Message from @Citizen Z
Discord ID: 608292096528351263
And thereβs an interview with Neil Armstrong and he is asked if he saw and stars and planets while in space and on the moon and he said he didnβt see any stars or planets , he just saw a deep black void and the earth but I watched another interview with Don Petit and he said he sees plenty of stars all the time in space. So whoβs lying ?
so u believe it was faked bc a story changed?
π€‘
Well that could be explained. Neil lives in new york where there is a lot of light polution in the sky, so it is harder for him to see the stars and other things in the sky
He was in space
He said he didnβt see any stars and planets in space
And how did Apollo 11 go through the Van Allen radiation belts
Van allen belt argument lom
@π~π΄πππ~π lots to say to your comments but i have to goto work. Catch you later
the van allen belts are made up of charged particles, protons and electrons
Cuz NASA
I will give you a link for the space belt
Ever hear of the high voltage orbital long tether experiments?
the aluminum skin of the module protected against the protons, while polyethylene lining protected against the electrons
A tether once broke during testing
even then, the apollo module went around the belts
They drained a bunch of it
Link me.
A vid of that
Do you know how hazardous that radiation is? Aluminum is not effective whatsoever
Tons of interesting things about the supposed belts
They were trying to drain the belts in order to make it easier to leave LEO
Wreckless
U know what I like? Links. They would be amazing rn
Aluminum is most definitely effective against protons
^
Protons can be stopped by almost anything
<:fakenews:574732963460284427> @Citizen Z
Whats fake news?
the fish bowl thing
also every single one of ur half baked arguments
Its mainstream info
@Superiorna_Artiljerija I donβt understand, everything has protons
thereβs a reason nobody believes flat earth except people like you
Ok
Mate Iβm with you, the earth is flat
It's not an argument
@PhumoZTYPE these are individual particles, which can cause damage with direct hits to the nucleus of another atom