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  • NASA | Ten Cool Things Seen in the First Year of LRO
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    Envoyée le mercredi 23 juin 2010 11:36:32
    par NASAexplorer
    Vue 6147 fois
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    To celebrate one year in orbit, here are ten cool things already observed by NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter. Note that the stories here are just a small sample of what the LRO team has released and barely touch on the major scientific accomplishments of the mission.

    Visit http://www.nasa.gov/LRO to read about these images and many more!

    Like our videos? Subscribe to NASA's Goddard Shorts HD podcast:
    http://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/vis/iTunes/f0004_index.html

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  • FirstPersonShitter

    you have to be an almost unhuman douche to dislike vids like this.
    lundi 26 mars 2012 06:39:55
  • ErickW666

    Science trumps religion every time, because facts hold more weight than primitive myths.
    vendredi 17 décembre 2010 10:47:13
  • pisoff44

    lol? maybe Sceince have proofed many things but not all also Religion have proofen some stuffs.
    jeudi 16 septembre 2010 15:37:00
  • DackIsBack

    "Science (from the Latin scientia, meaning "knowledge") is, in its broadest sense, any systematic knowledge-base or prescriptive practice that is capable of resulting in a correct prediction, or reliably-predictable type of outcome..." - Wikipedia. Nothing like religion... Science = Knowledge. Religion = Socially Acceptable Mass Psychosis. Faith = Belief without Evidence.
    lundi 05 juillet 2010 17:35:00
  • khunopie

    NASA puts the god in Goddard.
    mardi 29 juin 2010 10:51:35
  • DrDoe1

    I wonder how the coldest place in the solar system is on the moon? You would think one of those ice moons or even something closer to the edge of the solar system would be colder....
    dimanche 27 juin 2010 16:43:58
  • gadget133

    Makes sense... I would suppose that you would get a chalky limestone (in texture only of course) stratification once you went down a meter or so... Yes, it would be a huge bonus to the understanding of how the solar system formed. The fact that there is no geological movement gives us an unprecedented ability to study impacts also. Makes you cry at the whole "never been back" thing.
    dimanche 27 juin 2010 03:05:17
  • gadget133

    From memory... That ocean looking thing on the far side is actually the remnants of a molten ocean after a collision or impact from a comet or meteor. Same as on the near side. And the core drill would have to be VERY long to get anything useful as most of the surface is dust... Very fine dust. And that is rather deep in places.
    samedi 26 juin 2010 02:57:03
  • austpom333

    What was that i heard about firing rockets into the moon, why?
    vendredi 25 juin 2010 05:24:07
  • UltraRebels

    You bring the rocket. I'll bring the crackers and a tea kettle.
    jeudi 24 juin 2010 17:55:06
  • wakeboarder124

    that sounds educated
    jeudi 24 juin 2010 15:07:02
  • joachim2464

    because there is no air there is nothing to stop the flag from moving. Therefore the kinetic energy from the astronauts transfered to the flag makes the flag move een more on the moon than on earth and it takes longer for the flag to release all the energy.
    jeudi 24 juin 2010 04:41:53
  • ivanjesik

    :-)
    mercredi 23 juin 2010 23:55:03
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