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The MOON
Decided to start a thread on our closest neighbor "The Moon", for my stalker on this forum, and for those of you who wish to discuss what, if anything, is on the Moon. Why we have never been back, even with the recent discovery of WATER, the essential ingredient for life. Obama has basically defunded the Moon missions.
Thisngs to check out.... Apollo 20 - YouTube - Re: APOLLO 20 ALIEN SPACESHIP ON THE MOON CSM FLYOVER 8 Helium 3 NASA airbrushing lunar photos http://solreka.com/blog/wp-content/m...ushed_nasa.jpg Project Blue Beam Strip Mining Edgar Mitchell http://www.spacefacts.de/cancelled/p.../apollo-20.gif John Lear and Richard Hoagland http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9ASTvjNBaAw |
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Fact is you're trolling for a response, and I am gladly providing it because I enjoy how foolish you look. But don't call someone a stalker when you're the one doing the trolling. Quote:
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oh gosh...you even derail the thread I'm starting on YOUR behalf... GET OFF THE THREAD if you have nothing to add....I'll send you some polaroids of me, dont worry. |
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some people on this board have said in othe threads that I dont know the first thing about "fission" suggesting that Helium 3 is essential for a fission reaction...
Technology Review: Mining the Moon Mining the Moon Lab experiments suggest that future fusion reactors could use helium-3 gathered from the moon. ExplainingTheFuture.com : Helium-3 Helium-3 and Nuclear Fusion To provide a little background -- and without getting deeply into the science -- all nuclear power plants use a nuclear reaction to produce heat. This is used to turn water into steam that then drives a turbine to produce electricity. Current nuclear power plants have nuclear fission reactors in which uranium nuclei are split part. This releases energy, but also radioactivity and spent nuclear fuel that is reprocessed into uranium, plutonium and radioactive waste which has to be safety stored, effectively indefinitely. An overview of this nuclear fuel cycle can be found here. For over 40 years scientists have been working to create nuclear power from nuclear fusion rather than nuclear fission. In current nuclear fusion reactors, the hydrogen isotopes tritium and deuterium are used as the fuel, with atomic energy released when their nuclei fuse to create helium and a neutron. Nuclear fusion effectively makes use of the same energy source that fuels the Sun and other stars, and does not produce the radioactivity and nuclear waste that is the by-product of current nuclear fission power generation. However, the so-termed "fast" neutrons released by nuclear fusion reactors fuelled by tritium and deuterium lead to significant energy loss and are extremely difficult to contain. One potential solution may be to use helium-3 and deuterium as the fuels in "aneutronic" (power without neutrons) fusion reactors. The involved nuclear reaction here when helium-3 and deuterium fuse creates normal helium and a proton, which wastes less energy and is easier to contain. Nuclear fusion reactors using helium-3 could therefore provide a highly efficient form of nuclear power with virtually no waste and no radiation. A short wall chart explaining this in more detail can be found here. The aforementioned fission, fusion and aneutronic fusion nuclear reactions are also illustrated in animations in my Mining Helium-3 On the Moon video. |
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YouTube - Moon Rising Part 1
really interesting set of interviews, galleries of doctored photos, NASA quotes and insights. |
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