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Space Forum / Astronomy / July 2008



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Somethin' for the 'Moon landing hoax' groupies

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oldcoot - 10 Jul 2008 03:16 GMT
http://news.yahoo.com/s/space/20080709/sc_space/waterdiscoveredinmoonsamples
BradGuth - 10 Jul 2008 03:53 GMT
And how many million tonnes of moon rock should be found and easily
identified as such on Earth?

Obviously folks don't have a clue as to where some of those secondary
shards of moon went after each of those major impacts.

Remember that I'm the only one that's insisting our Selene/moon used
to be extensively ice covered, especially prior to having encountered
Earth.

- Brad Guth Brad_Guth Brad.Guth BradGuth

> http://news.yahoo.com/s/space/20080709/sc_space/waterdiscoveredinmoonsamples
Hagar - 10 Jul 2008 04:08 GMT
> And how many million tonnes of moon rock should be found and easily
> identified as such on Earth?
[quoted text clipped - 5 lines]
> to be extensively ice covered, especially prior to having encountered
> Earth.

So, Guthball, you're back to that inexplicable "lithobraking" thing again.
So, one more time, the Moon is composed partly of material from the Earth
and partly from whatever it was that collided with the Earth. It should be
no big surprise then that there are traces of water in the Moon's rocks.
BradGuth - 10 Jul 2008 04:20 GMT
> > And how many million tonnes of moon rock should be found and easily
> > identified as such on Earth?
[quoted text clipped - 7 lines]
>
> So, Guthball, you're back to that inexplicable "lithobraking" thing again.

I've never left that mindset of our Selene/moon lithobraking as it
encountered our 98.5% fluid Earth.

> So, one more time, the Moon is composed partly of material from the Earth
> and partly from whatever it was that collided with the Earth. It should be
> no big surprise then that there are traces of water in the Moon's rocks.

Correct, the same as if our once upon a time icy Selene/moon having
come to us from Sirius-B.  For once we 100% agree that our moon could
have been wet or perhaps even icy wet.

- Brad Guth Brad_Guth Brad.Guth BradGuth
Hagar - 10 Jul 2008 15:09 GMT
>> > And how many million tonnes of moon rock should be found and easily
>> > identified as such on Earth?
[quoted text clipped - 20 lines]
> come to us from Sirius-B.  For once we 100% agree that our moon could
> have been wet or perhaps even icy wet.

So, the Moon, once upon a time a planet orbiting the White Dwarf Sirius B,
was ejected from its orbit and then travelled 8.6 light-years through space
and smoothly lithobraked itself into a nifty orbit around our relatively
puny Earth ... yer a friggin' loon.
Go seek help, they can fix your problem.
oldcoot - 10 Jul 2008 15:22 GMT
> So, the Moon, once upon a time a planet orbiting the White Dwarf Sirius B,
> was ejected from its orbit and then travelled 8.6 light-years through space
> and smoothly lithobraked itself into a nifty orbit around our relatively
> puny Earth ...

Litho.. hmm, refers to rock or stone. So litho-braking (as opposed to
aerobraking) would be deceleration (or stoppage) by direct contact
with terra firma. Sounds more like the Collision theory. :-)
Hagar - 10 Jul 2008 17:02 GMT
On Jul 10, 7:09 am, "Hagar" <ha...@sahm.name> wrote:

> So, the Moon, once upon a time a planet orbiting the White Dwarf Sirius B,
> was ejected from its orbit and then travelled 8.6 light-years through
> space
> and smoothly lithobraked itself into a nifty orbit around our relatively
> puny Earth ...

Litho.. hmm, refers to rock or stone. So litho-braking (as opposed to
aerobraking) would be deceleration (or stoppage) by direct contact
with terra firma. Sounds more like the Collision theory. :-)

OC, keep in mind that "litho-braking" is a Guthball invention.  No one
except him knows exactly how it works, but in HIS view, the Moon came
careening from out of nowhere and was captured by the Earth ...
BradGuth - 10 Jul 2008 18:58 GMT
> On Jul 10, 7:09 am, "Hagar" <ha...@sahm.name> wrote:
>
[quoted text clipped - 11 lines]
> except him knows exactly how it works, but in HIS view, the Moon came
> careening from out of nowhere and was captured by the Earth ...

