often edited out for brevity.
LMFFFAAAOOO only an idiot could compare 2001 and its CLEAR green screen, dust flying LIKE IT'S ON EARTH, and such short single shots with perfect framing... Stanley TROLLED everyone because of how ignorant you people are, AND YOU STILL BOUGHT IT 🤣🤦♂️🤡
No, the highest temperature is 120 Celsius. And, no Apollo mission ever landed when it was that hot. They all landed early in the lunar morning, long before the temperature got that high.
@@rockethead7 I don't even want to be mistaken. And the moon is not gray. Brown is correct, just because the temperature is high during the day and the surface is red-hot like a red brick.
It's not even possible to have a dialog with someone who obviously cannot stay on topic. You opened by talking about the surface temperatures. You were wrong. I replied to correct you. Since then, all you've done is talk about other things.
I'm 69 years old and I followed all of NASA's missions very closely. What really saddens me is that I might not live long enough to see any nationality of humans return to the moon.
That's not one of its objectives. There have been a million other ways to prove Apollo. Adding one more is not going to make a bit of difference to the deniers.
"see how he is pulled up by some wire" Huh? Do you mean the communications antenna? "standing almost 45 degree to the ground." Not even close to 45 degrees. But, tell me, what angle would you stand at, while on a sloped ground, while wearing a suit and backpack that weighs more than you do? You don't think you'd be hunched forward?
Horisont is always black, but it looks like it’s daylight on the planet according to the shadows. Other footage is I’ve seen from another flight actually is a little strange because the lighting doesn’t match up always with what’s perceived. And in addition, it’s always black in the horizon, but no stars again. And then that other footage that I was speaking about with the shadows in my job putting the flag up and I know it was stiff so it would be straight up for some reason but there’s supposed to be no airflow there and yet there was on the flag. It was stiff and attached to a stick.
You need to do some real research as to why the stars do not show. Can you see the stars on Earth during the day? There was a metal rod holding the flag out. Again a little real research would help you there. Also again, just because it does not look like you think it should does not mean it is not real.
@@terryregas1748 Apollo landings were always Lunar morning. That was so they would have the light of the sun and long shadows. Just because the sky is black on the moon does not mean it is night. If it was night the stars would be seen by the astronauts and they would have to bring lighting. But it was day time on the moon.
Huh? Primative batteries? Is that like batteries for primates? Or, did you mean "primitive," but you're functionally illiterate? What's primitive about them? And, why do you think radio would have an issue with a vacuum? What ARE you talking about?
So now we have another lander on the moon - apparently lying on its side, but it's there and is transmitting. It'll be interesting to see how we progress to the next stage.
There is a program called Artemis. Artemis I has already flown. It was unmanned, orbited the moon and came back. Artemis II will fly a similar mission but with astronauts on board. Artemis III plans to land men on the moon for the first time since Apollo 17 in 1972.
@@willoughbykrenzteinburg I wouldn't bet on Artemis III landing. NASA is already backtracking and saying that Artemis III might be another orbital mission. It's pretty doubtful that either of the landers will be ready on time.
They've already contracted Blue to be a "2nd lander" to the SpaceX version. As far as I'm concerned, it's only a matter of time before they cancel SpaceX altogether. I was shocked from Day-1 that they even chose SpaceX and that hideous monstrosity. But, when the person on the NASA board who was leading them to select SpaceX got a high paying job at SpaceX, yeah, it made more sense about why that happened. As soon as Blue shows that they're ready to fly, my guess is that NASA will dump SpaceX. SpaceX is a joke of a rocket company, powered more by hype than rocket fuel.
This was fantastic I Was a few days b4 my 18th birthday when this happened and probably a world away in Australia and not interested in the moon landings.I was 71 just 2 days ago and watched and appreciated this so much
You and I are roughly the same age. I had just turned 16 when Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin walked on the moon. It was the most extraordinary day of my young life and I'll never forget it. Didn't sleep a wink that night and I remember being so relieved when they returned safely to earth.
Very inspiring…..maybe time to show these documentaries to our kids to create inspiration. I came to watch doubting we ever went to the moon. After watching this documentary I feel that people have lost the inspiration they once had.
How comes stars are not seen fro
m the moon ?
@@malaremurilo8046how come the stars are not seen from earth during daytime ?
@@jacqueswaahl5036 its because of the sun rays, but on the video you can see they landed on the part of the moon where these is no direct sunrays coming to them , so why stars are not seen shining from the space ?
@@malaremurilo8046??
@@malaremurilo8046because of the way cameras work. The moon is extremely reflective. There is no atmosphere to refract the light before it hits the surface. It is so bright that cameras do not pick up the starlight in the sky.
This cured my depression.
