Fascinating video. Despite being old enough to have watched the landing, it didn't strike me until now just how much of a contrast there was between the lunar monochrome and the bright colours of the LEM. Must have seemed sureal to the astronauts - almost as if their colour vision had failed when they looked away from the LEM. A sad note too - two of the three people involved in this amazing adventure are now dead. And 52 years later we stil haven't returned. I was 15 when they landed and, even with all the talk of going back to the moon now, at nearly 70, I may never live to see man return to the lunar surface. No way would I have believed that 52 years ago...
Apollo astronauts saw some colours in the lunar soil and rocks. Granted, most of the Moon is grey-ish, but there are subtle colour variations depending on the mineral composition. They saw some orange lunar soil, some green melt material, and much more. www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/LRO/multimedia/lroimages/lroc-20100910_color_moon.html
They kind of make it low-key for this video but Aldrin and Armstrong would have been the brightest things on the moon that day. On average the lunar surface is about as bright as weathered asphalt.
Lunar albedo is only obout .12 to .14, but the sun is rediculously bright. Each sq meter (about 9 sq feet) of the moon's surface is hit with about 150000 lumens from the sun. Even with only 12 - 14% reflection that equals roughly 16000 lumen reflected light per square meter (which is about the same output as a street light - and that's PER SQUARE METER)...
As someone who spends a lot of time in dealing with the Apollo program I just want to say that this is just awesome work! I've seen all the documentaries over and over, read a lot of books, built models and so on but this is the first time to see an "overview" of the EVA with the relative positions of Neil and Buzz. Really good work!
Meticulous work as usual. I like the view during ascent of the solitary footpath leading to and from Little West crater, neatly capturing Neil’s private visit to take photos and perhaps do something deeply personal
Seeing it at this speed, it really does come off as the well-choreographed and well-rehearsed lunar “ballet” that it was. Not a step unplanned or unpracticed. Beautiful.
Mostly not unplanned or unpracticed. Armstrong's lone excursion out to East Crater was not planned. His departure and return are shown in this video but he goes out of frame. Exactly what he did there, if anything, was ultimately known only to Armstrong.
Very nicely done. I don't believe I've ever seen a more informative and concise video showing how much distance was covered and what experiments were set up where.
@@marcialima1454 no, I’m from the U.S.A. Though if you go not to far back along my dad’s lineage I have family that came from Poland. “Stolatz!” is about the only trace that carries through.
Love the fact the flag got destroyed at the ascent, such a small detail but kudos you put it it! The audio clips are a great idea, I think adding some pop-ups with info about what the astronauts are actually doing would make things even more clearer though.
It was the afternoon of July 21st in Japan, and I was a toddler at the time, and I had just figured out what the moon was. I remember watching blurry images on a black-and-white TV.
I wish you could tell us how you did it! Did you made the models walk path by hand? Is the walk path an estimation of the astronauts position? Is the body motion random or have you used any tracking technique? All seems so meticulous.
This is excellent work, the kind of videos I've been waiting for someone to make for a long time. You might want to check the colour of the panels on +Y side of the ascent stage though (too many dark panels), I can't tell if it's a modelling or a rendering issue. Given the amount of work that must have gone into simulating this stuff, I guess we can expect some more angles of the same animations?
It looks like the astronauts are try to clean the surface with a broom. In 1969 i was 5 years old when my dad get me out of bed to watch this on the BBC. And it still is one of the most favorite events i ever whitnessed in my life. And i have to thank my dad for it.
No, they needed them to breathe at that point. The LM doesn’t have an airlock so the whole thing was depressurised so they could open the door. They would remove the PLSS packs and close the suit valves after they repressurised so they wouldn’t die. Then they depressurised again to give the packs the heave ho, then repressurised again.
@@Sir_Uncle_Ned Thank you! That little but poignant fact completely escaped me - I had no idea this was what they had to do, or that they indeed dropped their portable life support backpacks on the lunar surface before leaving. How they accomplished this is mildly mind boggling - particularly the potential health and safety risks involved if something went wrong during THAT operation. Fascinating!