On many of our road service trucks they utilize large air filled
modules in order to minimize those apparently unavoidable rear-end
encounters that would otherwise kill most anyone plowing into such a
heavy rig that's moving slow or parked.

At poorly designed intersections or with complex clover leaf
interchanges is where the local state highway systems uses a series of
large plastic containers of water for the same safety solution of aqua-
braking instead of hard steel reinforced cement-braking.

A public supercomputer could run this series of complex lithobraking
simulations as based upon the regular laws of physics, as otherwise
polished off by the best available science, none of which I've had to
invent or skew in order to suit my conjecture/theory.

-    Brad Guth Brad_Guth Brad.Guth BradGuth
BradGuth - 10 Jul 2008 18:33 GMT
> > So, the Moon, once upon a time a planet orbiting the White Dwarf Sirius B,
> > was ejected from its orbit and then travelled 8.6 light-years through space
[quoted text clipped - 4 lines]
> aerobraking) would be deceleration (or stoppage) by direct contact
> with terra firma. Sounds more like the Collision theory. :-)

Lithobraking also includes ice to ice encounters, of which a very
thick ice (say 100 km thick) coated Selene encountering an ice-age
Earth having perhaps as much as a 3~4 km layer of ice at the glancing
Arctic point of encounter could have managed to survive such a
horrific cosmic sucker-punch, with perhaps 10% of the existing life on
Earth having survived as well, and not that a few centuries worth of
seriously bad terrestrial environment times didn't follow this icy
encounter.

Why does everything have to be so simple minded in order to fly within
this Google/NOVA server of our DARPA Usenet/newsgroups?

-    Brad Guth Brad_Guth Brad.Guth BradGuth
Hagar - 10 Jul 2008 18:49 GMT
>> > So, the Moon, once upon a time a planet orbiting the White Dwarf Sirius
>> > B,
[quoted text clipped - 12 lines]
> Earth having perhaps as much as a 3~4 km layer of ice at the glancing
> Arctic point

BWAHAHAHAHAHAHAH 3~4 km ... take yer meds. loon.
BradGuth - 13 Jul 2008 01:30 GMT
> >> > So, the Moon, once upon a time a planet orbiting the White Dwarf Sirius
> >> > B,
[quoted text clipped - 14 lines]
>
> BWAHAHAHAHAHAHAH 3~4 km ... take yer meds. loon.

I believe in places it was even thicker than 4 km, especially as of
24,000 years ago.

Honest physics and peer replicated science certainly blows your socks
off.  Too bad that none of it can be applied on behalf of Earth, our
moon or Venus without your blowing another gasket.

-    Brad Guth Brad_Guth Brad.Guth BradGuth
Saul Levy - 10 Jul 2008 20:28 GMT
No way, BradBoi!  lmfjao!

The SUVs were causing Global Warming back then too!  lmao!

The ice was very thin, if any.

Saul Levy

>Lithobraking also includes ice to ice encounters, of which a very
>thick ice (say 100 km thick) coated Selene encountering an ice-age
[quoted text clipped - 9 lines]
>
>-    Brad Guth Brad_Guth Brad.Guth BradGuth
BradGuth - 10 Jul 2008 18:16 GMT
> >> "BradGuth" <bradg...@gmail.com> wrote in message
>
[quoted text clipped - 26 lines]
>
> So, the Moon, once upon a time a planet orbiting the White Dwarf Sirius B,

Silly DARPA boy, it seems at the time Sirius-B wasn't a white dwarf,
but instead going through a rather nasty red giant phase.  Of course
you had to have know that because you're supposedly so much smarter
than all the rest of us combined.

> was ejected from its orbit and then travelled 8.6 light-years through space
> and smoothly lithobraked itself into a nifty orbit around our relatively
> puny Earth ... yer a friggin' loon.
> Go seek help, they can fix your problem.

Silly DARPA boy, our passive solar system had likely been considerably
closer to the complex and relatively massive Sirius star/solar system,
and there was absolutely nothing smooth about any lithobraking
encounter with an icy Selene.  What the f*ck makes you the one and
only interpretive god of all that's physics and science (your over
sized balls and extended pecker don't count any better than your butt-
cheek brains).