Genuinely; who could watch this and not be moved to tears of joy? LOOK WHAT WE'RE CAPABLE OF!
I think of the upcoming Artemis missions and can't help but feel that I'm missing out on an opportunity to play a role in the next step of the arguably most exciting project in human history...
Then again... maybe it's not too late.
@danielleblanc8302 Maybe Orion mission - back to the Moon - had to be canceled, because you could not help. And those not very well organized guys in NASA say, they lost Apollo technology. Without your help, and decade by decade worse technology I can't see how it's not to late.
@@jazemkrzysio Not. A. Space. Agency.
@@charles_preston I.D.I.O.T!!!!!
My soul is filled with Love, wonder and excitement when watching these videos💖💖💖 it never gets old. If I'm ever born again I pray I become an astronaut. I'm hoping one day I can meet one.
It's night 3:21 am night at my place....i got notification of this video 2 hrs ago...and I have been watching this since then..I am on my terrace watching moon...I m having goosebumps... I am emotional at the same time...this documentary is a gem.!!!
This really is a gem. I hope I will see another moon launch in my lifetime. 24yo right now.
The mars rover missions are the most beautifull missions in my lifetime.
Wow ! 😂😂😂😂😂😂
What did you see? What we’re watching Now ? NO !
@@deangeneral7640 seems like you are very keen to get my reply..well I'm still saying...it's the best documentary i have ever seen till now.
I was 8 years old at the time and was mesmerized by the whole thing. I got the books, the models, the merchandise. This video is beyond outstanding and I can only imagine ig I could have watched it back when I was 8.
The videos were available within a few weeks of the mission.
What a blessing that they came back alive, our guys. They created the history of all mankind on Earth.
😂
hahahaha
And the poetry! It made me nauseous... those clunky cameras attached to the spacesuit, brilliant! 🤠
Beautiful and daunting at the same time. It chokes me up watching.
We are going to make it, and not break it, this opportunity.
Hopefully I can help, I love this planet and everyone on it (Well, almost all 😂) and that will never change.
We really are one big family ❤
Love you too 😊😊😊
I'm an Australian and I was only 14 years old when Challenger landed on the Moon at the Taurus Litrow landing site in late November 1972. At the same time, it saddened me when Apollo 17 astronauts lifted off the Moon at Taurus, Littlrow landing site aboard the second stage of the Challenger spacecraft for the very last an Apollo spacecraft would venture to the Moon in the Apollo program.
Z wielką przyjemnością i sentymentem obejrzałem film dokumentalny o wyprawie Apollo 17. Czas APOLLO, to moja młodość i nieustające interesowanie się postępami w dziedzinie lotów kosmicznych.
@kristoferzamojski7140Też tak miałem. W czasie Apollo 17 zostałem modelarzem lotniczym. Jakiś pomysł, kto zmienia pozycję, oraz zoom kamery w 4 i 24 minucie, gdy obaj są zajęci?
ive been waiting for part 2, really good program
Bless these men. They are truly heros 🎉😊
Used to create lies.
@@charleswest6372 Moron.
I must be a freakin' weirdo but this docu has been a sleep docu for me for months now. I love falling asleep hearing Jack & Gene walking on the moon 😂🤘
Same for me)
So..I must be that kind of weirdo..I love this docs as soundtrack along my CG endless hours of work
well......i confirm.....you are a weirdo 😂 Cheers
Fairy tales are always best to fall asleep to. The gingerbread man and Jimmy crack corn.
Whatever makes you happy. 😁
25:00
First time I've ever seen an astronauts face in the EVA suit, what a lovely humanizing moment. Look at that grin, can feel the joy 50 years and 283,900 miles away.
The biggest lie of the century! 😥
@@elciosampaio2018 Ok you think a lie. Why?
@@elciosampaio2018I APPRECIATE YOU ! ❤
@@elciosampaio2018 feel pity for you and all those like you :(
You have a cool channel. Thanks for doing all this 😊
Why in the 1970s, with simpler technology, humans could and dared to land several times on the moon? Meanwhile, with more advanced technology, we were not as brave as before.
Huh? What makes you think it has anything to do with technology?
Ono GIA: Brave has nothing to do with it unless you mean the lack of it with politicians. This is a short history of why the Lunar Missions stopped in 1972. Also why it is taking so long to get back.
Congress started cutting NASA's budget even before NASA got to the moon. 1966 was NASA's biggest budget year. They got approximately 4.6% of the U.S. G.D.P.. This is while they were still building the infrastructure for Apollo and they hoped an infrastructure to get them beyond the moon to Mars by 1981-2.
