Apollo 12: The Complete Descent

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Apollo 12 - Apollo Flight Journal

Apollo 12 - Apollo Flight Journal

5 ай бұрын

A detailed account of every second of the Apollo 12 descent and landing on Oceanus Procellarum in the Moon's western hemisphere. The video combines data from the Lunar Module's onboard computer for altitude and pitch angle, with 16mm film that was shot at 12 frames per second during the approach and terminal phases of the descent. The audio recording of the air/ground communication has been subtitled to aid comprehension.
This video is part of the Apollo Flight Journal, Apollo 12 collection.
A12LSJ: www.nasa.gov/history/alsj/a12...
A12FJ: www.nasa.gov/history/afj/ap12...
Also available by David Woods: 'How Apollo Flew to the Moon'.
This book is available from all usual outlets including Google and Kindle as well as paperback and audiobook.

Пікірлер: 211
@triadmad
@triadmad 4 ай бұрын
Those two had such a great sense of humor and weren't afraid to show their joy at what they accomplished. My greatest regret from that mission was when they tried to remove the video camera that would provide a live feed from the surface, it accidentally got pointed directly at the sun, resulting in the light sensors being burned out. It would have been a joy listening to them as they did their work around the LEM.
@respectbossmon
@respectbossmon 4 ай бұрын
Yeah those saticon tubes were so delicate. That particular cam also had a rotating RGB filter that was supposed to result in 'true' color video. The hope was the color wheel was stuck, blocking the camera. That's why Alan Bean tried fixing it by tappy-tap-tapping the camera case with his hammer. It didn't work. Astronaut Bean's camera issues didn't end there. He left one of the Hasselblad film magazines on the Surveyor lander because of a distraction. And either just before, or during splashdown, a 16mm event camera broke loose from its mount and hit him in the face! I always wondered if these were part of his motivation to take up painting. He produced some beautiful works.
@richardhill2643
@richardhill2643 5 ай бұрын
Fantastic, just to hear the excitement in their voices while concentrating on doing their job as their tension builds a little towards actual landing. Just terrific!
@proto-geek248
@proto-geek248 4 ай бұрын
Wow! That was absolutely awesome. Thank you SO much for this great work. Those were the days, man. I remember setting my alarm as little kid so I could get up at 5am to watch Apollo coverage. Alan Bean came to our school & I got to shake his hand. I thought I was gonna faint lol. I was in total awe.
@2Oldcoots
@2Oldcoots 5 ай бұрын
Unforgettable history of magnificent human achievement! Thank You so much for preserving this!
@Chatta-Ortega
@Chatta-Ortega 4 ай бұрын
Those guys had a blast up there. RIP crew of Apollo 12.
@ovalhunter488
@ovalhunter488 3 ай бұрын
I met Conrad about a year before he was killed. He was shorter than I expected, but his intensity was incredible.
@challenger2ultralightadventure
@challenger2ultralightadventure 4 ай бұрын
I remember as a kid being glued to the black and white TV, watching every second in total silence. I'm sure that was duplicated all over the world. For a short while, we were all one race, the human race, and we were all smiling. I wonder if that feeling will happen again around the world when we set foot on Mars?
@skyedog24
@skyedog24 4 ай бұрын
Yep I got an Apollo rocket for Christmas in 1971 I have a picture of it.
@MrSimonw58
@MrSimonw58 4 ай бұрын
Was s* in the old days
@Rocketman5442
@Rocketman5442 4 ай бұрын
Loved those guys. If I could have flown on any mission it would’ve been with these 2.
@jawoody9745
@jawoody9745 4 ай бұрын
Two of the best, most intelligent Commanders and Pilots we had! Pete Conrad cracked EVERYBODY up. He was meticulous, and humorous as hell.
@gary6449
@gary6449 4 ай бұрын
55yrs ago - when we could actually DO things like this !
@KevinVenturePhilippines
@KevinVenturePhilippines 4 ай бұрын
Not sure how the gravity of their massive balls didn't disturb the landing! Holy moley! That was a heck of a ride! All that dust they couldn't see jack! IFR, wow. Legends. Thank you so much for this!!
@mattc.310
@mattc.310 4 ай бұрын
Outstanding. Thanks for the upload.
