Apollo 10's Lunar Module Snoopy Is Lost In Space - Could We Bring it Home?

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  • Опубликовано: 23 авг 2024
  • The lunar module flown on Apollo 10 is the only flown lunar module which didn't end up crashing into the moon, or burning up in the Earth's atmosphere. After the testing in lunar orbit the ascent engine performed a burn to depletion which meant it escaped into interplanetary space.
    At this moment the location is unknown, but people are looking for it, however it could take decades to be sure since it only comes into the vicinity of the Earth every 15 years or so.
    If it were found however, would it be possible to bring it back to earth for inspection by historians and space archaeologists - time to fire up Kerbal Space Program with realism overhaul to try flying this mission.
    Mike Loucks' did the math to figure out the possible orbits:
    astrogatorsgui...

Комментарии • 1,6 тыс.

  • @Declan-pg8cg
    @Declan-pg8cg 5 лет назад +337

    My heart always goes out to Jim Lovell. Can you imagine going all the way to the moon twice, but no cigar? First time saying "I could be down there" & the second time saying "I should be down there". Still one of the finest men ever to have lived.

    • @shaenj
      @shaenj 5 лет назад +16

      which is why he was given the role he was. He has NO regrets why should you?

    • @suekennedy8917
      @suekennedy8917 5 лет назад +2

      LOL! No video showing the inside of the CSM-LEM with his wondrous piloting. Duct tape is not in the Apollo 13 Press Kit. Hoax!

    • @Declan-pg8cg
      @Declan-pg8cg 5 лет назад +16

      @@shaenj Exactly, he's a consummate professional. If I had done half the things he has I would have no regrets whatsoever.

    • @Declan-pg8cg
      @Declan-pg8cg 5 лет назад +36

      @@suekennedy8917 You are joking, aren't you? Please don't tell me you're another conspiracy Fruitcake with an absolutely shite understanding of even basic physics or science in general?

    • @edgarwalk5637
      @edgarwalk5637 5 лет назад +9

      Gene Cernan was the luckiest, he got to go on Apollo 17.

  • @williamjamesrapp7356
    @williamjamesrapp7356 5 лет назад +215

    My Father worked on SNOOPY during the Apollo missions -- He was a Quality Test Engineer for Grumman during the Apollo missions

    • @williamjamesrapp7356
      @williamjamesrapp7356 5 лет назад +2

      @C J HA HA HA YUP ! it is amazing that that technology made it into space at all.

    • @christianege4989
      @christianege4989 5 лет назад +6

      @@williamjamesrapp7356 Only amazing for people who don't have any clue of what this technology really was.

    • @dancolley4208
      @dancolley4208 4 года назад +4

      @@williamjamesrapp7356 Aha!!! NOW we have a clue to the owner of that turd which was floating around in the space craft..it was the Grumman QA guy who planted it on board while going through one of the incredibly long list of checks !!!

    • @bernardcohen3245
      @bernardcohen3245 4 года назад +3

      And my dad was the janitor who signed off on the LEM

    • @jblob5764
      @jblob5764 4 года назад

      @Nature and Physics that is the most ridiculous statement ive heard all day

  • @fieryfeather
    @fieryfeather 5 лет назад +560

    -Analyze Snoopy's spin
    What are you doing
    -Docking
    Snoopy's rotation is 67-68 rpm
    -Get ready to match our spin with the retro thrusters
    It's not possible!
    -No, it's necessary

    • @stanleydodds9
      @stanleydodds9 5 лет назад +52

      Come on turd... come on turd!

    • @DanielSanchez-ew1js
      @DanielSanchez-ew1js 5 лет назад +47

      Cue dramatic organ music.

    • @ryandickson6761
      @ryandickson6761 5 лет назад +25

      @@DanielSanchez-ew1js DUNDUNDUN DUN DUN DUN DUN DUN DUN DUN DUN DUN

    • @RWBHere
      @RWBHere 5 лет назад +14

      DUNG, DUNG, DONE!

    • @ZuluMoose97
      @ZuluMoose97 5 лет назад +15

      I love we should see if Scott would be willing to recut the video using the Stellar theme music

  • @TheMrPeteChannel
    @TheMrPeteChannel 5 лет назад +786

    The Beagle has landed! (If we ever get Snoopy home)

    • @allangibson8494
      @allangibson8494 5 лет назад +44

      The retrieval vehicle would have to be the Red Baron (or the Dog House).

    • @TheMrPeteChannel
      @TheMrPeteChannel 5 лет назад +5

      @@allangibson8494 or the neighbor's killer cat.

    • @NemoConsequentae
      @NemoConsequentae 5 лет назад +28

      @@allangibson8494 My vote would be on it being _Woodstock._

    • @RWBHere
      @RWBHere 5 лет назад +15

      If they capture it by wrapping a shroud around the module, then surely Linus would be best, with his comfort blanket!

    • @allangibson8494
      @allangibson8494 5 лет назад +3

      @@NemoConsequentae Or a mission to put a tracking beacon on it...

  • @hannesgroesslinger
    @hannesgroesslinger 5 лет назад +232

    I'm sure NASA's new guidelines about naming spacecraft were predominantly motivated by fear of what Pete Conrad and his crew might come up with for Apollo 12.

    • @AmusedWalrus
      @AmusedWalrus 5 лет назад +1

      What do you mean?

    • @DARisse-ji1yw
      @DARisse-ji1yw 5 лет назад +90

      "Playboy" & "Bunny" .....

    • @PrograError
      @PrograError 5 лет назад +4

      @@DARisse-ji1yw definitely sfw

    • @5Andysalive
      @5Andysalive 5 лет назад +30

      @@AmusedWalrus Let's say they wera a much more lively group than most of the others. It's a bit of a shame the first landing was communication wise such a quiet affair.
      This is Apollo 12 landing: ruclips.net/video/Xbj8Zo053Lc/видео.html
      And Pete Conrad died (too early) in a Motorbike Accident.

    • @ENCHANTMEN_
      @ENCHANTMEN_ 5 лет назад +1

      Surely they could just veto the name?

  • @JanStrojil
    @JanStrojil 5 лет назад +125

    Apollo 10 in the London Science museum was the first Apollo hardware that I saw with my own eyes. I still remember that feeling of awe. Go Charlie, go Snoopy!