After 1966 NASA's budget went on a steady decline. Originally the first phase of Lunar Exploration was to go to Apollo 20. NASA had built in the infrastructure for a continuous supply of CSMs LMs and SaturnVs. Plans were in the works for upgraded CSM, LMs and SaturnVs. NASA even built prototype pressurized LRVs for use on planned Lunar Colonies. There were plans for more then 1 Skylab as a stepping stone for larger Space Stations. Original plans for the Space Shuttle were for a much more elaborate system to ferry astronauts and equipment to and from the ever expanding Space Stations. They were even looking at plans for making the Saturn V's first and second stages recoverable and reusable. Originally Launch Complex 39 was to have 6 launch pads. Then it got cut to 3, then only 2 were built. They built 3 mobile launch towers, but only 2 were ever used.
All the working plans and proposals are still there to be seen. With NASA’s budget being cut after 1966, bit by bit NASA’s ambitious plans started to dwindle. After Apollo 11 it was planned to have 4 Apollo launches a year till Apollo 20. This soon got cut to 2 per year and at the same time Apollo 20 was cancelled. In late 1970 future contracts to build more Apollo CSMs, LMs and Saturn Vs were cancelled. The remaining 5 CSM: 3 would be used for Skylab of which there would only be 1 Skylab now. One CSM was planned for the then hopeful Apollo Soyuz mission and the last CSM(now in a museum) was modified to hold 5 people as a potential rescue mission for Skylab crews. One of the remaining three SaturnVs would be used to launch Skylab, the last two are now museum pieces.
NASA’s budget continued to get cut and along with it Space Shuttle kept being scaled back from what NASA wanted. In 1975 NASA started to redo Pad 39A for the coming Space Shuttle. But NASA kept begging to get Apollo going again and maintained Pad 39B for Apollo and tried to maintain as much of the Apollo infrastructure and talent as they could. But by 1977 it was clear Apollo was dead. So NASA let the Apollo infrastructure and talent atrophy away.
Through the terms of Regan, Bush, Clinton, Bush and Obama, NASA was pushed and pulled in many directions with start and stop goals given and taken away. All of them with plans to return to the moon. Bush 2 laid out the most promising plan for a return to the moon in 2004 with the Constellation Program. It called for a return to the moon before 2014. In 2010 Obama cancelled Constellation after a lot of money and effort had been spent. All with budgets nothing like the had in 1966. The current Artemis plans which rose out of the ashes of Constellation are 12 years old and moving at a snails pace on a shoestring budget. Another reason it is taking so long.
Go look up NASA’s plans and dreams. Would have been amazing had they been allowed to carry on. NASA was thinking exploration, human expansion and potential research science and resources to gain. The government thought, beat the USSR and not much more.
6 times with untested "tech". 50 years later...
Ooops how do we do it.
Laughably fake
@@BadAtTeaDude LOL you lack of any kind of research is laughable. How do you mean untested. Every piece of major equipment was tested more then once. Both uncrewed and crewed. If would would read it, I would tell you the reason for the 5 year gap, but that would be like reading. What has you convinces it was, "Laughably fake"?
@@williammann9176 😴
Untested
Fake
3:40 how is sound propagating?
Great question! It’s being transmitted through the hammer, up through the glove and insulated from vacuum uniform to the microphone he’s speaking through.
Eagerly waiting for live footage of Artemis Mission
20 years away.
Those astronauts had awesome evenings.......every night was full moon.....
Full of bull too
One day , India will send men to Moon. Good work NASA.
@DilipAghav I hope they do send people.
@@anonymous-hz1mf They also photographed the Apollos 11 and 12 landing sites and low and behold there are the LM lower stages. Oh we are in another space race. May not have the urgency of the 1960s one, but indeed a race. NASA and it's partners are still currently in the lead. But China, India, Japan and even Russia have eyes on the moon.
If they would ever get out of those scam centers and into the labs. Then maybe Mr Patel
@@chillindylan9828 You mean green-screen technology.
Got enough Indians on Earth
Something I've always wondered about and would love to see a video of is the procedures to deal with all the equipment, dust and samples once they enter the lunar module after a long EVA.
They take a shower after exiting the studio
It was a huge problem for the astronauts, one of them had a small heart attack and never fully recovered. Combating lunar dust will have the highest priority in future lunar missions.
@@spamm0145 , ,, ,
Unfortunately no footage of them exists exiting or entering the module.
I have yet to see footage of the lander leaving the surface and back up to the orbiter. The lander may still be sitting there for all I know. I can imagine they orbited and began wondering if they could get off the surface since they'd never practiced it . And decided to put down the lander and leave it. There's so many gaps in the narrative it makes you wonder.