What part of your DARPA boot camp taught you and so many others of
your incest mutated kind to be such a perpetual killer-bee swarm of
liars and rusemasters of topic/author stalking and skewing of topics
kind, as you continually spew such intentional disinformation?  Was
your teacher some kind of a special Zionist god of hocus-pocus, or did
you get taught how to f*ck each and everything in sight by the likes
of Hitler himself?

What part of orbital and physical encounter physics "duh" of the icy
kind don't you understand?

-    Brad Guth Brad_Guth Brad.Guth BradGuth
Hagar - 10 Jul 2008 18:40 GMT
>> >> "BradGuth" <bradg...@gmail.com> wrote in message
>>
[quoted text clipped - 62 lines]
> What part of orbital and physical encounter physics "duh" of the icy
> kind don't you understand?

Your f.cking ridiculous version, Guthball.
Yer a certifiable nutjob.
BradGuth - 10 Jul 2008 23:10 GMT
> "BradGuth" <bradg...@gmail.com> wrote in message
> > What part of orbital and physical encounter physics "duh" of the icy
> > kind don't you understand?
>
> Your f.cking ridiculous version, Guthball.
> Yer a certifiable nutjob.

Then we can agree that no matters what the physics or best available
science, revising the status quo textbook version of anything is next
to impossible.  I guess that's why Columbus discovered America first,
Muslims had all of those WMD and your Old Testament is the one and
only word of God.

-    Brad Guth Brad_Guth Brad.Guth BradGuth
Saul Levy - 10 Jul 2008 20:26 GMT
The Solar System has NEVER been any closer to Sirius than it is now,
BradBoi!  lmfjao!

Oh, what's the new period for the Sun's orbit around Sirius A/B?

Saul Levy

>Silly DARPA boy, it seems at the time Sirius-B wasn't a white dwarf,
>but instead going through a rather nasty red giant phase.  Of course
>you had to have know that because you're supposedly so much smarter
>than all the rest of us combined.

>Silly DARPA boy, our passive solar system had likely been considerably
>closer to the complex and relatively massive Sirius star/solar system,
[quoted text clipped - 16 lines]
>
>-    Brad Guth Brad_Guth Brad.Guth BradGuth
Saul Levy - 10 Jul 2008 19:45 GMT
The only hope BradBoi has is a TOTAL LOBOTOMY, Hagar!  lmao!

Saul Levy

>So, the Moon, once upon a time a planet orbiting the White Dwarf Sirius B,
>was ejected from its orbit and then travelled 8.6 light-years through space
>and smoothly lithobraked itself into a nifty orbit around our relatively
>puny Earth ... yer a friggin' loon.
>Go seek help, they can fix your problem.
Hagar - 10 Jul 2008 20:52 GMT
> The only hope BradBoi has is a TOTAL LOBOTOMY, Hagar!  lmao!
>
> Saul Levy

There's no there there, nothing to lobotomize ....
Saul Levy - 11 Jul 2008 00:06 GMT
Yep, that's true, Hagar!  lmao!

Saul Levy

>> The only hope BradBoi has is a TOTAL LOBOTOMY, Hagar!  lmao!
>>
>> Saul Levy
>
>There's no there there, nothing to lobotomize ....
Hagar - 11 Jul 2008 20:44 GMT
> The only hope BradBoi has is a TOTAL LOBOTOMY, Hagar!  lmao!
>
> Saul Levy

As I always say:
I'd rather have a bottle in front of me,
than a frontal lobotomy.
Painius - 11 Jul 2008 21:31 GMT
>> The only hope BradBoi has is a TOTAL LOBOTOMY, Hagar!  lmao!
>>
[quoted text clipped - 3 lines]
> I'd rather have a bottle in front of me,
> than a frontal lobotomy.

Heh, had to think about that one for a moment.  <g>

happy days and...
  starry starry nights!

Signature

Indelibly yours,
Paine Ellsworth

P.S.:  Thank YOU for reading!

P.P.S.:  http://painellsworth.net

 
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