    • @JohnMorley1
      @JohnMorley1 5 лет назад +9

      One day there might be a glass case next to it with that long lost turd in it.
      Then it will be more impressive.

    • @owensmith7530
      @owensmith7530 5 лет назад +5

      I examined the Apollo 10 capsule yesterday, both on my way into and out of the Science Museum IMAX to watch Apollo 11 (sadly the "First Steps" 45 minute version). I also had a long look at the life size LM replica, and the RL-10 and J-2 engines conveniently placed next to each other (they appear to both be missing the lower parts of their engine bells).
      But the best exhibition at the Science Museum was the Soviet one. I have seen an LK with my own eyes! And a Lunokhod!

    • @sparkplug1018
      @sparkplug1018 5 лет назад +4

      Best exhibit I've seen is at the Kennedy space center. They have the Apollo 14 CM displayed along with a Saturn V rocket and I believe and un-flown LM. And a replica lunar rover. So awe inspiring seeing all the hardware displayed like that. Really want to travel and see the rest of them.

    • @JanStrojil
      @JanStrojil 5 лет назад +2

      @@sparkplug1018 Yes, that is probably the best one (but don't forget Oschin Science Center in LA!). But when it comes to the wow factor, their introduction to the Atlantis exhibition is probably top; the American sure know how to do spectacle well. :)

    • @sparkplug1018
      @sparkplug1018 5 лет назад +2

      @@JanStrojil Atlantis is truly a sight to see in person. The memorial towards the rear of the hall is also one of the most moving I've ever seen.
      We do know how to display things for maximum effect thats for sure.

  • @TheBonsaiZone
    @TheBonsaiZone 5 лет назад +79

    This is where you need a tractor beam for recovery.

  • @dwayne7356
    @dwayne7356 5 лет назад +224

    Are there material science questions that can be tested or verified on something that has been exposed to cosmic radiation and cold temperatures for 50 years?

    • @sparkplug1018
      @sparkplug1018 5 лет назад +81

      Absolutely. Effects of solar radiation, micro meteorites and so on. That was precisely why Apollo 12 returned hardware from Surveyor 3 to Earth. They wanted to determine the effects of being on the Lunar surface for a few years.
      www.lpi.usra.edu/lunar/documents/NTRS/collection2/NASA_SP_284.pdf
      Thats the report they generated, or at least part of it. Interesting read, especially that part about the microbes that ended up in the camera.

    • @RCAvhstape
      @RCAvhstape 5 лет назад +83

      After the Challenger accident, the LDEF (Long Duration Exposure Facility) was left in orbit for a much longer time than was planned. Eventually it was retrieved by another shuttle and a lot of good data was gathered from it. Since then we've had several chances to visit Hubble Space Telescope and see how it has held up as it aged, and of course Mir and the ISS have both yielded lots of data on long term mission hardware. But Snoopy would be special, since it has been in deep space for five decades, outside of the LEO gravity well and the Earth's magnetosphere.

    • @Bill_Woo
      @Bill_Woo 5 лет назад +19

      At first I thought, well duh we have things that have been exposed to cosmic radiation and cold temperatures for 50 _million_ years. Yet knowing the effect of a 50 year slice would indeed be revealing.

    • @ReneSchickbauer
      @ReneSchickbauer 5 лет назад +51

      Apart from the stuff already mentioned, it would also give us a very good insight into long term effects on electronics when they are turned off in space. As we send probes ever deeper into space, hibernating (turning off) spacecraft systems becomes more common for the coast phase of those missions. Some of those missions, like "Breakthrough Starshot", with coast phases in the range of 20+ this will become very important.
      In theory, it could be possible to send a probe (or many, many tiny probes) to another star only powered by solar cells. The probe would turn itself off when leaving the vicinity of our sun, and only get powered up again when it reaches the vicinity of, say, Alpha Centauri. The real question is if we can build electronics, radio- and science equipments that can survive long term exposure to space without power or thermal control. Recovering the Apollo 10 LEM and other derelict vintage space hardware could help us analyze the failure modes and start implementing better designs.

    • @teaser6089
      @teaser6089 5 лет назад +6

      @Coldern Ice Not true since if they still work after 8 years in hibernation. You can do a system diagnostic by sending a signal from earth and send the data back. Would only take 14 years. 8 years to get to Alpha centuri(At best) 2 years to send a signal. 4 years to get an answer.

  • @purplealice
    @purplealice 5 лет назад +176

    I worked at Grumman Aircraft on Long Island when they were building the Lunar Modules, and occasionally I had the chance to see, and even touch, one of them during the assembly process. I am fairly certain that Snoopy was one of the ones I touched. (And I still have my green "Lunar Contact" button from when the "Eagle" landed.) So among the traces of human DNA that might be found inside Snoopy (disregarding the turd, of course), there could be traces of my DNA, which means that some microscopic part of me did make it into space.

    • @BaguetteGamingOfficial
      @BaguetteGamingOfficial 5 лет назад +28

      I'm really fucking jealous right now

    • @bogomir67
      @bogomir67 5 лет назад +2

      @@BaguetteGamingOfficial So am I!

    • @purplealice
      @purplealice 5 лет назад +5

      I wasn't wearing gloves whhen I touched the frame of one of the seats in the LEM. I just leaned in the doorway to look inside, and put out my hand for balance.

    • @gregc2222
      @gregc2222 5 лет назад +11

      @@purplealice Ahhhhh... Seats? In the LM? Think again.

    • @BaguetteGamingOfficial
      @BaguetteGamingOfficial 5 лет назад +8

      @@gregc2222 yeah something's not quite right there lol

  • @astrofox2409
    @astrofox2409 5 лет назад +230

    Noticing the "Woodstock" name for the return craft. Nice touch.

    • @sparkplug1018
      @sparkplug1018 5 лет назад +10

      So many names you could pick for it. Id either name it Woodstock or Lucy.
      And when it lands we can declare the Beagle has landed, credit to a comment above.

    • @RWBHere
      @RWBHere 5 лет назад +12

      Linus. Comfort blanket used to capture the LM.

    • @reminiscingrocketeer1430
      @reminiscingrocketeer1430 5 лет назад +3

      @@RWBHere actually yes, the thermal protective blanket to aid in anchoring Snoopy and providing additional protection during reentry.

