Star Wars tbh.
It'll be interesting...will people be able to see it?
It'll be interesting...will people be able to see it?
Probably some fucked up 4th of july celebration lolSenorToenails wrote:
I searched for "blow up the moon cold war" and that is what came up. Besides, detonating a nuclear weapon on the surface is a far cry from "blowing it up".syndicat111 wrote:
No American plans to blow up the moon to show dominance over Communist Russia.
You have to remember, they were just ideas and were never actually put into motion - its the fact that this idea was explored...
http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2000/ … heobserverBest I can find so farThe US Air Force developed a top-secret plan to detonate a nuclear bomb on the moon as a display of military might at the height of the Cold War
A missile. Anti-satellite weapons have existed for quite some time.Pubic wrote:
I'm not wondering why they're blowing it up, that one is a bit of a no-brainer. How they'll blow it up is what I'm pondering...
yep they have... i laughed when everyone was all up in arms about china shooting down a satellite. we've had this shit for years:SenorToenails wrote:
A missile. Anti-satellite weapons have existed for quite some time.Pubic wrote:
I'm not wondering why they're blowing it up, that one is a bit of a no-brainer. How they'll blow it up is what I'm pondering...
You could be a rogue pilot that blows up weather balloons for fun.steelie34 wrote:
yep they have... i laughed when everyone was all up in arms about china shooting down a satellite. we've had this shit for years:SenorToenails wrote:
A missile. Anti-satellite weapons have existed for quite some time.Pubic wrote:
I'm not wondering why they're blowing it up, that one is a bit of a no-brainer. How they'll blow it up is what I'm pondering...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:ASAT … launch.jpg
things like this make me want to be the navy pilot that gets to shoot it down... now that would be a cool fucking job.
I am loling at this whole tangent.SenorToenails wrote:
No. It wouldn't.syndicat111 wrote:
Well what do you think a nuclear explosion would do to it? Aside from blow a considerable hole in it, potentially killing due to the debri and screwing tidal patterns in the ass...
The moon has a radius of 1,737.10 km and a mass of 7.3477×10^22 kg. That's large. A single nuclear weapon would not "blow a considerable hole in it" at all. Maybe a crater, but nothing that will really change the moonscape. Think about it logically. It will take a lot of explosives to blow apart the moon. Especially from the surface.
A lot of people were up in arms over the amount of orbital debris that the Chinese action produced. But then again, it was a sign that China is approaching a military maturity and capability that not many people want.steelie34 wrote:
yep they have... i laughed when everyone was all up in arms about china shooting down a satellite. we've had this shit for years:
of course we'll continue to make a big deal out of it, because if we didn't china would know we have far better technology. what better way to keep our "real" technology under wraps? idk, just throwin that out there... lolSenorToenails wrote:
A lot of people were up in arms over the amount of orbital debris that the Chinese action produced. But then again, it was a sign that China is approaching a military maturity and capability that not many people want.steelie34 wrote:
yep they have... i laughed when everyone was all up in arms about china shooting down a satellite. we've had this shit for years:
lol srsly. hey syndicate, didn't you see armageddon? that thing was waaaay smaller than the moon and even still nuking it from the ground wasnt an optionghettoperson wrote:
I am loling at this whole tangent.SenorToenails wrote:
No. It wouldn't.syndicat111 wrote:
Well what do you think a nuclear explosion would do to it? Aside from blow a considerable hole in it, potentially killing due to the debri and screwing tidal patterns in the ass...
The moon has a radius of 1,737.10 km and a mass of 7.3477×10^22 kg. That's large. A single nuclear weapon would not "blow a considerable hole in it" at all. Maybe a crater, but nothing that will really change the moonscape. Think about it logically. It will take a lot of explosives to blow apart the moon. Especially from the surface.
Again, I'm sure it's got all sorts of secret info on there... but for comparison...Aapje wrote:
If the satellite wasn't important then yes...HurricaИe wrote:
Why blow it up? It's not exactly an asteroid or a NASA space shuttle... it would probably burn up and whatever's left when it impacts the water or land won't be of any use to the Chinese or Russians.
Last edited by HurricaИe (2008-02-14 18:00:51)
i lol'dSenorToenails wrote:
Blow up the moon? How? From a surface attack? No way! Give me a source, or that is just bullshit.syndicat111 wrote:
You know, in the Cold War, it was actually planned to blow up the moon after Sputnik was released... it was cancelled because they didnt know where the pieces would land. That is trying to show strength...
like the workings of top secret spy sat technology.syndicat111 wrote:
Perhaps there are some things the US government might not want anyone else to find out about...?
Last edited by Kmarion (2008-02-16 22:22:11)
Sweet!Kmarion wrote:
Russia: US Satellite Shot a Weapons Test
gtfo
MOSCOW (AP) - Russia said Saturday that U.S. military plans to shoot down a damaged spy satellite may be a veiled test of America's missile defense system.
The Pentagon failed to provide "enough arguments" to back its plan to smash the satellite next week with a missile, Russia's Defense Ministry said in a statement.
"There is an impression that the United States is trying to use the accident with its satellite to test its national anti-missile defense system's capability to destroy other countries' satellites," the ministry said.
The Bush administration says the operation is not a test of a program to kill other nations' orbiting communications and intelligence capabilities. U.S. diplomats around the world have been instructed to inform governments that it is meant to protect people from 1,000 pounds of toxic fuel on the bus-sized satellite hurtling toward Earth.
The diplomats were told to distinguish the upcoming attempt from last year's test by China of a missile specifically designed to take out satellites, which was criticized by the United States and other countries.
Known by its military designation US 193, the satellite was launched in December 2006. It lost power and its central computer failed almost immediately afterward, leaving it uncontrollable. It carried a sophisticated and secret imaging sensor.
Left alone, the satellite would likely hit Earth during the first week of March. About half of the 5,000-pound spacecraft would probably survive its blazing descent through the atmosphere and would scatter debris over several hundred miles.
Military and administration officials said the satellite is carrying fuel called hydrazine that could injure or kill people who are near it when it hits the ground.
The operation to shoot down the dead satellite could happen as soon as next week.
http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id … _article=1