@phillipdavis3316
@phillipdavis3316 4 ай бұрын
Apollo 12 was always my favorite mission. The stress of making the deadline over, this one was much more relaxed and performed by the best crew. Being struck by lightning twice, SCE to AUX, the precise touchdown, and the cuff prank all make this mission more awesome. Sue Bean was my neighbor up until about two years ago. She is awesome, classy, and a sweet woman. I think that I scared her at first with my NASA nerdiness. Her cassaroles are amazing. IMO, the cuff checklist prank was one of the best pranks ever. Cudos to Scott, Worden, and Irwin for doing that. I know that Conrad and Bean agreed.
@JONESSTI01
@JONESSTI01 2 ай бұрын
What a navigator to fly with. He was clear, precise, confident, gave confidence and optimistic with a positive result. Man these were the days! I wish we had things like this nowadays.
@kendo4242
@kendo4242 4 ай бұрын
There are some people living in the Northern and Western U.S. states who hear a southern accent and immediately think " slow country hick". Well guess what? These "slow country hick" astronauts with their southern accents were some of the bravest and most intelligent Americans who ever lived.
@garywiseman5080
@garywiseman5080 4 ай бұрын
The all Navy crew endured two lightning strikes, were saved by 27 year old John Aaron with set SCE to Aux, tolerated excessive RCS firing due to sloshing fuel tanks, and made a pinpoint landing next to surveyor 3. What a flight! Go Navy!
@joevignolor4u949
@joevignolor4u949 5 ай бұрын
One correction. I believe you were thinking about the helium supply tanks in the ascent stage, which do contain gaseous helium at high pressure. In contrast the helium tanks in the descent stage were not filled with helium gas at extremely high pressure. What's in the tanks is supercritical helium, which is an extremely cold, dense cryogenic liquid that is stored at a relatively low pressure. Supercritical helium has other compounds mixed into it that allows it to change phases from a liquid to a gas very quickly when it's exposed to higher temperatures. During the operation of the descent engine, helium gas from the supply tank is routed through a heat exchanger on the descent engine. This warms the gas and then it goes back and flows through a heating coil located inside the supply tank. This dumps additional heat into the supercritical liquid helium inside the supply tank, which boils more liquid to produce even more gas. From there the pressurized helium gas goes to the fuel and oxydizer tanks to pressurize them to greater than about 110 psi to maintain the flow of propellants into the engine.
@apollo12-apolloflightjourn11
@apollo12-apolloflightjourn11 5 ай бұрын
Thank you for your comments. The one detail that you mention that is new to me is the addition of other compounds into the LM's cryogenic helium to enable the supercritical state. I would be very interested to learn more and if you can point me to a source, I would be most grateful. You seem to say that there were multiple supercritical tanks. I'm only aware of one such tank, plus an ambient tank that was used to get the system going until the flow of fuel through the heat exchanger was established. In a video such as this, there is neither time nor space to give a full description of a system. Suitable simplification is required for brevity. Since the pressure in the supercritical tank was between 400 and 1,750 psia (27 to 119 times Earth atmospheric pressure), one can argue whether or not this is 'extremely' high pressure or just high pressure. I was, and still am happy with my brief description.
@lajoswinkler
@lajoswinkler 4 ай бұрын
Supercritical helium is not a liquid, but a fluid. Liquids and gases are fluids and supercritical fluids are something that has some properties of both.
@Erny_Module
@Erny_Module 4 ай бұрын
Awesome indeed! Such a brilliant concept - the audio, video, technical explanation all synched up and presented in an easily understandable fashion. Outstanding work, and really highlights what a momentous achievement the entire Apollo programme was. I was just old enough to watch and remember all the Apollo landings, and now I can truly understand and appreciate what I was seeing and hearing all those years ago - enormous thanks from a devoted fan!
@mikewa2
@mikewa2 4 ай бұрын
Amazing technology for the time. Shame the US was unable to continue with Moon after Apollo, they had the brilliant brains to have made it to Mars many decades ago
@tedpeterson1156
@tedpeterson1156 4 ай бұрын
The vertical assembly building could hold 4 Saturn V rockets, the plans were for 100+ launches. 1986 was considered the best launch window for a crewed Mars mission. Congress threw it all away, leaving only Skylab, and the flying brick aka shuttle which (technically) couldn’t really even reach earth orbit.
@NoIce33
@NoIce33 4 ай бұрын
One thing, money (the Apollo program was a huge sinkhole that could not really last for ever); the other thing is that Mars really was considered, which led to the realisation that it would be practically impossible to put a live human there.