    • @StarkRG
      @StarkRG 5 лет назад +8

      @@sparkplug1018 Nah, Lucy would set up the final orbital capture maneuver and then would release the spacecraft right before it happened.

    • @jazzfan1994
      @jazzfan1994 5 лет назад +3

      I was thinking "The Red Baron" but this is better since you don't want to shoot it out of the sky.

  • @donaldparlettjr3295
    @donaldparlettjr3295 5 лет назад +12

    How interesting to get Snoopy back home to study a spacecraft in space for 50 years. NASA , this would be so interesting to see how items survive overtime.

  • @VosperCDN
    @VosperCDN 5 лет назад +25

    If this is done, one of the rockets sent for Snoopy better be called The Red Baron.

  • @theCodyReeder
    @theCodyReeder 5 лет назад +66

    10:05 ah yes the good ol oberth effect at work. I learned about that from you ya know. Anyway in this case I think of it as some the energy gained from dropping the mass of the fuel down into the gravity well being transferred to the spacecraft.

    • @Hyperlooper
      @Hyperlooper 5 лет назад +4

      I love seeing my fave RUclipsrs commenting on my other fave RUclipsrs. Hope you are well, Cody.

  • @GetUpTheMountains
    @GetUpTheMountains 5 лет назад +46

    Good to see you still playing KSP, I miss that content.

  • @QuantumBraced
    @QuantumBraced 5 лет назад +62

    Imagine if Neil had said "Tranquility base here. Snoopy has landed".

    • @olliea6052
      @olliea6052 5 лет назад +7

      😂

    • @stargazer7644
      @stargazer7644 5 лет назад +19

      The Beagle has landed.

    • @user-mp3eq6ir5b
      @user-mp3eq6ir5b 4 года назад

      QuantumBraced ☆ "Snoopy is hunched over in the backyard"

    • @MrSpuzzz
      @MrSpuzzz 4 года назад

      QuantumBraced I’d have loved it. Totally Americana.

    • @TheScubapez376
      @TheScubapez376 4 года назад

      If Snoopy had landed, it would of been Snoopy base 😃. Hence the LiM was called Tranquility that’s why it became Tranquillity base on landing 😆

  • @WoodworkerDon
    @WoodworkerDon 5 лет назад +9

    To safely "capture" Snoopy, if hard-docking points would be difficult, I suggest something akin to the Bigelow Expandable Activity Module on the ISS.
    Once found and station-keeping with Snoopy, the capture craft would inflate a BEAM-like module to engulf Snoopy. Deflate, at least partially, to softly secure Snoopy within the BEAM, then tow it on home.

  • @johnnyfavorite1194
    @johnnyfavorite1194 5 лет назад +43

    To date, *the Lunar Module remains the only true, human crewed, piloted spacecraft ever constructed,* as it was designed solely to transport and sustain humans only while operating outside the earth’s atmosphere. (NASA’s MMU “Jetpack” wouldn’t count as it has no independent life support systems) All other crewed spacecraft were built to operate in both space and within the Earth’s atmosphere.

    • @tinldw
      @tinldw 5 лет назад +4

      Nope. There are & were many space stations with own thrusters

    • @Chris-Workshop
      @Chris-Workshop 5 лет назад +8

      one could argue that the stations are all meant to stay in place where they are. and the module actually went somewhere, like from the surface of the moon into an orbit. try that with the ISS ;-)

    • @PrograError
      @PrograError 5 лет назад

      @@Chris-Workshop ask the russian ...

    • @johnnyfavorite1194
      @johnnyfavorite1194 5 лет назад +7

      Sergey tinldw Thrusters are necessary for any artificial object expected to maintain a planetary orbit. Does a space station meet the definition of a space vehicle if it is still fully dependent on the earth’s gravity to maintain a low earth orbit while completely lacking any designed capabilities for surface/orbit escape velocity or reentry? The Lunar Module was fully capable of independently maneuvering to and from the command module as well as landing on and launching from the moon. Calling a manned or unmanned satellite a vehicle or spacecraft may be a wee bit of a stretch if it still needs earth’s gravity just to go round and round with no fixed points of departure and destination?

    • @Chris-Workshop
      @Chris-Workshop 5 лет назад +2

      @@johnnyfavorite1194 well said!

  • @thisnicklldo
    @thisnicklldo 5 лет назад +80

    They were correct to change the naming procedure - by now we'd have Lemmy McLemface.

    • @qzg7857
      @qzg7857 5 лет назад +8

      Fun fact Stanisław Lem was apolish sci-fi writer. LEM was named kinda after him.

    • @sparkplug1018
      @sparkplug1018 5 лет назад +21

      The crews logic for the name was actually pretty solid though. They picked a name that they thought would get children interested in science and space travel.

    • @tubularap
      @tubularap 5 лет назад +4

      @@sparkplug1018 -- Good point ! And The Peanuts were very popular then.

    • @dsandoval9396
      @dsandoval9396 4 года назад +2

      What's wrong with Lemmy Mclemface!?!

  • @thomasarledge1933
    @thomasarledge1933 5 лет назад +85

    Yes Scott, we need to put the Floating Turd in the Smithsonian. Great Video...... Denton TX

    • @rodgersericv
      @rodgersericv 5 лет назад +2

      It's probably alive.

    • @spook_dad
      @spook_dad 5 лет назад

      I wouldn't like to be the one opening it up

    • @whorton4
      @whorton4 5 лет назад +2

      It has been in orbit longer than any human being. Who knows, it may have spawned some hideous space turd monster.

    • @davewilliams1157
      @davewilliams1157 4 года назад

      thomas arledge , we could put it next to ground vibration sensors, disguised as animal turds, that were dropped on the Ho Chi Minh trail during the Vietnam War!

    • @clearingbaffles
      @clearingbaffles 4 года назад

      thomas arledge give it to Nanci to replace the gavel

  • @williamswenson5315
    @williamswenson5315 5 лет назад +49

    A frugal approach for recovery might be to proffer a dog biscuit in LEO.

    • @EDEPole
      @EDEPole 5 лет назад +3

      A pizza would work better with Snoopy. Nice lateral thinking, thou.