My whole life I knew this happened but I NEVER knew how funny these guys are!! especially the one who kept falling 😂😂
YOU'RE PRETTY BUT NOT BRIGHT IF YOU THINK WE SET FOOT ON THE MOON
@@leelunk8235 I still don’t know!! I definitely don’t 100% think we did.. but while watching this it was hard not
to believe… 🙄😂
@@alexandriaa44100% WE DIDNT. IMPOSSIBLE
@@lecrabesavant4435 1967 WE DIDN'T EVEN HAVE COLOR TV'S. WE CANT EVEN SEND ASTRONAUTS TO THE ISS WITHOUT THEM EXPLODING, HELL NO WE DIDN'T
Someone needs their diaper changed. We got a party pooper in the comment thread.
This is an amazing documentary. Absolutely stunning.
Amazing documentary
Parabéns astronautas, parabéns NASA, parabens Apolo 17
Thank you ❤
Watching this in 2023 after Artemis finally went around the moon, I'm so hopeful that we (USA) will put another man or woman on the moon in next few years and I can't wait to hear about how much we learn from that, since it's been almost 60 years. Imagine the technology change. I hope this inspires the gen Z kids .
Me and you go 😔💖
USA never put anyone on the moon lol
Do you really believe USA send a human to the moon? Thats all blue lies no one has never been to the moon.
They’re aiming to put a LGBTQ+ BLM person on the moon.
@draco moron on marijuana spotted 😂
At that time Hollywood could not achieve that realism
Why not, if they could fly to the Moon with 2500 tons rocket, instead of required 800 000 tons, and equipped with onboard computer of few dozens kilobytes? And carrying lightweight cameras better than Hollywood ones - look how their cameras were able to track and zoom them, while both are busy, e.g. 4", or 24"? That was amazing technology, not like modern 21st century junk, letting barely phone zombies to drop me off my bicycle, as they don't even know, they already left their walkway!
Amazing achievement!...thank you 👍🇳🇿
Agreed. I talked to my teenage daughters about it often and am so glad they haven’t been indoctrinated into the nonsense so many do now. They watch and research the science.
Definitely an achievement! It fool the whole world.
Sky with no stars? Unbelievable!
You’re thanking them for fooling you? 🫣
@@brightcamp4091But if Russia flew to the moon, you would definitely believe it 😂😂😂
Fantastic story and documentary - but sadly some of the captions were almost illegible against the moon surface shots
12:24 😂 “deadgummit”
had a nice laugh
The footage from Apollo 17 is amazing!
Better quality cameras and it was quite the journey/exploration/sampling mission
Seemed like a fun one 😃
Hope we get back to the moon soon.. it’s hard to believe we forgot how to get back there when we were comfortable doing it back in the 70s
By this mission it was practically second nature.. we got good at it
Imagine if we would have kept going back and built a base there🤔
Go NASA go SpaceX
Potentially one day away from the second orbital attempt of Starship!
Can’t wait! 🚀
I’m calling that starship makes it into orbit this time and attempts reentry 🤞
We will build a moon base soon to pave the way for a mars colony and i cant wait either we’re living in one of the best times for space exploration
amazing report ... from the brave iraq 🇮🇶
❤ WOW FANTASTIC ❤ I LOVE YOU MY FRIEND 🇺🇸 ❤❤❤
25:28 tiene los abdominales de Thor para levantarse asi o una hermosa ayuda cinematográfica?
Amazing... ❤❤❤
Is the camera that they used to watch the astronauts from the NASA center still there?I mean it's still installed on the moon and does it work?
No. It burned out 27 hours after Apollo 17 lifted off. It was never designed to survive the heat of a lunar high noon. (In the case of Apollo 17, the camera even burned out prior to high noon. The Apollo 16 camera made it to high noon, though, then burned out.) It also ran on batteries that are long dead by now.
That poem by jack is outstanding
Amazing😘😘
Can someone describe to me out the EVA worked at the very end? The one on the way home... since the Command Module didn't have an airlock, how did they perform an EVA?
They put their suits on before depressurizing the cabin, and took their suits off only after the cabin was repressurized. Can you tell me which video you watched that told you to ask this?
@@rockethead7 It's amazing to me such a small spacecraft could hold that much oxygen..but then again the service module was pretty awesome.
@@erichaynes7502 Small? It's like a two stairs building.
An airlock is not required for a studio on Earth.😀😀😀😀
@Mr Renics Dumbster On Marijuana Spotted😂
This documentary was before the internet was even invented! This is soo amazing 🥰🌚🫶🏼
Very nice
Just amazing....wow!
How the flag fluttered when there was no air in it.كيف رفرف العلم عندما لم يكن هناك هواء فيه.
@@حيدرابوكرار-ن9ب pretty confident the flag did not have air in it. Just like flags on earth! What it did have was movement by the astronaut. An object when moved is going to move, regardless of atmosphere or not.
@@erac5855
الهبوط كذب امريكا لم تهبط على القمر هذا تصوير على الأرض.