@TheGarywolfbarron8
@TheGarywolfbarron8 4 ай бұрын
Love the joy in their voices!
@johnnyallred3753
@johnnyallred3753 4 ай бұрын
I don't see how you could watch this and listen to Pet Conrad and Al and Bean land in the Sea of Storms and belive the Moon Landing was fake. It's the real thing ! . Thank you for the video.
@sblack48
@sblack48 4 ай бұрын
The faker people are completely devoid of any scientific or engineering knowledge and they didn’t live through it like some us did. They’re basically disaffected losers who think everything is a deep state conspiracy. Most of them barely have high school and certainly nine have any STEM qualifications. Therefore their opinion really is worthless. It’s like debating Shakespeare with someone who doesn’t even know the alphabet. It’s not even worth the effort.
@philfyphil
@philfyphil 4 ай бұрын
No one with any degree of intelligence would think otherwise.
@sblack48
@sblack48 4 ай бұрын
@@philfyphil not a single prominent astronomer, physicist or other scientist or engineer has ever cast any doubt on the moon landings. The conspiracy theorists are all without exception science and tech have nots yammering on about flat earths and firmaments etc, ironically sending out their idiotic nonsense on cell phones to the internet via satellite etc.
@GlennSisson
@GlennSisson 4 ай бұрын
Excellent! Thanks so much for this truly wonderful annotated presentation of the landing! You all were able to present so much information and detail in such an easy to consume way that it was really exciting and great fun. Conrad's excitement is so irrepressible and heartwarming. Love it. (and now I think I'll have to go watch Episode 7 of Tom Hanks's "From the Earth to the Moon" miniseries which covers Apollo 12... it is great fun too!)
@lajoswinkler
@lajoswinkler 4 ай бұрын
Beautiful, spot on landing.
@JorgeRzezak
@JorgeRzezak 4 ай бұрын
Absolutely amazing! Thanks a lot for the video I remember being a little kid at this times. As a non American I am so proud of America!
@771jlp
@771jlp 4 ай бұрын
Amazing! Amazing!
@Stralnikov
@Stralnikov 4 ай бұрын
Many, many thanks for doing this!
@martinhahn1390
@martinhahn1390 5 ай бұрын
Great work, as always! Thanks!
@davidjames4915
@davidjames4915 5 ай бұрын
Fascinating. I knew that Apollo 12 landed at the Surveyor 3 landing site, but never knew how that was achieved. I've long thought that Apollo 11 should have landed at the Apollo 12 site, or one of the other promising Surveyor sites, given how close-run the actual 11 landing was due to unexpected debris fields.
@apollo12-apolloflightjourn11
@apollo12-apolloflightjourn11 5 ай бұрын
There was nothing wrong with the intended Apollo 11 site. They just didn't land where intended. The landing ellipse for that mission was chosen to be a relatively smooth area. Apollo 11's issue came from navigation errors that took it six kilometres downrange of the centre of the ellipse and nearly into unplanned territory.
@craigw.scribner6490
@craigw.scribner6490 4 ай бұрын
Awesome! I was 14 when Apollo 12 touched down and your video brings back some great memories--thanks!
@toucheturtle3840
@toucheturtle3840 4 ай бұрын
Absolutely love Al Beans enthusiasm. RIP.🤘🏻
@billsmart2532
@billsmart2532 4 ай бұрын
Wow! I had no sense of distance looking at those self-similar craters, textbook Mandelbrot example.
@juliendenat3678
@juliendenat3678 5 ай бұрын
Thank you ! Great job !
@geraldo209
@geraldo209 Ай бұрын
Absolutely amazing!
@ynp1978
@ynp1978 3 ай бұрын
This is some really good stuff!
@PatGleeson123
@PatGleeson123 4 ай бұрын
In the words of Alan Bean "Outstanding" 🙂
@tuladog77
@tuladog77 4 ай бұрын
Chills! Awesome video.
@barryispuzzled
@barryispuzzled 4 ай бұрын
I think part of the excitement is having some ground to stand on, any kind of ground, after floating around in space in a tin can for several days!
@martinlulak9601
@martinlulak9601 5 ай бұрын
Outstanding!!!
@johnjoesdeli
@johnjoesdeli 4 ай бұрын
Just amazing!
@jdcjr50
@jdcjr50 4 ай бұрын
Thank you so much!
@Dolores5000
@Dolores5000 25 күн бұрын
Fantastic
@InAMinMaths
@InAMinMaths 4 ай бұрын
Great effort thanks 🙏
@fantansam
@fantansam 5 ай бұрын
American ingenuity at its best. I love it. Awesome!!!.
@lukepepper3949
@lukepepper3949 4 ай бұрын
Plus British engineers/scientists and astronomers. Without the British designed fuel-cells none of the missions would have worked.
@DCresident123
@DCresident123 Ай бұрын
research how much of it is actually american...
@doitatit
@doitatit 4 ай бұрын
We were watching the news on the BBC, from our home in West Belfast and Patrick Moore came on to the tv, just before the weather came on. All excited he told the audience to rush out side and look to the West! And there was stage 2 of Apollo bright in the late autumn sky. It was 6:30pm.
@alfoldi01
@alfoldi01 4 ай бұрын
Great video, i stared till the end with open mouth...
@husky450s
@husky450s 4 ай бұрын
❤❤ amazing love it
@mtlassen1992
@mtlassen1992 4 ай бұрын
Who woulda thunk flat Earthers would be born 10 years later and dream up conspiracies of a Hollywood movie set?
@Shell1950
@Shell1950 4 ай бұрын
I had a tape deck and was able to record the landing off my radio. Lots of fun
@olsmokey
@olsmokey 4 ай бұрын
I was holding my breath all over again.
@monkey_gamer_001
@monkey_gamer_001 4 ай бұрын
I used to play a game called Moon Tycoon. Some of the audio from this conversation is used as ambient dialogue. Very interesting to hear familiar phrases dotted throughout
@greatsilentwatcher
@greatsilentwatcher 4 ай бұрын
Grew up during all this. The Gemini missions were my favorites.
@danshearer7627
@danshearer7627 3 ай бұрын
And we did this with the computing power of a calculator. Amazing!
@user-up3lf6wv3s
@user-up3lf6wv3s 4 ай бұрын
Спасибо за Историю!
@cha7664
@cha7664 4 ай бұрын
Great! Will you add the other 16mm magazines to this channel as well? Especially the one with footage of the eclipse.
@apollo12-apolloflightjourn11
@apollo12-apolloflightjourn11 4 ай бұрын
All 12 16mm magazines have just been added. Enjoy. Mag F has the eclipse at the end.
@cha7664
@cha7664 4 ай бұрын
@@apollo12-apolloflightjourn11 Amazing, thanks so much for your work! I just want to ask, do you also plan to add all 16mm mags to the Apollo 16 flight journal channel?
@robmyjob8870
@robmyjob8870 2 ай бұрын
What is that shadow-like black line in the window on the right that appears with P64 at 6000 feet and follows them all the way to the surface?
@tedpeterson1156
@tedpeterson1156 4 ай бұрын
8:32 “We never saw that $&cking gauge move in training, ever. We were convinced it wasn’t actually hooked up”
@Alanoffer
@Alanoffer 4 ай бұрын
Incredible the quality of comms they have no delay between the moon and the earth
@toucheturtle3840
@toucheturtle3840 4 ай бұрын
The delay was clear…
@tubecated_development
@tubecated_development 4 ай бұрын
You’re trolling
@dennypayne
@dennypayne 4 ай бұрын
Quite clearly a delay of about 2 seconds where they occasionally step on each others transmissions. Exactly as expected.
@johnbidwell2393
@johnbidwell2393 4 ай бұрын
This is a recording of comms as heard in mission control in Houston. The only perceivable delay in comms would be when CAPCOM say something that the crew respond to. For example 8:57. Otherwise, CAPCOM's responses to the crew are real-time, as you would expect.
@wayneschenk5512
@wayneschenk5512 4 ай бұрын
Some nervous release on the way down knowing they were in peril if things didn’t work out.
@ezequielpiacenza3776
@ezequielpiacenza3776 4 ай бұрын
Un logro increíble excelente 👍 de 🇺🇸🌍👌🌟
@badlands555
@badlands555 4 ай бұрын
Is the surveyor ever visible in the film of their descent?
