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It was Impossible to Fake the Moon Landing on video in 1969
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[quote:Halcyon Dayz, FCD:MV80MDE3MDYyXzcyODI2NzE3X0NFQzdBOUNE] [quote:Anonymous Coward 76676317:MV80MDE3MDYyXzcyODExNTE4Xzg3OEIyMjVC] How come there are no stars? Too hard to fake. Just leave them out. [/quote] Ooh boy! A time traveller from 1974. Everybody who has ever tried to photograph stars understands why stars don't show up in the regular lunar surface pictures. Hoaxies on the other hand understand nothing. You should be embarrassed. :book: [quote:anonym0us coward:MV80MDE3MDYyXzcyODEzODM0XzFFREE1NzJB] So, when you place a tin can in a vacuum environment, once the air is removed from around the can, it seals the opening tightly shut. The opening cannot be released without great force once it's back in an aired environment. If that is the case, how did the astronauts manage to open the door of their rocket once it was surrounded by a vacuum? [/quote] By letting the air out first. [quote:anonym0us coward:MV80MDE3MDYyXzcyODEzODM0XzFFREE1NzJB] The vacuum would have tightly sealed the door shut, assuming it didnt totally squash the tin can, sorry rocket into a tiny piece of metal. [/quote] You still seem to think that vacuum can exert a force. It is [i]the air inside[/i] (at about 1/3 atm) that pushes against the door and the walls. If the air pressure inside an airtight container exceeds the structural strength of the container the container would rupture, NOT crumble. (Spaceships have pressure valves to avoid this.) [quote:anonym0us coward:MV80MDE3MDYyXzcyODEzODM0XzFFREE1NzJB] Okay, Halcyon Dayz, at your advice, I'm doing some research. [/quote] You clearly need to do a lot more. Like, pick up a secondary education physics text book. :book: [/quote]
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