The landing is a lie. America did not land on the moon. This is a depiction on Earth
@@حيدرابوكرار-ن9ب whatever helps you sleep at night
It is just unvelivable that they put mens on the moon with the tecnology that they got those days, just incredible
Sorry, the word "technology" doesn't work that way. You don't get to just say "technology" like it is supposed to mean something without clarifying. Can you name the EXACT technology you think they lacked? And, can you explain why none of the thousands of engineers who designed and built that particular technology ever realized that it wouldn't do what they designed it to do?
@@rockethead7 why are you so angry haha like you know everything 🤣
@@Sly253 😂😂
Pues ahí están las pruebas.
@@Sly253 Y tu lo sabes todo? Cual es tu fuente, la biblia? 🤣🤣🤣🤡🤡🤡
خدا کا بڑا احسان ہے کہ اُس نے ہماری زمین میں کششِ ثقل ( gravity power ) رکھی ہے ورنہ ہم زمین پر اسی طرح کوُد کوُد کر چلتے۔ جس طرح یہ خلاباز چاند پر اُچھل اُچھل کر چل۔رہے ہیں ۔ زمین پر زندگی گُذارنا اور کوئ کام دھندا کرنا مُشکل ہو جاتا ۔ اللہ تعالی کا لاکھ لاکھ شکر ادا کرنا چاہیے ۔ سید مہتاب علی نیندڑو انڈیا ۔
Dio? Quale Dio? È l'uomo artefice. Studi Darwin e l'evoluzione della specie oppure continui pure a credere alle favole.
@@marcominelli2578In his tales the sky is solid and the moon is nailed to the sky 😂😂😂
thank you successful landing all Astronaut thank you congratulation from Bangladesh 🇧🇩♥️🙂👍
Amazing.... 👍🔥
17:07 I don’t know how long this chamber on the astronaut’s chest is, but if the length of this chamber is 0.25 meters, then the astronaut’s height should be 1.25 meters. Even if it is 0.3 meters, then his height is 1.5 meters. This is also very little. The chamber would need to be about 0.4 meters long for an astronaut to be 1.8 meters tall. But I don't think this camera model is that big
The answer is at your fingertips. Just look up the dimensions of a Lunar EVA Hasselblad EL with 70mm film mag used on Apollo 17.
@@williammann9176 I didn't find the size on the Internet, tell me if you have it on hand
I grew up during Apollo and I don't remember ever seeing any videos like these. Was I too busy playing with my matchboxes or was there some reason they were being withheld from the public? And if they were withheld why release them now?
Sadly, the later Apollo missions just weren't 'important' enough for the TV networks. With no Internet then you had no other way. I watched everything I could of Apollo as a kid, but much was never shown at the time.
No human has ever set foot on the lunar surface...ever.
@@daryllect6659 Yes when our only source of information has been corrupted you pretty much cant believe what is real and what is fiction.. They have destroid morals and in its wake an honest society. Now many people dont hesitate to rewrite history even when they werent there and have no idea what they are saying.
@@daryllect6659 👎
@@daryllect6659 And what is your proof to validate your statement?
who is recording at 39:20?
Same exact person as the entire rest of the mission, and the two missions before. Ed Fendell.
The liftoff was recorded with a camera on the mission's Lunar Roving Vehicle.
so they left it there? im asking cause i dont know lol
@@rcairflr
@@joeybrennan3893 No, you're trolling cause you're very ignorant and want to believe your little story. Your guru is proud of you. Good boy.
The question is valid if you do not know the history. But the answers are literally at your fingertips. The camera was mounted on and powered by the Lunar Roving Vehicle(LRV) It was controlled from Earth in Mission Control by Ed Fendell. There are 3 of those cameras on 3 LRVs on the moon still.
What movie is that??
Not a movie, little one. It’s real life. You should try it some time. 😂
The one shot on location 240 thousand miles away where there is no atmospheric pressure, no wind, no weather, no air, nothing that would keep dust in the air like here on earth. No floating dust. Kick it up and it will stick, but it will not suspend in the air.
Is not easy for them over there, great men with brave mind, God bless united state of America
What was the maximum distance between the Lunar Module and the Rover?
Well, they covered about 20 miles total across the 3 EVAs. But, to answer your question more directly, the greatest distance from the lunar module on Apollo 17 was around 4-5 miles. You can get a better understanding by looking at the Apollo 17 rover traverse map.
@@rockethead7 OK, thank you 🙂.
@@rockethead7 4-5 miles is still pretty far, though. Quite scary. Luckily you cannot really get lost because the tracks you made are still there. But what if the space suit conks out? You must always trust the equipment.