@@datathunderstorm You want to talk about safety risks in the apollo program? The LM ascent stage engine fuel was so corrosive that it couldn't be test-fired before flight. The first time that engine is ever fired is for the ascent from the lunar surface to CSM. And there was no backup. That engine either worked on the first ever firing or the moonwalkers are stranded on the lunar surface with no hope of rescue. Then there was the CSM engine, which pulled the astronauts into lunar orbit and kicked them back to earth. Again, no backup. If anything goes wrong with that engine, there is literally nothing they can do about it. And, coming back to the LM ascent stage engine, one of the Apollo 11 astronauts actually managed to break the engine arm circuit breaker while getting back in. They had to hold it down with a pencil so the engine could light. Then you have design flaws like the shared piping in the oxygen system that led to the Apollo 13 SM losing all oxygen. One tank exploded, the other was fine but common piping meant it all vented out anyway. The Apollo program was extremely dangerous and such risks would not be even remotely considered today.
Great attention to detail here! Both the Solar Wind experiment and the US flag were blown over by the LM ascent stage at 06:02 . Later Apollo missions learned to place the flag a bit further out.
Wow! Getting a birds eye view of the mission really brings it all to life!! Really really incredible! But I wonder if the astronauts movement would look a bit different if you factor in the bounce of their elongated steps, because of the lower gravity. Apart from that, this is AMAZING!
The only way we would know is that, for safety reasons (and to quell the Moon Landing Hoaxers and Flat Earthers), Artemis III was directed to land at the Sea of Tranquility, and the astronauts went to Tranquility Base to retrieve the old PLSS backpacks, and parts of the LM's Descent Stage (for purposes of the study of long-term exposure necessary for future trips to Mars and beyond) and one goes to Little West crater and let's say, finds something akin to Charlie Duke leaving the photo of him and his family on the Moon on Apollo 16, except it would have been something in memory of Neil's daughter, Karen, who died of complications of a brain tumor in 1962 at the age of 2, less than 8 months before Neil was selected as an astronaut for NASA.
It would become exponentially more complex, even the mission with the next least time outside - Apollo 12 - spent 3 times as long walking around. Apollo 17 spent nearly a full day outside total, over three separate days.
Depends which camera. Both astronauts handled cameras at various points. There was also at least 1 automated camera that captured Neil's first steps. Or maybe you mean the time lapse, in which case mb
Whish you added the chatter as text at one side/top or bottom - like a transcript, because there is alot of chatter in between the 2 hours. But great! Cool animation! it kinda gives more flesh to the landing itself.
Thank you.....🤗 Remember the day as if it were yesterday..... Most still were viewing with black and white television back then....😊 I remember thinking,why don't they go further out and the flag being placed in the (soil/ dirt )of the ( no oxygen ) no gravity 🤯moon surface blew my mind🤯even more..............😅 "Da za voo"🤔
It got interesting when they had the moon buggy because they always needed to be able to walk back to the lunar module from wherever they were, in case the buggy broke down. To maximise the distance they could travel, they would drive far away in the morning, and each stop - “station” - would be progressively closer to the LM. Had to be because the possible distance they could walk got shorter and shorter as time went on and they used up the oxygen.
This is weirdly adorable, like watching a Kerbal short. I hope you do more of these historical timelapses!
Where exactly is the Land Rover? 😅
@@BjayawesomeBlackDudethis is Apollo 11. The the rover wasn’t brought till Apollo 15
@@BjayawesomeBlackDude Not on Apollo 11.
Fascinating video. Despite being old enough to have watched the landing, it didn't strike me until now just how much of a contrast there was between the lunar monochrome and the bright colours of the LEM. Must have seemed sureal to the astronauts - almost as if their colour vision had failed when they looked away from the LEM. A sad note too - two of the three people involved in this amazing adventure are now dead. And 52 years later we stil haven't returned. I was 15 when they landed and, even with all the talk of going back to the moon now, at nearly 70, I may never live to see man return to the lunar surface. No way would I have believed that 52 years ago...