@user-cz7hp6qx1v
@user-cz7hp6qx1v 4 ай бұрын
Пит молодец. Это наверное была самая мягкая и точная посадка за всю историю Аполлонов
@allgood6760
@allgood6760 2 ай бұрын
Incredible stuff! but you can't tell that to Bart Sibrel he thinks the astronots are a bunch of liars🚀
@Hobbes746
@Hobbes746 29 күн бұрын
Ironically, Sibrel is the one that has been caught lying over and over again.
@JustWasted3HoursHere
@JustWasted3HoursHere 4 ай бұрын
An interesting alternate take on an Apollo lunar landing! The Apollo Guidance Computer (AGC) is something that has always fascinated me. If it interests you as well, I highly recommend the following two talks about it: - "Light Years Ahead | The 1969 Apollo Guidance Computer" kzfaq.info/get/bejne/eJd6ZbV-1NiuiIE.htmlsi=4SnUAqGS69v39Dau (This is a detailed, but humorous, account of what the AGC did and what happened during the Apollo 11 descent done by a very knowledgeable young man) - "34C3 - The Ultimate Apollo Guidance Computer Talk" kzfaq.info/get/bejne/rt5nf8mZmrmvhYU.htmlsi=nfe4UJEE8xLyejv3 (This one is even more detailed and goes into specifics about how the AGC operates, including its command set! Probably most interesting to programmers.)
@DCresident123
@DCresident123 Ай бұрын
Wasnt the original footage lost or written over?
@apollo12-apolloflightjourn11
@apollo12-apolloflightjourn11 Ай бұрын
This is 16mm film footage. By using the phrase "written over", it implies an assumption that this was video recorded on magnetic tape. Two entirely separate things are being mixed up here, but that is the way of modern information exchange. It doesn't have to be correct to be spread far and wide. What is likely being referred to as "written over" is referring to the tapes that had a recording of the slow-scan video signal that was transmitted during the moonwalk of Apollo 11. That signal was converted, live, to commercial TV format for live broadcast. The source signal was recorded on tape but it was not required again - until decades later when it was realised that the rather poor conversion process could be bypassed if those tapes with the slow-scan recording could be located. They never were. Meanwhile the story was passed around and distorted. The original Ektachrome film of this 16mm footage still exists, kept in a freezer in Houston. This is a high definition scan of that footage. Film and video are very different technologies.
@Christ0pherWade
@Christ0pherWade 4 ай бұрын
12:34
@cecilchilders7698
@cecilchilders7698 4 ай бұрын
What is the descent vent ?
@BaguetteGamingOfficial
@BaguetteGamingOfficial 4 ай бұрын
after they land on the moon , they vent the remaining fuel in the descent stage. They get rid of it by letting it evaporate outside . This is to avoid any danger because working around a descent stage that still has fuel in it could be dangerous
@tonyknight9912
@tonyknight9912 4 ай бұрын
Never seen that before, shame the main camera failed for the moon walks.
@tedpeterson1156
@tedpeterson1156 4 ай бұрын
I remember that when it happened. It was a real letdown.
@largo6644
@largo6644 4 ай бұрын
👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
@mickobrien3156
@mickobrien3156 4 ай бұрын
It's funny.... 90% of the world knows Buzz and Neil.... Round up 10,000 random people.... Not one will know the names of any other of the guys that walked on the moon. Crazy.
@KPL400
@KPL400 4 ай бұрын
to help those people here goes ..Neil Armstrong, Edwin Aldrin (11) Charles Conrad, Alan Bean (12) Alan Shepard, Edgar Mitchell (14) David Scott, James Irwin (15) John Young, Charles Duke (16) Gene Cernan, Harrison Schmitt (17)
@mickobrien3156
@mickobrien3156 4 ай бұрын
@@KPL400 Nice summary. I remember the name Gene Cernan and Alan Shepard... But nobody and I mean nobody really can list off the others... off the top of their head.
@KPL400
@KPL400 4 ай бұрын
@@mickobrien3156 your right ..neither can I..
@geraldstiling3735
@geraldstiling3735 4 ай бұрын
Absolutely certain that Apollo 12 had Three man crew.. 👨🏼‍🚀👨🏻‍🚀👨🏽‍🚀..Alan Bean, Pete Conrad, and Dick Gordon😊
@olsmokey
@olsmokey 4 ай бұрын
One was left in the orbiter, same as Apollo 11.