Sure, but, ya know, these guys were going to the moon, not taking a commercial airliner flight. There were risks all over the place. Most of them were test pilots (and that's not exactly a "safe" career). Prior to being an astronaut, Cernan's last job was to train for WWIII, to fly along the tree line with nuclear bombs strapped to the bottom of his plane, get to the city he was supposed to bomb, pull up into a vertical climb, release the bomb (flinging it upward), then to pull out of that at top speed and get away before the bomb blows him to smithereens. Armstrong had 78 combat missions, including one where he was shot down behind enemy lines. Aldrin had 2 combat kills under his belt. The list goes on. These guys weren't exactly afraid to take risks.
The rover traverses were planned to hit the furthest point in the traverse toward the beginning of the EVA. They may have one or two stops before getting to the furthest point. But, basically, the idea was that they would first go far, then snake their way back, thus allowing the most oxygen remaining in their backpacks for the furthest distances, and would go closer and closer to the lunar module as they used their oxygen supply.
What happens if there are suit problems? Well, each PLSS backpack had an OPS system on top (which included a small spare supply of oxygen, good for around 1/2 hour). They could also share air between the two astronauts if they needed. Those hoses you see on the suits could be plugged and unplugged, and if one guy's PLSS failed completely, they could share with the other one's PLSS to get back safely. The suits themselves had 13 layers of ripstop fabrics in the outer garment, plus another half dozen layers under that, including a self-sealing layer (a lot like WWII fighter planes had self-sealing fuel tanks in the wings if they get hit by bullets). And, if somehow all of that failed, they were trained on how to patch small holes. A large hole that instantly depressurizes the entire suit would render the astronaut unconscious in about 2 minutes, and dead a few more minutes after that. But, that's a lot of time (relatively) for the other astronaut to try to patch something together to pressurize his partner's suit again. And, yeah, of course, beyond that, sure, it would be fatal if none of those things worked. But, I think the engineers designed things to be more resilient than you might know (?).
@@rockethead7 You are correct. Being a test pilot is very risky.
As you correctly state, all the equipment for the space missions is top-level, as well as the training of the astronauts. It is still not 100% foolproof but it is very close.
The astronauts also needed a very high level of mental and emotional toughness as well. They must possess so many qualities and abilities on so many levels. They are the elite of humanity in many respects.
V good information thank u super
❤
Who is filming?
So, you don't know something as simple as how the camera worked, yet, you know enough to declare that the entire planet's aerospace engineers are wrong about their own expertise, and you're right?
Not film, video. Ed Fendell. I know you have heard this before. Just not sinking in yet, if ever.
Is Google down where you live?
goosebumps
fraldas?😢😊😊 ameaças,cangurus , treinos para viagem a lua e Stanley?
Interessante passeio.
Incredible😢
12:08 Jack fighting to get upright, so hilarious 😂.
Those suits were really heavy duty full proof.
😂😂😂😂❤
Is this real video of apollo 17
Well those suits certainly proved you a fool.
@@neilarmstrongsson795 "dead gummit" twice?😂😂😂
Jack is hilarious! They joked about a ballerina company calling Mission Control to offer him a spot.
They took a Golf Buggy to the Moon, but FORGOT THEIR GOLF CLUBS.
Such a pity ... with so many Bunkers on the Moon.
Alan Shepard didn't.
@@yassassin6425 Yep, Yaasin ... Alan got a Birdie and an Eagle. Neil Armstrong may have been the FIRST MAN on the Moon, but Good Ol' Al was the FIRST to finish 8 Under Par.
Apollo 11 Press conference ( after the greatest hero of mankind come back to earth )
I don’t think that’s what this video was. But if you want to chat about test pilots who at that point were pretty tired of telling the same story and same details and knowing you still have a world tour coming up…
@@erac5855 He didn't say, what he means by "press conference". However all three of them look weirdo sad all the very long time rather than tired. All three exactly same deep level of sadness. Not like any average man looks after coming back from such crazy excurision, all of them in one piece! They weren't forced to go thru many press conferences. It could be only one, or very few for sure, then no one publicly spoke a single word for years.
i enjoyed the part 1 and the last piece of the documentary, hard to believe this was 50 years ago!! Shame they never continued with it until the end of the 70s, They could have pushed for mars in the 80s with a manned landing in the 90s or the 00s at latest. But for mars, i think all space programs on the planet need to unite for that one. Thanks fellas for the ride!
They never went to the moon in the first place.
Whoever said that the moon has dust like the earth. Watch as they jump how the soil scatters. They are now in the ground. They film. Lie they're in on the moon.
من قال ان القمر به تراب مثل الارض. شاهد وهم يقفزون كيف تنتشر التربة. هم الآن في الأرض. هم يصورون. أكذب أنهم على القمر .
"Hard to believe" - because it never happened, ever...& never will...
