Quote (Scaly @ Jun 9 2016 10:15pm)
So? Did you see it in 66? how do you know it hasn't been edited since then?
Published. ezpk
Quote (Qodesh @ Jun 9 2016 10:23pm)
Waste more time debating? instead you could truly help yourself by researching
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hlJmBe1eeQA
So if the sun was actually close to the clouds, how did it fail to illuminate the rest of them?
Quote (card_sultan @ Jun 9 2016 10:42pm)
Well two things a the camera seems to be focused on the capsule, but every single cloud is also in focus - could that just be two separate photos?
Also who took that photo and how, did one of the astro-nots simply open the portal window and stick his head out to snap that?
So heres a photo of the Gemini 9a spacecraft- but who took the picture?
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/1/10/Augmented_Target_Docking_Adapter_-_GPN-2000-001418.jpgAnd actually, the angle of that craft appears to be not parallel to the plane of the earth, like it's purpose was to show you proof more than show you reality.
and you can actually see how the photo has a slightly different shade of black around the top portion of the craft where it should be the blackness of space, ugg - I guess they never saw the internet coming back in 1966 - and why is space so black - isn't the sky full of stars?
lmfao astro-nots. How did several retroreflectors get on the moon then?
You're telling me the picture is unbelievable because wispy, hazy, drifting water vapors "appear" in focus??? Bwahahahaha
Eugene Cernan took the photo, and several more for that matter. Your picture is the Agena target vehicle that Gemini missions rendezvoused with in orbit.
What does the angle of the craft matter? In orbit, you can fly "backwards," because all you'd need to is use thrusters to change orientation. No atmosphere for resistance.
Different shade of black? What kind of dodge are you trying to come up with here?
Maybe they can't see stars in the photo for
the same reason we can't see stars during the daytime, their luminosity is overwhelmed by the light on the day-side of the planet?
Quote (MaliceMizer @ Jun 10 2016 01:02am)
I would only be able to counter that with the example of the Nile, which flows north across the equator & confirms your info graphic.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ThIrG0h85Ek
Gravity is a fickle mistress I'll tell ya.
And? The Red River of the North starts in the northern hemisphere and flows north into Hudson Bay, while a few dozen miles northeast, the Mississippi River flows south into the Gulf of Mexico. The Amazon and St Laurence flow east. Now try dropping an apple in Australia and see if it falls straight down.