    • @williamswenson5315
      @williamswenson5315 5 лет назад +2

      @@EDEPole Thank you. Lateral thought is an inadvertent characteristic of mine. I assume the pizza would be enticing to Snoopy's "Joe Cool" persona. As a big man on campus, he and his minions should be inseparable from that college staple of pizza.....................and beer, of course. Of course? What was I thinking?! You'd end up with frozen/ molten pizza (third degree burns to the palate) and either a beersicle or a mug full of nada. I'm sticking with the biscuit.

    • @davefarless9003
      @davefarless9003 5 лет назад +1

      Is that Lower Earth Orbit? 🌎

  • @TheFLOW1978
    @TheFLOW1978 5 лет назад +28

    Floaters are the worst.
    Somethings are better left untouched.
    Fun video

    • @thiesenf
      @thiesenf 5 лет назад +3

      Ghosties are creepy too...
      The feeling you get when your body just produced something that could compete with the Tsar Bomba and looking down in the toilette and all you see is nothing...

  • @sferrin2
    @sferrin2 5 лет назад +146

    I'd rather see a SpaceX Starship bring back Hubble so we can put it in the Smithsonian.

    • @johnfrancisdoe1563
      @johnfrancisdoe1563 5 лет назад +8

      sferrin2 Why not resupply and upgrade instead?

    • @dougpowers
      @dougpowers 4 года назад +37

      @@johnfrancisdoe1563 Hubble is an amazing piece of hardware, but she's pretty much obsolete by now. Her sensors are old and her mirror is a small 4.5 square meter, monolithic design. James Webb will have a segmented mirror with a whopping 25 square meters of collection area.

    • @blackhawks81H
      @blackhawks81H 4 года назад +8

      @@dougpowers And a total inability to see in the visual spectrum, meaning great for science, but not so great for the awesome beatufil photos, unfortunately.

    • @blackhawks81H
      @blackhawks81H 4 года назад +12

      Bring back both. The sky is no longer the limit. If the US govt can piss away TRILLIONS of dollars directly into the stock market during the sillyvirus pandemic basically to almost no effect, then we can definitely give NASA a much, much, higher budget.

    • @epiccollision
      @epiccollision 4 года назад

      ZoeQuinnIsAMurderer you’re welcome to wallow in more poverty...good luck.

  • @puremaga17
    @puremaga17 5 лет назад +24

    The space poop can only belong to John Young, even though he and Gene Cernan were both Naval aviator's and fighter pilot's, only a combat pilot could carry on the age old Carrier tradition of the "Phantom Shi**er"
    Thanks Scott!

    • @brettwarren5976
      @brettwarren5976 3 года назад +1

      * _Aviators_ and _fighter pilots_

    • @jimbodeek
      @jimbodeek 2 года назад +1

      Young was in the Command Module Charlie Brown.
      The poop would probably belong to either Stafford or Cernan.

  • @KnightRanger38
    @KnightRanger38 5 лет назад +2

    The ascent stage of the Snoopy lunar module is the only ascent stage of the 10 flown lunar modules (Apollo 5, and 9 through 17) still in existence. There are six descent stages still in existence on the Moon (Apollo 11, 12, 14 through 17). The descent stage of Apollo 5, 9 and 13 burned up in reentry in the Earth's atmosphere while Snoopy's descent stage crashed into the moon.

  • @RoyNBarlow
    @RoyNBarlow 5 лет назад +29

    I REALLY REALLY REALLY want to see the next episode of this where you actually use starship to bring it down to the launch pad now. Pretty pretty pretty please.

  • @TheHacknor
    @TheHacknor 5 лет назад +45

    Somehow it would seem more fitting if it was ever done to put in on the moon as part of the lunar museum

    • @Kevin_Street
      @Kevin_Street 5 лет назад +9

      That's what I was thinking!

    • @ColinPaddock
      @ColinPaddock 5 лет назад +6

      That would obviate any need for a return aeroshell.

    • @1FatLittleMonkey
      @1FatLittleMonkey 5 лет назад +3

      "That belongs in a moonseum!"
      "So do you!"

    • @lezzman
      @lezzman 5 лет назад +1

      But then the hoaxers wouldn't get to see it since they wouldn't believe the lunar museum exists.

  • @LoricSwift
    @LoricSwift 5 лет назад +42

    "An Insufficient Amount of Gravitas"

    • @tetsujin_144
      @tetsujin_144 5 лет назад +10

      When Wernher Von Braun failed to demonstrate a proper appreciation for the seriousness of the situation he was in, his mentor Hermann Oberth was there to offer a gravitas assist.
      Von Braun later cited Oberth as a great benefit to his productivity, noting that at times it felt as though being in close proximity allowed him to accomplish far more with the same amount of effort.

    • @JohnDangcilGeekWere
      @JohnDangcilGeekWere 5 лет назад +1

      Bwahaha, thank you!

    • @a1001ku
      @a1001ku 3 года назад

      @@tetsujin_144 lol

  • @Brixxter
    @Brixxter 5 лет назад +22

    Oh yes... Finally the okulele intro is back

  • @Allan_aka_RocKITEman
    @Allan_aka_RocKITEman 5 лет назад +27

    @Scott Manley >>> _"But you know of course it's really something you just want to put into a museum."_
    Uh, did you mean the _ascent stage,_ or the _turd?_ 😝😝😝

  • @danyelPitmon
    @danyelPitmon 5 лет назад +14

    I would love to see that lander sitting in a museum like the Smithsonian a piece of earths history of the Apollo moon landing that would be so cool to see

  • @proffmongo
    @proffmongo 5 лет назад +27

    Let's just use the spacecraft from "You Only Live Twice" to pick up Snoopy. ~!:^ P

    • @lezzman
      @lezzman 5 лет назад +2

      Now you're just being silly...you know full well that Blofeld destroyed the island launching facility before escaping!

    • @user-mp3eq6ir5b
      @user-mp3eq6ir5b 4 года назад

      proffmongo ☆ I think there is at least one "Buran" capable of refit. I'm sure with the Proper diplomatic exchange, something could be arranged to the satisfaction of All parties. Do want the Jet Engine version!