@user-os8ws7xj5r
@user-os8ws7xj5r 4 ай бұрын
Apollo 12 was hit by lightning shortly after launch. Fortunately, no harm was done
@walterappling6230
@walterappling6230 4 ай бұрын
Talkative
@2nostromo
@2nostromo 4 ай бұрын
They build such a beautiful machine. a beautiful system and teams to match. How is it possible that they just threw it all down the gurgler? How did they pull away the support after all that beautiful work. and now standing by, watching... you've left Ukraine to wither on the vine. Who are you America? Who did you become?
@phillipdavis3316
@phillipdavis3316 4 ай бұрын
To the conspiracy theorists: where is your proof that we did not land on the moon? There is way more evidence that we, in fact, did land on the moon. Friggin mindless trolls.
@adoof4814
@adoof4814 4 ай бұрын
They have no life. There's no reasoning with those who do not want to listen, change or learn anything new. It's probably best to enjoy space content in a vacuum for that reason; no more comment sections 😂 Although it is fun to have a little argument every now and then...
@jimtussing
@jimtussing 4 ай бұрын
Not a conspiracy theorist, but are these communications altered? The communications between Earth and Apollo 12 takes about 1.5 seconds one way and there are many occurrences in this apparently uniform audio where the responses come in immediately, which would be impossible.
@tubecated_development
@tubecated_development 4 ай бұрын
Example? Timestamp?
@chsyank
@chsyank 4 ай бұрын
Yes you are, why are you picking this out? . this is a well done integrated video and audio that would have been tailored for general consumption., including removing no sound in the audio side.
@jimtussing
@jimtussing 4 ай бұрын
@@chsyank No I’m not. I’m picking it out because it stood out to me. All I’m asking is if anyone can confirm that the audio was edited in the manner in which you suggest. It’s not a hard question. If you don’t know the answer then shush.
@jimtussing
@jimtussing 4 ай бұрын
@@tubecated_development There are many examples but one is at 5:30 where Bean transmits “Roger. Copied. Plus 04200” and MCC replies immediately with no delay. Having listened to the rest I noticed that the delay only happens when Apollo 12 is talking to Houston, which would make sense if the recording of the transmissions was being made at Houston, which it was. So I think that’s what’s happening rather than audio edits. If you rewind to 5:20 when MCC transmits the 04200 info there is an appropriate delay before Apollo 12 responds.
@NoIce33
@NoIce33 4 ай бұрын
Don't cite me but I think I remember from from the Apollo 11 "real time + 50y" event that the audio was synched at times. But this is not required most of the time, as each source recording was from a certain place, mostly Houston, so the communication delay is already on the record, effectively synched. So I would guess this particular recording here should not have needed any additional synching; it was as things looked and sounded to Houston and indeed, the actual events and sounds in the LM took place 1.5 s prior.
@FlatEarth-ps8qm
@FlatEarth-ps8qm 4 ай бұрын
So does anyone know the temperature of the moon surface?? Is it hot or cold ?
@thewildcellist
@thewildcellist 4 ай бұрын
No, no one knows. It'll probably always remain a mystery. I'd recommend continuing to ask in comment sections of youtube videos. They're an excellent - possibly the best - source of important scientific knowledge.
@jamesgibson3582
@jamesgibson3582 4 ай бұрын
An easy cocktail party answer is +250F to -250F. The actual surface tempetatures during Apollo 12 are difficult to find. Google is useless as it it often lists Quora, Reddit and Wikipedia as factual sources and then asks if you really meant ro ask about something else. I have a ton of printed apollo references, now I want to know what the surface temp was during that mission!
@thewildcellist
@thewildcellist 4 ай бұрын
@@jamesgibson3582 All of the missions took place during the lunar morning (a day on the Moon is equivalent to a month on Earth). So suffice to say the temps were not extreme at either end of the spectrum during any of the landings. That was by design.
@jamesgibson3582
@jamesgibson3582 4 ай бұрын
@@thewildcellist I totally agree on the timing and the reason, and for years....up until today, I never wondered specifically what temp Apollo 12 landing site was. I figured it would be a simple google query. Not so apparemtly. I do have a ton of printed books and I am pretty sure the temps for each landing were in an appendix of one of them. I appreciate your comment, now I am just fixated.
@thewildcellist
@thewildcellist 4 ай бұрын
@@jamesgibson3582 got it. It's funny (and tragic) how so often what "should" be a simple internet search often is anything but. Good luck! Seems like those temps would be documented - somewhere.
