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Artemis II astronauts witnessed meteorites striking the moon's surface.
Posted on 4/9/26 at 8:40 am
Posted on 4/9/26 at 8:40 am
LINK
quote:
During their flyby of the far side of the moon, the Artemis II astronauts aboard the Orion spacecraft saw as many as six flashes emerging from the lunar surface. Surprisingly, they were witnessing small meteorites impacting the ground and producing brief flashes of light.
NASA's control room recorded the team's surprise during the mission livestream, although the cameras did not pick up the flashes. According to the astronauts, the flashes were white or blue-white and lasted less than a second. The cameras they were using to document the moon weren't fast enough to record them.
The crew was flying between 6,000 and 7,000 kilometers away. Under normal conditions, these impacts would have gone unnoticed. However, at the time they were studying the solar eclipse, which left the far side of the moon completely dark. That extreme contrast allowed them to distinguish the brief flashes that emerged from the surface.
Since the idea of building permanent lunar bases first arose, different teams have assessed the risks to future inhabitants. Today, the two major challenges are “moonquakes” and meteorite impacts. For the former, there are plans to install seismographs to help understand the phenomenon. For the meteorites, astronomers already know the approximate frequency, and observations such as the six recent flashes help to refine existing models.
In space exploration, even small objects can pose a risk. For example, a micrometeorite traveling at tens of kilometers per second can puncture thin materials or damage essential equipment. Fragments whose surface area exceed centimeters act as high-energy projectiles, similar to bullets, and could compromise a habitat. Objects larger than 1 meter across generate craters; while they're extremely rare, they pose a real risk.
Posted on 4/9/26 at 8:41 am to LSUDVM1999
quote:
The cameras they were using to document the moon weren't fast enough to record them
Hollywood needs to up their game.
Posted on 4/9/26 at 8:42 am to LSUDVM1999
They are in a production room filming all of this nonsense.
Posted on 4/9/26 at 8:42 am to LSUDVM1999
quote:
The cameras they were using to document the moon weren't fast enough to record them.
Oh sure, sure. Bet they saw little green men too
Posted on 4/9/26 at 8:45 am to LSUDVM1999
quote:
they were witnessing small meteorites impacting the ground and producing brief flashes of light
quote:
NASA's control room recorded the team's surprise during the mission livestream, although the cameras did not pick up the flashes
quote:
The cameras they were using to document the moon weren't fast enough to record them.
This post was edited on 4/9/26 at 8:46 am
Posted on 4/9/26 at 8:48 am to Cockopotamus
I think this is my favorite gif of all time.
Posted on 4/9/26 at 8:53 am to The Torch
quote:
They are in a production room filming all of this nonsense
Posted on 4/9/26 at 8:57 am to LSUDVM1999
I remember being a kid and wanting nothing more than being an astronaut and flying to the moon.
Nowadays I have so many questions first. The liftoff is probably nauseating right? How do you take a shite in private? Would I really have to eat MRE type food again? What if the other MFers snore and I can't sleep? Where do I get coffee in a spaceship? Who is gonna mow my grass while I'm gone? How do I watch the LSU game?
Nowadays I have so many questions first. The liftoff is probably nauseating right? How do you take a shite in private? Would I really have to eat MRE type food again? What if the other MFers snore and I can't sleep? Where do I get coffee in a spaceship? Who is gonna mow my grass while I'm gone? How do I watch the LSU game?
Posted on 4/9/26 at 9:06 am to The Torch
quote:
They are in a production room filming all of this nonsense.
You're in your mom's basement hiding from the real world
Posted on 4/9/26 at 9:20 am to LSUDVM1999
Posted on 4/9/26 at 9:21 am to LSUDVM1999
Video or it didnt happen
And if there was video its probably AI
And if there was video its probably AI
Posted on 4/9/26 at 9:22 am to LSUDVM1999
Ah yes, the meteors were too fast.
So, no pictures after the collisions? Prior?
That’s just unfortunate
So, no pictures after the collisions? Prior?
That’s just unfortunate
Posted on 4/9/26 at 9:23 am to LSUDVM1999
quote:
the Orion spacecraft saw as many as six flashes emerging from the lunar surface. Surprisingly, they were witnessing small meteorites impacting the ground and producing brief flashes of light.
NASA's control room recorded the team's surprise during the mission livestream, although the cameras did not pick up the flashes. According to the astronauts, the flashes were white or blue-white and lasted less than a second. The cameras they were using to document the moon weren't fast enough to record them.
how many millions did we spend on this buffoon mission?
Posted on 4/9/26 at 9:24 am to Hback
bro, you space floated. THE END. QUIT TRYING TO GLORIFY YOUR DUMB shite
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