Stars: You're on Earth not the moon, we have a thing called the atmosphere that keeps us from being fried by intense heat (which would be accompanied with intense light)Funky_Finny wrote:
As I previously stated before, stars ARE bright enough to be exposed on a camera film, regardless of the shutter speed. Tonight I will take a picture of the sky at 1/2000 of a second (The fasted shutter speed my camera will allow) to prove it to you.
And to explain the almost thousand pounds of lunar rock, they landed un-manned space craft on the moon, I'll accept that, and that could pick up rock. Maybe not as efficiently but it could certainly do it. Didn't they make a craft that would land on Mars able to do this? I'm sure if you sent enough of these to the moon (which they did, right?) you could collect enough moon rocks.
So now you think they sent an un-manned spacecraft to the moon successfully? Why couldn't it happen to be carrying a few people then??
edit: LOL WUT, so you're saying the government made what was essentially an outer-space UAV in 1969 but god forbid a human actually landed?
Last edited by HurricaИe (2008-02-22 04:33:07)