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Displaying 1—10 of 1000 matches for query "Eagle_on_the_Moon_documentary_VOA_Jul_1969" retrieved in 0.027 sec with these stats:

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  • "1969" found 15091 times in 1695 documents



File:69-07-Eagle-On-The-Moon.mp4 Category:Audio
... where Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin landed, back in 1969, and see their footprints, which are still there today. One half of the Moon is always pointed away from Earth so astronomers might want to put a telescope over there. Wherever we land, remember that a day on the Moon lasts half a month ...
... will commence the second half-century of the civil space age, and it could also mark the beginning of a program to create the first city on the Moon and the initiation of the permanent expansion of the World's human civilization beyond the Earth. In commenting upon the opening stage of the new "Space ...
... as high on the Moon as on Earth. This means that stadiums for lunar sports will require very large domes. All kinds of new games can be invented on the Moon. Instead of snowboarding, folks on the Moon might have regoboarding which would involve sliding down the regolith on the sides of craters. It is likely that new ...
... they were functioning, the Apollo seismographs recorded hundreds of small meteor impacts over the course of the year on the Moon's surface. The mechanical energy released by some of these small meteors impacting the Moon might have been observed as very small explosions, say the size of a ...
... to learn about the Moon. There were three series of robotic spacecraft before Project Apollo. They were Ranger, Lunar Orbiter and Surveyor. Rangers 7-9 photographed the Moon up close before crashing on it. http ... .htm (See CDROM) Lunar Orbiter mapped the Moon's surface from orbit. http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/planetary/lunar/lunarorb.html (See CDROM) Surveyor actually landed on the Moon to study its surface. http://nssdc ...
... experience the Moon's level of gravity. The moon is rich in resources and energy. Humans will use the Moon to generate clean safe energy for the Earth. Humans will also mine metals and other materials on the Moon that will be used to reduce the ...
... down wrong. From a straight physics standpoint, the average adult can jump about 1.5 feet into the air from a standstill here on Earth. On the Moon that would be about ten feet or about seven times as high. What's disorienting is that, because of the lower gravity, while less than a second is spent in the air here on Earth, a full three and a half seconds would be spent in the air on the Moon. A pogo ...
... on the Moon, and perhaps more than one, but doing so will depend on several factors. One factor is finding useful things to do on the Moon, because we're not doing this just for fun. In the ... small animals and insects. The kinds of activities we seek to undertake on the Moon will influence the design. A base designed solely to provide support to some infrared (IR) telescopes on the Moon will be a lot ...
... a person fed. Recycling will be a very important discipline on the Moon. People who waste will be socially unpopular. By itself, the Moon could not support a population larger than a few tens or ... —numbering in the millions—could be supported on the Moon. ---- Answer provided by Thomas Matula, Ph.D. & Kenneth J. Murphy Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the book Kids to ...

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