The world is an amazing place, why "explore" out of this world myths, when we have so much unknown on earth??
I'll wait...
Here none believers were going back so sit and wait. mission, Artemis II, is scheduled to take place in November 2024 with the four-person crew circling the Moon but not landing on it. As part of the Artemis program, NASA aims to send astronauts to the Moon in 2025 - more than five decades after the historic Apollo missions ended in 1972.
Nice video
The moon missions are more than technological work. They are amazing feats of humans being on another world, & doing research into early history of our solar system. The deniers in my opinion, need to be taught what they denied on this actually happened. I am in awe of the moon landings. I wish I was there with them, but I was too young.
Oh yeah. The tech is only one piece of the puzzle. A necessary piece, but not sufficient to get to the moon. The social and psychological aspects are also necessary.
@@gives_bad_advice very true.
40:48 The antenna at the top right is shaking. Has the cosmic breeze blown?
I can see why someone could question that. As the LM is approaching the CSM the RCS are constantly firing around the LM lining up to dock. Every firing send vibrations through the LM causing items not totally locked down to move.
Good moon 🌗 thanks 👍 to happy motion
Lengends of universe 🙌🙌👏👏 forever 🎥
¡¡ Qué apasionante y hermoso momento !!!! EL DESPEGUE 💪💪💪👍👍👍👍👍👍
This is a desert area and they deceived the world.
Excellent Editing works from Usa😂
Editing nhi hai
In the summer of 2006 at a tiny air show in Three forks Montana I was visiting with my father-in-law I sat in the shade of an airplane
So what
6 minutes and 37 seconds are perfect for this video😢😢😢😢😮
What?
Technology may have looked boxie and old but not inferior, it was built strong. Like an old car.
Thanks 👍 on moon 🌘 base
Excelente, felicitaciones!!!
I wonder if that moon buggy still works? 🤔
After 50 years of thermal cycling, probably not.
@@Hobbes746
But there’d be no corrosion.
@@JoeRivermanSongwriter Correct, no corrosion.
Thermal cycling means the rover is exposed to big changes in temperature. Materials expand and contract at different rates when the temperature changes. So in anything made of a combination of materials, e.g. a printed circuit board, you get large forces pulling components apart. I suspect you’d have to completely replace the electrical system, and all moving parts with tight tolerances (wheel bearings, for instance) to get an LRV to run again.
@
Ah ok 👍
Hollywood's special effects are so good, 50 years ago they made such a good movie
Especially the broken fender part in the script and the Apollo 13 drama. The director had been biting his nails he couldn't not get an Oscar. And the Earth is not round - it's flat!
LOVE💖💖💖
There is a distinct line between the foreground and the blurry bsckground in every frame,
Yes, it's called a "horizon." Amazing, huh?
@@rockethead7 Amazing is that blurry background is before horizon.
@@jazemkrzysio
Depends. Are you talking about TV video? Film video? Distance to objects in the background? Apparent horizon or real horizon? What was the camera focused on? Result vary depending on details.
Amazing sound from moon to earth is instant
Well, no. Listen to the original recordings, and you can hear the pauses before the astronauts reply to Mission Control. This is often edited out for brevity.
@@maxfan1591 he's an idiot
Interesting
) это вдохновляет
just amazing subahan Allah ❤
subhanaloda ola u uber chuslimmms
Allah?😂😂😂😂😂😂
34:03 really cool moment that will probably be concluded sometime in the next decade...
Amazing! And people still don’t believe we went to the moon… 😂😂😂
It's amazing that there are so many uneducated people incapable of critical thought. No human has ever set foot on the lunar surface...ever.
What proof do you have that says that we did….? Some blurry old movie films?
@@Showboat_Six
Over a third of a ton of moon rock is a good place to start.
@@Showboat_SixYeeeah and what those blurry old movies show.
Cuz we didn’t. Thanks
Mantap ,kami warga dunia bangga kepada amerika...
Өте ғажап екен
😂 amazingly fake!
@@FthaPoliceBut if Russia flew to the moon, you would definitely believe it 😂
Well done everyone
A masterpiece by Stanley Kubrick..
LMFFFAAAOOO only an idiot could compare 2001 and its CLEAR green screen, dust flying LIKE IT'S ON EARTH, and such short single shots with perfect framing... Stanley TROLLED everyone because of how ignorant you people are, AND YOU STILL BOUGHT IT 🤣🤦♂️🤡
Got proof? 😊
Didn’t think so, pathetic. 😂
wikileaks
@@boggle272 ?
Great great work
The advancement of mankind..
By the way, on the moon, the temperature in the sun reaches 160 degrees Celsius. How long can you sit in the sauna?
