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Is Apollo 11's Lunar Module Still In Orbit Around The Moon 52 Years Later?
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Just to clarify, the LEM consisted of two parts. The decent module (four legged thing) and the ascent module (very small cramped thing).
When the Apollo 11 ascent module was jettisoned after the two astronauts transferred to the CSM, it was just jettisoned. Unlike the other Apollo ascent modules, which were used for impact studies, the Apollo 11 ascent module was just jettisoned to move it away from the CSM so the CSM could safely conduct its maneuvers. It was assumed that the ascent module was in an unstable orbit and would naturally decay and crash. Where and when, we really did not care too much about. The issue is the Mass Concentrations (MASCONS) of the moon are irregular. It IS possible that the ascent module was incidentally placed in a stable orbit or whether the mascons allowed it to drift into a more stable orbit. We don't know. So why has no one at NASA bothered to look for it? Simply because they don't have the time, nor the authorization to expend the resources to look for it. It would take a lot of time and resources to find something as small (both size and RCS) as the ascent module. NASA has done this before by finding a "lost' Indian lunar orbiter, but the Indian space agencies paid NASA to find it...... no one is willing to pay NASA to find the Apollo 11 ascent module. |
That would be incredible. I hope it's still there.
I thought it was cool enough that in future generations kids will be able to go on school field trips and visit the Apollo 11 landing site and see Neil & Buzz's footprints. |
If i was told in 1972 that man would not go to the moon in over 50 years i wouldnt have believed them .
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Why expend time and money to look for something that was never there? It’s been proven by science many times over the moon landing was fake.
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I believe we have been on the Moon that's for sure.
Markus |
Fun fact:
During the Apollo 13 mission, the astronauts needed to know how long would the ascent module's electronics continue to operate once the cooling system was shut down. The ascent module was used to supplement the damaged CSM after the explosion. The engineers did not need to guess at this as they already knew...From Apollo 11's ascent module. The engineers had the foresight to perform on last experiment with the ascent module after its usefulness ended. Shortly before the ascent module was jettisoned, the cooling system was shut down but all of the electronics were left on. Telemetry told them how long it took for the electronics to stop working. If memory serves me it was about 16 hours. It was a good thing these engineers were interested in finding out the answer to a question that no one ever thought would need answering...just in case. :up: |
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There used to be a Mercury simulation game that was pretty realistic -- boring that is.
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I wonder if I could see it with my telescope. Here's a couple videos I shot before I knew how to lock the focus on my phone. I think the first is at 80x magnification and the second is 120x, but I'm not sure.
https://youtu.be/aSpYr7mgqes https://youtu.be/mx0Mkw-Zymg |
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Unfortunately, no. No terrestrial telescope can see even the much larger decent modules. First the atmosphere mucks up the resolution. Second would be the aperture needed. Even the Hubble 94.5-inch mirror outside of the atmosphere can only detect objects about 300 feet wide at the distance to the moon. The largest dimension of the Ascent Model is just over 14 feet. |
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Yes, you can clearly see the effect of the atmosphere in my videos. I am certain one could not make out any module-sized objects on the surface. If my math is correct, an object that size - even at the Moon's perigee - would have an apparent angular size of 0.0024 arc seconds. But, I still wonder if one could detect the movement of an object that size if it is in orbit around the Moon. Probably not, I suppose - for the same reasons. Oh, well. |
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