Apollo astronauts saw some colours in the lunar soil and rocks. Granted, most of the Moon is grey-ish, but there are subtle colour variations depending on the mineral composition. They saw some orange lunar soil, some green melt material, and much more. www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/LRO/multimedia/lroimages/lroc-20100910_color_moon.html
They kind of make it low-key for this video but Aldrin and Armstrong would have been the brightest things on the moon that day. On average the lunar surface is about as bright as weathered asphalt.
@@hubbsllc then why is the moon so bright at night huh!!! explain that.
@@marcialima1454 It'd be a lot brighter if it were anywhere close to white.
Lunar albedo is only obout .12 to .14, but the sun is rediculously bright. Each sq meter (about 9 sq feet) of the moon's surface is hit with about 150000 lumens from the sun. Even with only 12 - 14% reflection that equals roughly 16000 lumen reflected light per square meter (which is about the same output as a street light - and that's PER SQUARE METER)...
As someone who spends a lot of time in dealing with the Apollo program I just want to say that this is just awesome work! I've seen all the documentaries over and over, read a lot of books, built models and so on but this is the first time to see an "overview" of the EVA with the relative positions of Neil and Buzz. Really good work!
One small step for man, one giant leap for Haze kind!
Sólo un astronauta...?
Meticulous work as usual. I like the view during ascent of the solitary footpath leading to and from Little West crater, neatly capturing Neil’s private visit to take photos and perhaps do something deeply personal
He went5 to look at the computer-directed crater that almost ended the mission in tragedy.
Man your work gets me every time! Imagine with the 4k artemis videos we will get in a couple of years!
@AntiangelRaphael That's what we are waiting for my friend
I can't wait. Watching football you see every blade of grass. I'm sure the lunar landscape will be amazing
Seeing it at this speed, it really does come off as the well-choreographed and well-rehearsed lunar “ballet” that it was. Not a step unplanned or unpracticed. Beautiful.
Mostly not unplanned or unpracticed. Armstrong's lone excursion out to East Crater was not planned. His departure and return are shown in this video but he goes out of frame. Exactly what he did there, if anything, was ultimately known only to Armstrong.
6:00 I love that you rendered the flag waving in the exhaust
Very nicely done. I don't believe I've ever seen a more informative and concise video showing how much distance was covered and what experiments were set up where.
This is where I come for church. Thanks.
I see your comments all over RUclips. It’s gratifying to know we share similar tastes in video clips.
@@junkdriver42 same I see his comments too
@@junkdriver42 are u polish
@@marcialima1454 no, I’m from the U.S.A. Though if you go not to far back along my dad’s lineage I have family that came from Poland. “Stolatz!” is about the only trace that carries through.
This is amazing! Can we have the normal speed version? It would be interesting to see their movements along with the real-time dialog.
This really is the best piece of work on the Apollo 11 EVA.
Amaizing, deserves more than mr beast doing reactions to tik tok.
Love the fact the flag got destroyed at the ascent, such a small detail but kudos you put it it!
The audio clips are a great idea, I think adding some pop-ups with info about what the astronauts are actually doing would make things even more clearer though.
Деньги ваши осваивают! 💯
Superb idea for an animation! As beautiful as educational and informative. Very, very well done!
Last time I was this early, they were still getting set for PDI!
Thank you! So well done. I would have watched the entire thing without being sped up. Would love to see more as well!
This might be the single best thing on youtube.
It's one of the best video about Apollo missions ever made.
I would love to see the 2 and a half hours in real time
It was the afternoon of July 21st in Japan, and I was a toddler at the time, and I had just figured out what the moon was.
I remember watching blurry images on a black-and-white TV.
I wish you could tell us how you did it! Did you made the models walk path by hand? Is the walk path an estimation of the astronauts position? Is the body motion random or have you used any tracking technique? All seems so meticulous.
Nice. Love your stuff. Don't know how you do it, but please, keep doing it
This is excellent work, the kind of videos I've been waiting for someone to make for a long time.
You might want to check the colour of the panels on +Y side of the ascent stage though (too many dark panels), I can't tell if it's a modelling or a rendering issue.
Given the amount of work that must have gone into simulating this stuff, I guess we can expect some more angles of the same animations?
Thank you for that. It's unique and much appreciated.