No, the highest temperature is 120 Celsius. And, no Apollo mission ever landed when it was that hot. They all landed early in the lunar morning, long before the temperature got that high.
@@rockethead7 My opinion, the Apollo mission was recorded for the USSR, in the struggle for supremacy, when Gagarin flew into space.
Is that all you're capable of doing? Change topics?
@@rockethead7 I don't even want to be mistaken. And the moon is not gray. Brown is correct, just because the temperature is high during the day and the surface is red-hot like a red brick.
It's not even possible to have a dialog with someone who obviously cannot stay on topic. You opened by talking about the surface temperatures. You were wrong. I replied to correct you. Since then, all you've done is talk about other things.
I'm 69 years old and I followed all of NASA's missions very closely. What really saddens me is that I might not live long enough to see any nationality of humans return to the moon.
The last men on the moon will soon be the latest men on the moon. :-D
hopefully the last one remaining will live to 110!
Full performance ?
Hello ❤❤❤❤❤
It was because of their greate determination
Oh God. I want go there.
قم بعمل فيلم كوميدي مثلهم في الصحراء. Do a comedy movie like them in the desert. you succeed.
Can Artemis mission show the world proofs of human landing on the moon?
That's not one of its objectives. There have been a million other ways to prove Apollo. Adding one more is not going to make a bit of difference to the deniers.
8:22 see how he is pulled up by some wire. standing almost 45 degree to the ground.
"see how he is pulled up by some wire"
Huh? Do you mean the communications antenna?
"standing almost 45 degree to the ground."
Not even close to 45 degrees. But, tell me, what angle would you stand at, while on a sloped ground, while wearing a suit and backpack that weighs more than you do? You don't think you'd be hunched forward?
It’s the PLSS VHF radio antenna, so he could communicate with his colleague on the moon and the CSM and in Houston
@@rockethead7 What Recocebo said, is kind of communication in fact. Or I'm wrong? ;-)
Horisont is always black, but it looks like it’s daylight on the planet according to the shadows. Other footage is I’ve seen from another flight actually is a little strange because the lighting doesn’t match up always with what’s perceived. And in addition, it’s always black in the horizon, but no stars again. And then that other footage that I was speaking about with the shadows in my job putting the flag up and I know it was stiff so it would be straight up for some reason but there’s supposed to be no airflow there and yet there was on the flag. It was stiff and attached to a stick.
You need to do some real research as to why the stars do not show. Can you see the stars on Earth during the day? There was a metal rod holding the flag out. Again a little real research would help you there. Also again, just because it does not look like you think it should does not mean it is not real.
I don't understand it, therefore it's fake.
Sorry typo first word. ..is .. “horizon”
It wasn’t daytime. It was nighttime of darkness ..Of which IS WHEN WE SEE THE STARS AT NIGHT .. that’s what I was saying.
@@terryregas1748 Apollo landings were always Lunar morning. That was so they would have the light of the sun and long shadows. Just because the sky is black on the moon does not mean it is night. If it was night the stars would be seen by the astronauts and they would have to bring lighting. But it was day time on the moon.
How did the real time transmissions on the moon and earth and between astronauts happen via radio waves and primative battery packs in a vacuum?
Tmobile has multiple cell towers on the moon
🤫
Huh? Primative batteries? Is that like batteries for primates? Or, did you mean "primitive," but you're functionally illiterate? What's primitive about them? And, why do you think radio would have an issue with a vacuum? What ARE you talking about?
@@rockethead7 ok bad spelling . It was an honest question can you answer?
Spare me. You know nothing about radio, batteries, or the English language. You aren't asking honest questions.
So now we have another lander on the moon - apparently lying on its side, but it's there and is transmitting. It'll be interesting to see how we progress to the next stage.
There is a program called Artemis. Artemis I has already flown. It was unmanned, orbited the moon and came back. Artemis II will fly a similar mission but with astronauts on board. Artemis III plans to land men on the moon for the first time since Apollo 17 in 1972.
@@willoughbykrenzteinburg
I wouldn't bet on Artemis III landing. NASA is already backtracking and saying that Artemis III might be another orbital mission. It's pretty doubtful that either of the landers will be ready on time.
@@rockethead7Hadn't heard that. Bummer.
@@willoughbykrenzteinburg spacex moment
They've already contracted Blue to be a "2nd lander" to the SpaceX version. As far as I'm concerned, it's only a matter of time before they cancel SpaceX altogether. I was shocked from Day-1 that they even chose SpaceX and that hideous monstrosity. But, when the person on the NASA board who was leading them to select SpaceX got a high paying job at SpaceX, yeah, it made more sense about why that happened. As soon as Blue shows that they're ready to fly, my guess is that NASA will dump SpaceX. SpaceX is a joke of a rocket company, powered more by hype than rocket fuel.