  • @hakrsakr
    @hakrsakr 5 лет назад +5

    If Snoopy could indeed be located and tracked, a mission to bring it home would in my(probably worthless) opinion be a fantastic mission solely due to the unique challenges it presents: spacecraft spin/trajectory/condition not fully or not at all known, far enough out to demand an autonomous solution, requires a capture vehicle big enough or clever enough to do the job, requires the capture vehicle hardware to be capable of a decade+ of hibernation in interplanetary space... all valuable lessons, never mind what we'd learn from studying Snoopy itself. Catching and returning something from space that was never designed to come back, or something on a fucked trajectory due to an accident is absolutely something we'll face in the future. And I think it would be better to learn these solutions on a shitty old lunar module than in a situation where lives and/or a multimillion dollar mission is at stake.

  • @johngay8416
    @johngay8416 5 лет назад +33

    News story today June 10 2019:
    Amateur astronomers in the UK are 98% sure they've located Snoopy!!!

  • @daveduna1
    @daveduna1 5 лет назад +120

    Best transcript I've read. Multiple turds.

    • @CurtisDensmore1
      @CurtisDensmore1 5 лет назад +19

      The best line: "God almighty"

    • @sunnyjim1355
      @sunnyjim1355 5 лет назад +2

      "Houston, we have a problem."

    • @C40V15
      @C40V15 5 лет назад +2

      "confidential"

    • @skorpius752
      @skorpius752 5 лет назад +4

      You notice how there's only three people up there and NONE of them crapped it out. I'm sure it was a close encounter of the turd kind.

    • @Nekroleinchen
      @Nekroleinchen 4 года назад

      @@skorpius752 the only explanation is that an alien took a shit into the spaceship

  • @TheWeatherbuff
    @TheWeatherbuff 5 лет назад +3

    Scott, you're going to be reincarnated as "Scotty", and you'll end up working on the Enterprise. This is really cool stuff!

  • @dronillon2578
    @dronillon2578 5 лет назад +6

    Another cool history video, thank you.
    Please, what version of KSP are you using?
    List of mods would be awesome! Screenshot of CKAN in your next KSP video perhaps?

  • @ronaldgarrison8478
    @ronaldgarrison8478 4 года назад +3

    If Snoopy spun up to enough RPMs, it may have just flown apart. That would be kind of a drag, but it will be what it will be.

  • @Kevin_Street
    @Kevin_Street 5 лет назад +17

    Today we propose Project Woodstock - a fifteen year mission that will employ new state-of-the-art capture techniques to retrieve a spacecraft from its long, lonely exile around the Sun and bring it back to Earth. Then we can finally close a chapter in the history books and conclusively determine who dealt it.
    We're looking at you, Tom Stafford. Soon science will provide the proof.

  • @PeterTangney
    @PeterTangney 4 года назад +2

    Based on the age old law of 'they who denied it supplied it' it's clear that the floater was from the command module pilot, John Young, who is sadly no longer with us.

  • @homomorphic
    @homomorphic 5 лет назад +5

    I did not expect this to lead into a discussion of scatology

  • @Carstuff111
    @Carstuff111 5 лет назад +3

    Woodstock helping Snoopy find his way home.... that would be epic!

  • @OSalviano
    @OSalviano 5 лет назад +17

    Snoopy, Come Home

  • @NZAnimeManga
    @NZAnimeManga 4 года назад

    You're the only RUclipsr to pronounce et cetera correctly, thank you.

  • @mattc3696
    @mattc3696 4 года назад +1

    This reminded me of the Star Trek film, when they find one of the Voyager probes. Thanks, Scott, as ever.

  • @reidhulshof3645
    @reidhulshof3645 4 года назад +3

    I can’t be the only one who’s greatly entertained by the fact that things can’t stay in lunar orbit very long because the moon is too lumpy and the gravitational field isn’t consistent enough

  • @idontwantachannelimjustcom7745
    @idontwantachannelimjustcom7745 5 лет назад +4

    We can do a study of long term corrosion and heat cycling of the module. We can take biological samples to find out if any microbes survived the trip. We could find out if any of the lost telemetry data is still in the computer.

    • @JohnMorley1
      @JohnMorley1 5 лет назад

      My guess is that we won't have immunity to any new bacteria that have evolved on that turd in all these years.

    • @sparkplug1018
      @sparkplug1018 5 лет назад

      As far as the telemetry goes, its all still in there, what ever it had stored when it was powered down. As far as bacteria goes, I'm not sure I want to know.

  • @jedigecko06
    @jedigecko06 5 лет назад +6

    Earth-crossing solar orbit? Possibly spinning?
    Sounds like an asteroid capture dry-run to me.

  • @ZanderSwart
    @ZanderSwart 5 лет назад +13

    Hey Scotty Thanx for beaming me up again.

    • @CombraStudios
      @CombraStudios 5 лет назад

      Wait were you the first comment?

    • @ZanderSwart
      @ZanderSwart 5 лет назад

      @@CombraStudios It is very possible. Maybe the second.

    • @CombraStudios
      @CombraStudios 5 лет назад

      @@ZanderSwart But I need to know it exactly

  • @Mr.Deleterious
    @Mr.Deleterious 5 лет назад +10

    I vote Cooper from Interstellar to dock with spinning Snoopy.

  • @pegzounet
    @pegzounet 5 лет назад +22

    A crying shame pilots didn't get to keep giving crazy names to these things. I'm actually surprised at how mild charlie brown and snoopy is.

    • @SimonBuchanNz
      @SimonBuchanNz 5 лет назад +13

      NASA was concerned about getting a copyright strike and having all their work on Apollo be demonetised.

    • @sparkplug1018
      @sparkplug1018 5 лет назад +5

      Why they picked the name is actually pretty tame. They wanted to name it something that would get kids interested in science and space travel.

    • @stocchinet
      @stocchinet 5 лет назад +2

      No thanks, nowadays we would have Jon and Daenerys

    • @5Andysalive
      @5Andysalive 5 лет назад +1

      Pretty sure even 10 had a certain restraints on their naming. This program used billions of taxpayers money and Nasa was very aware of that.

    • @thegardenofeatin5965
      @thegardenofeatin5965 5 лет назад +1

      I understand that's where the tradition of mission patches comes from. Grissom named Gemini III "The Unsinkable Molly Brown" because he was a little butthurt over Liberty Bell 7's fate. NASA put the kibosh on that, and said "Here, play with these crayons instead."

  • @rogerrobot9295
    @rogerrobot9295 4 года назад

    By the time we catch the LEM, perhaps we'll have a growing space tourism market. Then we can bring it back and put it in an orbiting zero-g science museum. It would be an awesome artifact to go visit. Great work Mike Loucks, and excellent presentation Scott!

  • @boyurbeegaming36
    @boyurbeegaming36 4 года назад +1

    It works! I was starting to think my Portable Fecal Time Displacement Toilet was a failure. Finally my life’s work was a success. It’s a new age for mankind, we can now send poop anytime, anywhere, anyplace. Nobel Prize please!

  • @Robert-xp4ii
    @Robert-xp4ii 5 лет назад +4

    (At the museum)
    Kid: "Daddy, what's that?"
    Dad: "It's a turd that was inside Snoopy."
    Kid: 😮

  • @kunneman
    @kunneman 5 лет назад +178

    Would be interesting to see to whom the poop belonged! I'd put down my tax dollars for that. So many sleepless nights....

    • @theophrastusbombastus8019
      @theophrastusbombastus8019 5 лет назад +25

      Forsenic report. Top secret. Fecal matter is not human. Isotope composition do not match with Earth origin. Last meal was chili.

    • @dotancohen
      @dotancohen 5 лет назад +27

      More interesting would be to see what biology has grown in it since. That presumably turd did not get the "mash with anitbiotics" treatment that the other turds got, and thus has been a rich nutrient bed with different flora possibly evolving outside the Earth's SOI for fifty years!

    • @akizeta
      @akizeta 5 лет назад +25

      @@dotancohen Damn, I don't want to be the guy to open that module after who knows what's been mutating in there.

    • @PiezPiedPy
      @PiezPiedPy 5 лет назад +4

      As long as it doesn't end up in a museum :|

    • @ComradePhoenix
      @ComradePhoenix 5 лет назад +23

      @@dotancohen we now have the worst possible variation on the classic "scientists accidentally create tiny civilization" trope.

  • @Lashb1ade
    @Lashb1ade 5 лет назад +1

    "The famous Apollo 10 Floating Turd... it's really something that you just want to put in a museum," - Scott Manley.

    • @fred_derf
      @fred_derf 5 лет назад

      I wonder if Snoppy has been vented to space, if so that would be one freeze dried poop!

  • @fiveoneecho
    @fiveoneecho 5 лет назад +258

    Nobody:
    Elon Musk: Puts his old car in orbit. Recovers Apollo 10 floating poop.

    • @5Andysalive
      @5Andysalive 5 лет назад +11

      Well, poop can fertilze a planet. But who want's a Tesla on Mars.

    • @fiveoneecho
      @fiveoneecho 5 лет назад +35

      @@5Andysalive The first life discovered will be a strain of bacteria from the Apollo 10 poop. Snoopy broke the Prime Directive!

    • @whorton4
      @whorton4 5 лет назад +2

      What a waste . . .literally. Bill Murray would be proud.

    • @whorton4
      @whorton4 5 лет назад +12

      @@5Andysalive Who knows, maybe one day after the earth is destroyed, snoopy will find its way back and crash on earth. . . That delicate excrement may restart the totality of life on earth again.

    • @s.31.l50
      @s.31.l50 5 лет назад +1

      Cole Smith 😂😂😂🤦‍♂️

  • @vikkimcdonough6153
    @vikkimcdonough6153 5 лет назад +10

    7:14 - Could it potentially have spun up enough to have disassembled itself before we got to it?

    • @lucchesi87
      @lucchesi87 5 лет назад +5

      with its relatively small length and mass it would have to spin at incredible speeds to generate enough centrifugal forces to tear it apart...

    • @user-mp3eq6ir5b
      @user-mp3eq6ir5b 4 года назад

      Sean McDonough ☆ Just seeing it would prove/disprove that Theory. Like one of those solar bulb spinners from the 60s.

  • @DLR_Oli
    @DLR_Oli 5 лет назад +27

    A little disappointed you didn't build a Starship and brought it down to the KSC for... further analysis! haha

    • @user-yj7ks9mb1e
      @user-yj7ks9mb1e 5 лет назад +1

      It may be part two of a new "Return Snoopy" micro-series?

    • @dannycacciato1234
      @dannycacciato1234 5 лет назад

      ha, i was thinking that should be starships official test flight or tsting refueling

  • @johnmccnj
    @johnmccnj 5 лет назад +2

    "By the time we get to it, it's highly likely that it's spinning on it's own."

  • @josephjacobs5219
    @josephjacobs5219 5 лет назад

    You're right about the Lunar Module being thin....I remember years ago one of the astronauts said he had to pay attention, if he moved his foot the wrong way,...He could easily put a hole in the floor.....Also, if you noticed, when Apollo 11 is docking...The medal really looks wrinkled up.....Very light weight......The night Apollo11 landed...We were just kids but we ran outside into the night and looked up at a full moon.....I'll never forget my brother saying...Human beings are walking (right now) on the moon.....We were amazed.

  • @MechE_Emma
    @MechE_Emma 5 лет назад +7

    Awesome video, what navball mod were you using in your KSP instance?

    • @Gazpachian
      @Gazpachian 5 лет назад

      The navball reskin is part of Principia, the skins may be available as standalones for use with Texture Replacer somewhere but I'm not sure.

  • @morskojvolk
    @morskojvolk 5 лет назад +5

    "Listen, it's just a simple thing to do..." bloody Hell.🤨

  • @allangibson8494
    @allangibson8494 5 лет назад +2

    The ascent engine bell would probably be the best option for docking. Its the most robust part of the spacecraft being heavy walled aluminum.

    • @15Redstones
      @15Redstones 5 лет назад

      What about the docking mechanism

    • @allangibson8494
      @allangibson8494 5 лет назад

      @@15Redstones Probe & drogue into the engine throat pulling down onto the descent stage attachment points. If it burned to depletion very little fuel should remain. Questions about engine corrosion would need answers however.
      At a bit over 2 tonnes this should be possible.

  • @a32k57
    @a32k57 4 года назад +2

    Space is it's new home. Maybe land it on the moon, finally.. otherwise- by the time we expend the effort to catch it, we could just put it in A more stable solar orbit.. and enclose it in an orbital exhibit.. in space it's dramatic effect. It's so hard getting things to space, I hate bringing it back down, that's risky too.

    • @Zerbey
      @Zerbey 4 года назад

      Maybe when we finally get a Moon base they can pop it in a museum there.

  • @jonathaniszorro
    @jonathaniszorro 5 лет назад +36

    0:13 someone's thinking about KSP...

  • @prepperpov5852
    @prepperpov5852 5 лет назад +34

    Sure I’ll bring it home just gimme a minute... yeesh

  • @Mdelbeck1
    @Mdelbeck1 3 года назад

    You figured this out over the weekend huh? It took me all last weekend to find my reading glasses!

  • @Rose_Nebula
    @Rose_Nebula 5 лет назад

    Bringing snoopy back would actually be great because it would allow us to study how spacecraft, particularly those built for crew capability, are affected by extended time in solar orbit, and space in general, without servicing. This could be very helpful for interplanetary missions and such...

  • @martythemartian99
    @martythemartian99 5 лет назад +12

    HEY NASA! Nothing wrong with fun names for space ships. Don't be so full of yourselves.
    Marty has spoken!

    • @lawrencemiller3829
      @lawrencemiller3829 5 лет назад +1

      NASA called the Shuttle the Enterprise from Star Trek, but only after being directed by then president Gerald Ford (h/t Wikipedia)

    • @tetsujin_144
      @tetsujin_144 5 лет назад +5

      "Houston, Tranquility base: Landy McLanderFace has Landed."

    • @martythemartian99
      @martythemartian99 5 лет назад

      @@tetsujin_144 HA! (lmfao)

    • @thegardenofeatin5965
      @thegardenofeatin5965 5 лет назад

      @@tetsujin_144 Hasn't there been a Probey McProbeFace already?

  • @fod3er
    @fod3er 5 лет назад +11

    I was wondering if it could still be pressurized

    • @JohnMorley1
      @JohnMorley1 5 лет назад +1

      No, it would have been depreasurised since leaving the astronaut's bottom.

    • @fod3er
      @fod3er 5 лет назад

      @@JohnMorley1 lol are we talking about the same thing? i was on about the capsule

    • @sparkplug1018
      @sparkplug1018 5 лет назад +1

      @@fod3er Considering how they let it go, its doubtful that it would still be.

    • @marzsit9833
      @marzsit9833 5 лет назад +4

      when they cut snoopy loose, the hatches on both spacecraft were closed. the reason they used the explosive bolts to separate the spacecrafts was because this was strictly a hardware test mission and they had to test the explosive bolt system in zero-g to see if it worked. grumman lunar modules were built out of thick aluminum foil over a tube frame, if snoopy's hatch were open the rapid decompression would have been visible on the video of the separation and most likely would have ripped the lem apart a bit. it probably isn't fully pressurized after all this time but it may have some pressure differential.

    • @ColinPaddock
      @ColinPaddock 5 лет назад +3

      marzsit Also, I’m pretty sure the telemetry showed it was still pressurized. After 50 years, between micrometeorite bombardment and spinning wildly from YARP, that thing probably doesn’t hold air.

  • @RawbLV
    @RawbLV 5 лет назад

    Another channel that I can't watch while eating. Thanks, Scott!

    • @scottmanley
      @scottmanley  5 лет назад

      ruclips.net/video/w5y0mTqK54k/видео.html

  • @DroneMee
    @DroneMee 5 лет назад +1

    I was rrrealy hoping you were going to luanch a Starship and bring it home lol Awesome video as always sir!

  • @kaiserredgamer8943
    @kaiserredgamer8943 5 лет назад +10

    12:51 Cape Canaveral staff be like:
    Staff 1: See that "comet"?
    Staff 2: Yea
    Staff 1: That's Snoopy! It's back!!!
    Cernan: *SNOOPY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!* OMG I missed uuuuuuuuuuuuuuuu!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I love u more than my wife!

  • @FandersonUfo
    @FandersonUfo 5 лет назад +6

    Would be awesome to bring it back. A job for Bezos or Musk perhaps. Or next century with SLS.

    • @mrkeogh
      @mrkeogh 5 лет назад +2

      Bezos funded the recovery of the Saturn V engines, he'd probably be into this in a big way if the cost and timetable were reasonable.
      What if we left it in LEO as a space-based monument to all those involved in Apollo?

    • @FandersonUfo
      @FandersonUfo 5 лет назад

      @@mrkeogh - happy to be advised the best use for it - it is a piece of history that could be recovered easily within 10 years for a museum or memorial - it's just spinning around out there now of course

  • @dis4815
    @dis4815 4 года назад

    This is top class, Mr. Manley! But for an actual recovery mission for something this fragile after literally tumbling around for 50 or so years in space, I think you'll need a veteran human crew and a humungous big rocket to go out to Snoopy, capture it VERY CAREFULLY, and then bring it back to Earth orbit (I don't think it'd survive re-entry, even in a protective shell). That's of course, if it's even intact now...

  • @K-Effect
    @K-Effect 5 лет назад +1

    It does need to be put into museum

  • @SnowTiger45
    @SnowTiger45 5 лет назад +8

    Anything to do with Space Travel is "over my head" !

  • @spacetimelapses8244
    @spacetimelapses8244 5 лет назад +8

    The rotation of the lunar module can easily be fixed:
    simply figure out how to time warp in real-life and it should not spin any more ...

    • @b.c.102
      @b.c.102 4 года назад

      Q: its simple, change the gravitational constant of the universe!

  • @HorribleHarry
    @HorribleHarry 4 года назад

    I had always assumed snoopy was complete, thank you for clearing that up for me!

  • @darrinpearce9780
    @darrinpearce9780 5 лет назад

    I thought I knew all there was to know about Apollo but didnt know about the errant space turd. Seriously, thanks for the video Scott

  • @dr_birb
    @dr_birb 5 лет назад +6

    I got clickbaited as a fan on Snoopy.

  • @miguelrivas4649
    @miguelrivas4649 5 лет назад +6

    Does anyone know if the spaceship (the one containing the poop) was pressurized and if it was for how long would it have maintained that? I may ask my genetic forensics teacher if it would be possible to recover DNA from that if I have enough info to make a good question.

    • @SomeDudeInBaltimore
      @SomeDudeInBaltimore 5 лет назад +1

      All spacecraft leak a tiny bit. Most likely no atmo left inside.

