I was taking done pitcures recently on a brisk evening and I happened to get so pretty cool moon shots. Now obviously I'm no scientist, but I do understand how light works, kinda. What is this in the upper left corner of the Moon? The pictures would have been taken in August in Colorado. Is it just a feature left having from a meteor impact? Is it the secret Nazi moon base? Any thoughts or ideas welcome.
It's something, but maybe not cool. I just want to know.
Adrian Gray
it's just a crater, nigger. I have it on all mine (at the bottom)
Joseph Cook
if it was a based it'd be hundreds of miles across.
Logan Reyes
The geological features just look off. Nice picture by the way. My question is does anyone know of a mountain that is supposed to be there?
Kevin Gutierrez
No way. Iss isn't even more than a few hundred sqft. I doubt they could make hundreds of miles of moon base.
Adrian Cruz
It's Aristarchus. A crater.
Blake Lee
that's what I'm saying numbnuts. It's NOT a base because of it was ti'd be massive.
Colton Young
yea and if u rearrange the letters is spells antichrist think about that 4 a moment
Jason Barnes
...
Justin Adams
Thankful user! That's what I wanted to know.
William Parker
Fuck
William Ross
what did you use to take the photo? I hope not a P900.
Dominic Rivera
i know its was a real eye opener for me 2
Ryder Murphy
Cannon T3i with a 75-300mm.
Chase Reed
You should be able to get Jupiter and its moons with that. Will look small though. You *may* be able to get Saturn too and see the outline of the rings. Give it a shot. stick the camera on a tripod though.
Camden Harris
Thanks. I'll have to try that out. I had to use a tripod for that shot. It was like a 20 second shot.
Christian Stewart
20 sec at 300mm? I doubt it. you'd just get a blurry brigth mess as the Moon moves loads in 20 seconds. You don't need a long exposure for it. You need a fast shutter speed (like 1/250 second).
Please explain....
Aaron Murphy
Do you really think that if they were going to build a secret moon base it would be on the side of the moon that always faces the earth?
Austin Gonzalez
Winna winna chickin dinna
Jaxon Roberts
If they wanted to be able to communicate with the earth in a reliable way, maybe
Wyatt Reed
Easily solved with a small comsat in two Lagrange points that provide an unobstructed LoS for earth.
Adam Reyes
14,000 feet up. Clear evening. I sat my tripod on the table pointed the camera at the Moon, set a 3 second timer, sex it to 20 sec exposure, and let it ride. To be far It could have been 15 seconds, but it was a decently long exposure.
John Morris
Dank. You da bes.
Logan Myers
Am alien. Can confirm. That's my house.
Grayson Powell
Do you have an image of what that might look like on the Moon? I'm very interested in this idea.
Dominic King
Communication Satellites sit a L2 and L4 or L5.
Small ones at L4 and L5 would be practically invisible from earth surface L2 size is irreverent since the moon blocks it's view..
Nathaniel Davis
Thanks. That seems quite easy to accomplish.
Nicholas Brooks
Best part about Lagrange points too is anything you put there will naturally stay in that spot as the gravity from the two objects will pull whatever you put there along. So no real need to put propulsion on it. If you really wanted full coverage you could put Com Sats at L2, L3, L4, and L5 and it would be highly unlikely you would over loose communication unless something happened to L2.
Gavin Ortiz
We must already have them wouldn't you think? There are 1000s up there. We look like a floating trash ball.
James Carter
More then likely... The Solar storm observatory satellite sits at L1 for the Earth/Sun Lagrange point.
Oliver Baker
Is it just transmitting some frequency at that point or is it picking up more than sound?