Tag Archives: Moon

Electric moondust

We’ve been to the moon. Driven around, even hit golfballs. Been there, done that. Faced with the prospect of returning, and setting up a permanent outpost, however, NASA is studying the place all over again and finding things never imagined. Moondust, for instance. It made a mess of the Apollo astronauts, clinging to their spacesuits and their equipment. Now there’s speculation that it could even be electrifying, at least during a full moon. That’s when the moon flies through the tail of Earth’s magnetic bubble. None of the Apollo landings took place during a full moon, so no one knows for sure, but future explorers may need to ground themselves against a shocking experience, at least once a month.

Looking back

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The home planet and the moon from 88 million miles, taken by the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. 

That’s one small step…

No kidding. Talk about pathetic, as Instapundit says. Spend all that money, make all that effort, then go to the moon and pick up some rocks and hit a few golf balls. And never–NEVER–go again. Past pathetic. Bizarre. At least Houston got free advertising, and grew, and grew, and grew. Where was I? On patrol in Vietnam. Not, therefore, paying a whole lot of attention. I remember being only vaguely aware of it. Where were you?

First word from the moon: Houston

While Times Online claims Neil Armstrong’s planned utterance ("One small step…" etc.) was ungrammatical–and sci fi writer Arthur C. Clarke (writing in 1986) agreed–until an Australian computer expert recently uncovered the missing article. Well, every Texas schoolboy knows the REALLY important matter was the First Word from the lunar surface, not those planned-in-advance words.

That first word? "Houston," as in Armstrong reporting the landing by saying "Houston, Tranquillity base here…" etc. I used to have a colorful poster of an orbiting city made up by the Houston chamber of commerce crowing about it. As a paid scribe, I even once examined the official transcript to confirm it.

Comes Wikipedia claiming the first words were those of Buzz Aldrin: "The first words spoken from the surface were Aldrin’s, who reported ‘Contact Light’ as the Eagle’s landing probe touched the moon."

Harrumph. This is why, as we so often hear, Wikipedia’s encyclopedic veracity is questionable at best. 

Moon bigger

After the recent resuscitation of the "closer Mars" hoax, are you ready to fall for another space claim? Even if it is true?

"Tonight’s full Moon is the biggest and brightest of 2006."

Plus, for those in Australia, Asia, Africa and Eastern Europe, the moon will be partially eclipsed. 

Today’s pretty picture

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The moon from the International Space Station/NASA