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Someone suggested that lunar dirt accounted for the anomalies (Ref. 1)
seen on U.S.flags on the Moon. The explanation is impossible, because
all Apollo astronauts carried out their activities on the Moon in
daylight (Ref. 2), when the temperature is about 100 degrees C. (Ref.
3) and the flag would be bone dry. No moisture could have been left on
the flag to adhere any“dirt” to the flag.
Ref. 2: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Examination_of_Apollo_Moon_photographs#Absence_of_stars Quote from Ref. 2:“In the Apollo 11 press conference, Neil Armstrong
states that he was "never able to see stars from the lunar surface or
on the daylight side of the moon by eye" [6] Stars were visible with
the naked eye only when they were in the shadow of the Moon. All of
the landings were in daylight.[7]”
Ref. 3:
http://www.space.com/14725-moon-temperature-lunar-days-night.html Quote from Ref. 3: “Temperatures on the moon are very hot in the
daytime, about 100 degrees Centigrade. A single "day" on the moon
lasts about 28 Earth days, meaning the lunar daytime is nearly two
Earth weeks long.”
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On 5月22日, 下午11時03分, Wretch Fossil <wretchfos...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Someone suggested that lunar dirt accounted for the anomalies (Ref. 1)
> seen on U.S.flags on the Moon. The explanation is impossible, because
> all Apollo astronauts carried out their activities on the Moon in
> daylight (Ref. 2), when the temperature is about 100 degrees C. (Ref.
> 3) and the flag would be bone dry. No moisture could have been left on
> the flag to adhere any“dirt” to the flag.
>
> Ref. 1:http://www.wretch.cc/blog/lin440315/21627377http://www.wretch.cc/blog/lin440315/21627515 >
> Quote from Ref. 2:“In the Apollo 11 press conference, Neil Armstrong
> states that he was "never able to see stars from the lunar surface or
> on the daylight side of the moon by eye" [6] Stars were visible with
> the naked eye only when they were in the shadow of the Moon. All of
> the landings were in daylight.[7]”
>
> Ref. 3:http://www.space.com/14725-moon-temperature-lunar-days-night.html > Quote from Ref. 3: “Temperatures on the moon are very hot in the
> daytime, about 100 degrees Centigrade. A single "day" on the moon
> lasts about 28 Earth days, meaning the lunar daytime is nearly two
> Earth weeks long.”
>
> Read more at http://www.wretch.cc/blog/lin440315&category_id=0
Added on May 27:
No dirt could resemble these magnified neuron remains: