
Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter camera has imaged the impact site of the ispace HAKUTO-R Lander, which experienced an anomaly on April 26 during its landing attempt.

NASA’s greatest FEAR is a landing on the moon and it goes terribly wrong. With astronauts onboard.

Planets everywhere…bonboard.buy none like earth. Man has spent thousands of years trying to locate another earth and Space Aliens. Only dramatic Movies show us happiness and awaken our worst fears. But exploration on the Moon. A Colony On the Moon?

The Moon. A lonely dry, desolate Planet? The Moon is Earth’s only natural satellite. Its diameter is about one-quarter of Earth’s, making it the fifth largest satellite in the Solar System and the largest and most massive relative to its parent planet. It is larger than all known dwarf planets in the Solar System.
Radius: 1,079.6 mi
Orbital period: 27 days
Gravity: 1.62 m/s²
Distance to Earth: 238,900 mi
Kind of rock: igneous rocks nasa.gov
Satellite of: Earth
Surface area: 3.793×107 km2; (0.074 of Earth’s)
Wanna go? Do we need the Moon?
The brightest and largest object in our night sky, the Moon makes Earth a more livable planet by moderating our home planet’s wobble on its axis, leading to a relatively stable climate. It also causes tides, creating a rhythm that has guided humans for thousands of years.

3-D Images of the Moon





This doesn’t look like a place I’d want to visit or live in a Colony on the Moon. Always bumping around with a heavy spacesuit on you. No air to breath except a long way away on earth.

This early hit film was A Trip to the Moon (1902), directed, produced, written and starring French film pioneer Georges Melies. Today the 12-minute A Trip to the Moon might seem a bit primitive, but just imagine what it was like when the entire idea of moving images was still a new and even peculiar idea. Even frightening to some…
Could you imagine a World War over the ownership of the Moon? Who owns the Moon?
While United States astronauts were the first to visit the Moon, this does not mean that the United States owns it. In fact, under the 1967 Outer Space Treaty no country has a unique ownership in the Moon and all nations are accorded equal rights and access. But treaties are broken and ignored. But hopefully, there won’t be a lot of Drama over the Moon. Who can afford it? Trips to the Moon will never be JOY RIDES for the Rich.
I believe the taxpayers will put their feet down on that from happening.




Could you survive a jump off the tallest cliff in the Solar System? Quite possibly. Verona Rupes on Uranus’ moon Miranda is estimated to be 20 kilometers deep — ten times the depth of the Earth’s Grand Canyon.



Hmm…Is this the real future? A Colony On the Moon? And how long will it be before non-astronauts are sent there? Gonna need a ton of Money. Tons and tons and tons of Money. I don’t trust the soil to be solid enough for the weight of such a heavy vehicle. Topping over might happen.

Or it could turn into a Brain Fart of the highest order when the landing craft explodes on the Moon. There will be very troubling events that will happen. Not on purpose. Cutting corners or cheap materials. Getting Oxygen from the soil is gonna be a nice trick. But all I can say is- Good Luck!. But what they might find on Mars?

You must be logged in to post a comment.