It looks like the astronauts are try to clean the surface with a broom. In 1969 i was 5 years old when my dad get me out of bed to watch this on the BBC. And it still is one of the most favorite events i ever whitnessed in my life. And i have to thank my dad for it.
I'm hooked. These are the videos I've been looing for. Thanks...and Merry Christmas.
This is amazing!!
also the music you used! I used that in my KSP Apollo 11 vid :D
Apollo 11 :. Land, get some rocks, hurry up and get out of there. So much underlying pressure to be the first ones.
Great! But I always presumed that they dropped outside the Portable Life Support backpacks somewhat after entering the LM...
No, they needed them to breathe at that point. The LM doesn’t have an airlock so the whole thing was depressurised so they could open the door. They would remove the PLSS packs and close the suit valves after they repressurised so they wouldn’t die. Then they depressurised again to give the packs the heave ho, then repressurised again.
@@Sir_Uncle_Ned Thank you! That little but poignant fact completely escaped me - I had no idea this was what they had to do, or that they indeed dropped their portable life support backpacks on the lunar surface before leaving.
How they accomplished this is mildly mind boggling - particularly the potential health and safety risks involved if something went wrong during THAT operation.
Fascinating!
@@datathunderstorm You want to talk about safety risks in the apollo program? The LM ascent stage engine fuel was so corrosive that it couldn't be test-fired before flight. The first time that engine is ever fired is for the ascent from the lunar surface to CSM. And there was no backup. That engine either worked on the first ever firing or the moonwalkers are stranded on the lunar surface with no hope of rescue.
Then there was the CSM engine, which pulled the astronauts into lunar orbit and kicked them back to earth. Again, no backup. If anything goes wrong with that engine, there is literally nothing they can do about it.
And, coming back to the LM ascent stage engine, one of the Apollo 11 astronauts actually managed to break the engine arm circuit breaker while getting back in. They had to hold it down with a pencil so the engine could light.
Then you have design flaws like the shared piping in the oxygen system that led to the Apollo 13 SM losing all oxygen. One tank exploded, the other was fine but common piping meant it all vented out anyway.
The Apollo program was extremely dangerous and such risks would not be even remotely considered today.
@@Sir_Uncle_Ned correct.
Just beautiful, many thanks for making & posting that video.
This is very impressive, huge respect for the creator/creators
Find no words. Just THX!
Great attention to detail here! Both the Solar Wind experiment and the US flag were blown over by the LM ascent stage at 06:02 . Later Apollo missions learned to place the flag a bit further out.
Wow! Getting a birds eye view of the mission really brings it all to life!! Really really incredible! But I wonder if the astronauts movement would look a bit different if you factor in the bounce of their elongated steps, because of the lower gravity. Apart from that, this is AMAZING!
Amazing work as usual. What did Niel leave at the crater? I wonder if we will ever know.
The only way we would know is that, for safety reasons (and to quell the Moon Landing Hoaxers and Flat Earthers), Artemis III was directed to land at the Sea of Tranquility, and the astronauts went to Tranquility Base to retrieve the old PLSS backpacks, and parts of the LM's Descent Stage (for purposes of the study of long-term exposure necessary for future trips to Mars and beyond) and one goes to Little West crater and let's say, finds something akin to Charlie Duke leaving the photo of him and his family on the Moon on Apollo 16, except it would have been something in memory of Neil's daughter, Karen, who died of complications of a brain tumor in 1962 at the age of 2, less than 8 months before Neil was selected as an astronaut for NASA.
OMG! What the technology can do now is amazing!
This channel never disappoints. Ever.
This is awesome! can you do all the moon landings?
It would become exponentially more complex, even the mission with the next least time outside - Apollo 12 - spent 3 times as long walking around. Apollo 17 spent nearly a full day outside total, over three separate days.
That would be cool. Especially the Apollo J missions (15,16 & 17)had the lunar rovers traversing the regolith.
One dislike from the guy who says this is clearly faked. XD
It appears from this video that they left the solar wind experiment on the surface?
Awesome work 👍
Super cool. Thank you.