@jerrywatt6813
@jerrywatt6813 4 ай бұрын
I would have made a lousy astronaut after my anxiety attack about a successful landing and several barf bags later i would start worring about that rocket fireing and if it was going to get me the hell out of there 😊
@the-naked-sailor
@the-naked-sailor 4 ай бұрын
At 385,0000 kms away, and given the speed of light, there should've been at least a two second delay between mission control and astronauts.
@jim2lane
@jim2lane 4 ай бұрын
The distance between the Earth and Moon does vary through a continuous cycle, but on average, communication takes around 1.25 seconds each way
@the-naked-sailor
@the-naked-sailor 4 ай бұрын
@@jim2lane isn't that what I wrote?
@tedpeterson1156
@tedpeterson1156 4 ай бұрын
@@the-naked-sailor No. No that isn’t what you said.
@the-naked-sailor
@the-naked-sailor 4 ай бұрын
@@tedpeterson1156 is 385,000 kms not the average between perigee and apogee? Does light not travel at 299,936 kms per second?
@jim2lane
@jim2lane 4 ай бұрын
@@the-naked-sailor when you say "at least a two second delay between mission control and astronauts" most people would interpret that as more than two seconds each way
@CC-nx2wh
@CC-nx2wh 2 ай бұрын
thats all the footage they have?
@TurdBoi-tf5lf
@TurdBoi-tf5lf 2 ай бұрын
There is a lot more
@Hobbes746
@Hobbes746 29 күн бұрын
Every landing was filmed with a 16mm film camera. They only had one such camera on each mission, for the landing this was installed on a bracket, looking out the window. The LM could not send a video signal to Earth during the landing: it didn’t have enough bandwidth to send video and high-rate telemetry at the same time. So there is no TV footage of the landings.
@uuzd4s
@uuzd4s 4 ай бұрын
Get some American Engineers motivated and hand them some Slide Rules and this is what happens ! 😊
@andrese.castillo8869
@andrese.castillo8869 4 ай бұрын
And now today, Nasa is landing a robot on the moon...what happened??? we are in reverse?
@andrese.castillo8869
@andrese.castillo8869 4 ай бұрын
@ard-pk4nh ...and what is now on the moon?
@andrese.castillo8869
@andrese.castillo8869 4 ай бұрын
@@TheWizard-pk4nh 50 years ago Nasa got humans on the moon, that's my point
@andrese.castillo8869
@andrese.castillo8869 4 ай бұрын
nah @@TheWizard-pk4nh your comment is so out of context. The true is there is not goals for Nasa on put a device on the moon, when they may would have a moon base with humans right now.
@jameshampton9809
@jameshampton9809 4 ай бұрын
wow! no delay from houston to lander and vice versa.
@jkorshak
@jkorshak 4 ай бұрын
I know you really want to believe that this huge and multilayered government conspiracy requiring the silent participation of tens of thousands of people to keep their mouths shut and tell no one so they could fool you somehow forgot to remember one of the most basic aspects of long distance radio communications, but the delay is there. 🤣😂
@martinc3918
@martinc3918 4 ай бұрын
There is a delay as explained in the thread with 20 plus comments. Please read that and ask a question if you still don't understand.
@stephenh5944
@stephenh5944 4 ай бұрын
They're talking past each other @5:20 and @8:00. How could that have happened, when there's "no delay"? FYI, if you've ever been on a conference call with a delay, it happens all the time.
@nik_elektrik
@nik_elektrik 4 ай бұрын
@@stephenh5944They’re talking past each other exactly BECAUSE there is this delay. You can experience it yourself with a simple Skype call. Happens all the time. So 🤷‍♂️
@stephenh5944
@stephenh5944 4 ай бұрын
@@nik_elektrik - Exactly, that was my intended point.
@GalileoScientist
@GalileoScientist 4 ай бұрын
Strangely devoid of moon landing deniers.
@gisall8205
@gisall8205 Ай бұрын
That’s because all the comments are Planted FAKE’S.
@randyjohnson6845
@randyjohnson6845 4 ай бұрын
At the beginning before the 12 second mark it shows a diagram that indicates that Apollo went straight thru the van allen belts..the lying on everyone's part is just unbelievable
@adoof4814
@adoof4814 4 ай бұрын
Radiation shielding. Next.
@randyjohnson6845
@randyjohnson6845 Ай бұрын
@adoof4814 there's no shielding...just liars
@maxfan1591
@maxfan1591 13 күн бұрын
@@randyjohnson6845 "there's no shielding" And the aerospace engineers who built the Command Module disagree with you. What's your evidence you're right?
@randyjohnson6845
@randyjohnson6845 13 күн бұрын
@maxfan1591 Jane's van allen sent two different rockets threw the belts and then he went to Russia and said no way to go threw ...and then out of no where he said it's perfectly safe
@maxfan1591
@maxfan1591 13 күн бұрын
@@randyjohnson6845 "Jane's van allen sent two different rockets threw the belts" Assuming you mean James Van Allen, yes, he gets the credit for the spacecraft. "and then he went to Russia and said no way to go threw ..." Funny, I can't find any reference to him either going to the USSR or saying there was no way through the belts. So it would be great if you could provide a source for this. I do see how he kept working for NASA in the 1960s and 1970s, helping them with preparing for Apollo and then a bunch of unmanned missions. "and then out of no where he said it's perfectly safe" Yeah, if we leave out your (currently) evidence-free claim that he said there was no way through the belts, there's nothing "out of nowhere" about him saying it was perfectly safe. Then there's the simple fact that the Soviets sent spacecraft through the belts themselves, so they had their own data to compare with Van Allen's. Should we be surprised that the Soviets had no problem with the idea of people passing through the belts?
@randyjohnson6845
@randyjohnson6845 4 ай бұрын
I thought I heard Kubricks voice
@randyjohnson6845
@randyjohnson6845 4 ай бұрын
That blowing high speed dust at touchdown didn't look even close to real..more like a black and white cartoon
@adoof4814
@adoof4814 4 ай бұрын
I've seen sand move like that in high winds. Those thrusters are damn powerful. No wonder they're kicking up heaps of fine dust. Anything else?
@randyjohnson6845
@randyjohnson6845 4 ай бұрын
@adoof4814 where's the crater under the thruster...they forgot to put any sign of a thruster on the surface..your a lyer..when have you seen sand blow that fast and then the wind stops and everything looks like it did before the wind started to blow...your a lying..thus is animation cartoon ...your lying you have never seen this before
@geraldo209
@geraldo209 Ай бұрын
Looser
@adoof4814
@adoof4814 Ай бұрын
​@@randyjohnson6845 Why would there be a crater?? Craters form from solid impacts, not from gas pushing it around 😂 Also dust settles fast on the moon because there's no wind to keep it floating when you switch off the thrusters. Use your brain.
@eilidh771
@eilidh771 4 ай бұрын
This really happened didn't it . We all live on a spinning ball spiralling through the universe at 447,000 MPH don't we ? we randomly evolved along with all life from a pile of dirt ? The gods of science tell us it is so.
@gisall8205
@gisall8205 Ай бұрын
AAAAHH. All brought to the world by Stanley Kubrick.
@Hobbes746
@Hobbes746 29 күн бұрын
Kubrick was busy filming 2001: A Space Odyssey. This was heralded as the most accurate portrayal of space yet. But the 0 g and lunar scenes in that movie are faked, and it’s immediately obvious they are on Earth. The Apollo videos show the astronauts moving in perfect 1/6 g gravity, which is only possible if those videos were recorded on the moon.
@maxfan1591
@maxfan1591 13 күн бұрын
And I suppose Kubrick knew how to create fake Moon rocks too? Was he good enough at his faking to fool the Soviets? Come on, be sensible.
@gisall8205
@gisall8205 12 күн бұрын
@@maxfan1591 You're a Good boy. Make sure to VOTE and pay your TAXES. You're just what THEY'RE looking for.
@maxfan1591
@maxfan1591 12 күн бұрын
@@gisall8205 "You're a Good boy. Make sure to VOTE and pay your TAXES. You're just what THEY'RE looking for." So are you going to explain how Kubrick faked Moon rocks or tricked the Soviets?
@robert-to7ev
@robert-to7ev 4 ай бұрын
Hoax!
@robert-to7ev
@robert-to7ev 4 ай бұрын
@@TheWizard-pk4nh Asleep
@ovalhunter488
@ovalhunter488 3 ай бұрын
Real.
@robert-to7ev
@robert-to7ev 3 ай бұрын
@@ovalhunter488 Really is a hoax.
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