Amazing stuff. Superb graphics. Thanks 😉
What is the music ?
Why does the EVA counter increase the minutes at every 50 seconds, instead of 60?
If the frames are to be believed, I actually think it's advancing from 48 to 00. Good observation!
you are talented. I love these videos.
Awesome work indeed!
amazing
Who is operating the camera?
Depends which camera. Both astronauts handled cameras at various points. There was also at least 1 automated camera that captured Neil's first steps.
Or maybe you mean the time lapse, in which case mb
Great work the one you do!
Whish you added the chatter as text at one side/top or bottom - like a transcript, because there is alot of chatter in between the 2 hours. But great! Cool animation! it kinda gives more flesh to the landing itself.
This is so amazing
AMAZING!!
Very well done.
Incredible!
Buzz Aldrin: “Beautiful view.”
This is so fricken cute!!! :) :) Thanks, Hazegrayart!!!
❤❤ 인간의 도전은 어디까지인가 도전한 분들에게 감사드리고 우리가 행복하게 살 수 있다는 것을 느끼게 합니다❤❤❤
Thank you.....🤗
Remember the day as if it were yesterday.....
Most still were viewing with black and white television back then....😊
I remember thinking,why don't they go further out and the flag being placed in the (soil/ dirt )of the ( no oxygen ) no gravity 🤯moon surface blew my mind🤯even more..............😅
"Da za voo"🤔
Awesome work!
Real video????
Wow. Go Astroants. Love it!
lovely video!
Truly a God’s eye view. I kept think “What are these little guys doing now?”
Reenactment right?
how much oxygen time did they have??? it's amazing!!!
About 16 hours
@@myleswbrown wtf? with the same suit with one charge?????
@@martinilopez1 no this is not correct, it was about 4 hours (later extended to 8 hours for Apollo 15-17)
www.hq.nasa.gov/alsj/plss.html
@@ewan.cartwright Still SO IMPRESIVE
It got interesting when they had the moon buggy because they always needed to be able to walk back to the lunar module from wherever they were, in case the buggy broke down. To maximise the distance they could travel, they would drive far away in the morning, and each stop - “station” - would be progressively closer to the LM. Had to be because the possible distance they could walk got shorter and shorter as time went on and they used up the oxygen.
Is there(moon) 1min = 50 sec?!!! How? Can anyone explain?
Do you actually think that?
@@PanzerkampfwagenausfTschechosl never
@@3gdigitalcatvnetwork6 ok because the moon has no 50 sec minutes
where's the rover?
the rover was only used on apollo's 15,16, and 17
How to go back to world ?
I failed to see Alsep setup.
Cool! creative
Would have been nice to see Neil going up to little west crater it was out of shot in this
Slow it down!!!
"There is no dark side of the moon really. Mater of fact it's all dark." Gerry O'Driscoll.
absolutely amazing and realistic simulation...but I think they thrown out their backpacks from LM before the start
I believe you're right.
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
This is quite literally, a step-by-step process
These guys: *doing actual science*
Me on the moon: *doing regolith angels, stepping out giant penis shapes and doing moon parkour* 😂
Try as I might I can't find the flag raising or the call from Nixon?
Make video on Space X too
Didn't they drove the moon rover?
Not until Apollo 15.
🛸👽💚
No idea, how camera is making video from elevation.
Please explain.
It’s CGI animation based on LRO imaging, the mission plan, and the 3 hour Eva video.
Who shot this overview video being stable? Certainly it is not an original shot. 🤔😁
Everything on this channel is cgi animation.
... can do without overtly loud 🎵.. aside from that👍
Красивый мультик, даже лучше чем у Стэнли Кубрика.
First Moon Dance.
Как на счëт жëсткой радиации в шортах, терпимо?
Who is taking filming?
It’s CGI animation.
Hes so cute!
❤mom
quien viene de xpress tv?
What is this . . . A MOONWALK FOR ANTS ?!?!
See.
Proof.
😎 nashe
SSundee SSundee SSundee SSundee SSundee SSundee
Well these guy made a fine mess on the moon. Very poor guests. Probably won't get invited again.
Goofy ahh moonwalk 💀