    • @KohuGaly
      @KohuGaly 5 лет назад

      The turd is almost certainly got vacuum-dried in couple of years after the start. The DNA should be intact.

    • @tybofborg
      @tybofborg 5 лет назад

      @@KohuGaly That is, unless interplanetary space is flooded with ionizing radiation that will absolutely break down squishy DNA molecules, presenting a major challenge to manned interplanetary travel. Which it is.

    • @KohuGaly
      @KohuGaly 5 лет назад +1

      @@tybofborg Damage to the DNA that is susficient to kill a human is still orders of magnitudes lower than damage that would render DNA unrecognizable.

  • @richie1326
    @richie1326 5 лет назад

    Hey Scott, love the virtuoso ukulele intro... you are indeed a man of many talents!

  • @gwentchamp8720
    @gwentchamp8720 5 лет назад +2

    You changed the intro music. I liked the previous one :P

  • @MrGoesBoom
    @MrGoesBoom 5 лет назад +2

    I think it's a shame that they decided that the people who built, worked on, and ultimately flew the ships were forced to just pick boring 'important' names...naming them Snoopy and Charlie Brown was fun and interesting I think.

    • @randomnickify
      @randomnickify 5 лет назад

      ..."tranquility base here, Snoopy has landed"... brilliant way to enter history books ;)

    • @MrGoesBoom
      @MrGoesBoom 5 лет назад

      @@randomnickify Why not? Why should Eagle ( a bland generic name ) be considered more important, majestic, whatever than Snoopy?

    • @MrGoesBoom
      @MrGoesBoom 5 лет назад

      @Charles Yuditsky Ok, and why is that bad? Unless you have a dirty mind in which case that's on you.

    • @jimbodeek
      @jimbodeek 2 года назад

      @@randomnickify Or how about this: "Snoopy's in the yard."

  • @davidanderson4091
    @davidanderson4091 5 лет назад +3

    Scott "Rich Purnell" Manley
    "I've done the math... it checks out"

    • @thegardenofeatin5965
      @thegardenofeatin5965 5 лет назад +1

      Flight, be advised. Scott Manley is a steely-eyed missile man!

  • @mastershooter64
    @mastershooter64 5 лет назад +1

    Lunar gravity field is rough by that do you mean that there are some areas where gravity waz higher and some areas where gravity was low?

  • @quantumac
    @quantumac 5 лет назад +1

    Perhaps some kind of large, semi-rigid lasso could be developed, one which could be extended around the rotating LM and then tightened quickly. Once captured, the return vehicle could use its thrusters to stabilize the rotation.

    • @quantumac
      @quantumac 5 лет назад

      @@javaman4584 Yeah, it certainly could end up that way if KSP is any predictor. It's a tricky problem to solve, no doubt. Perhaps someone ought to set up a competition for ideas.

  • @WoodworkerDon
    @WoodworkerDon 5 лет назад +14

    Send James Cameron to go find Snoopy. He thinks he's the greatest explorer of all time. Earth could spare him for however long it might take him to track down Snoopy and get a leash on him.

    • @Hyperlooper
      @Hyperlooper 5 лет назад +4

      I could actually see him doing this.

    • @epiccollision
      @epiccollision 4 года назад +2

      Then the earth would be without James Cameron for years, that’s a net positive any way you shake it.

  • @darkguardian1314
    @darkguardian1314 5 лет назад +7

    4:10 Good grief.

  • @colinrickatson6320
    @colinrickatson6320 5 лет назад +1

    The ship that goes out there to bring snoopy back should be called Red Baron :D

    • @tommypetraglia4688
      @tommypetraglia4688 5 лет назад +1

      Bravo 👏👏👏 ... well played my man, well played

  • @Bobshouse
    @Bobshouse 5 лет назад

    I'd forgotten all about the poop incident, thanks for the memories and the laugh.

  • @peppeddu
    @peppeddu 5 лет назад +9

    With the human waste left in the module and the sun baking it for 50 years I wouldn't be surprised if you find a new life form developing inside.

    • @stargazer7644
      @stargazer7644 4 года назад +1

      Spacecraft don't generally bake in space. They have to be heated to stay warm inside. There's a lot more empty space at -270 deg C surrounding a spacecraft than there is hot sun shining on one side of it. That's why Apollo 13 froze on the way back from the Moon when they had to turn off the heaters.

  • @geoffreylee5199
    @geoffreylee5199 5 лет назад +3

    LEMs have a lot of aluminium in the structure.

  • @TheAlastairBrown
    @TheAlastairBrown 5 лет назад

    Easiest way to bring it back in - huge plastic bag filled with ablative foam, like from the proposed emergency space station ejection seats. A parachute system, a few tanks of foam, a small deorbit burn.

  • @craigrmeyer
    @craigrmeyer 4 года назад

    Next please take a crack at that “frisbee box” fairing scheme for launching a gigantic one-piece mirror for a space super-telescope. Holy moly would that be amazing.
    Something about launching from a balloon to avoid most air drag, or something.

  • @shonny61
    @shonny61 5 лет назад +6

    If Snoops shed parts from yorping to structural failure it might be a skosh harder to find.

    • @sparkplug1018
      @sparkplug1018 5 лет назад

      Unless its either started rotating rapidly, or been hit by something in theory it should be intact still. But if it has come apart I doubt there would be much left to find, things like the ascent engine and computers maybe.

  • @PaulAtreidesMuadDib
    @PaulAtreidesMuadDib 5 лет назад +4

    Poor Snoopy probably looks like swiss cheese or pumice after being clobbered by micro meteoroids for years

    • @stargazer7644
      @stargazer7644 5 лет назад +2

      I think you underestimate the size of space and overestimate the number of objects floating in it.

    • @alastairbrand5821
      @alastairbrand5821 4 года назад

      @@stargazer7644 True - most of the recorded impacts on objects in LEO have been space debris (our trash) as opposed to being of extraterrestrial origin. As Snoopy is in interplanetary space it is not in the (man made) danger zone.
      As proud as I am of human achievement in space over the past 63 years, it nonetheless saddens me that we have already started cluttering up near space with our rubbish.

    • @stargazer7644
      @stargazer7644 4 года назад

      @@alastairbrand5821 Even for objects in LEO, the chance of being hit even once by anything that could cause damage in 45 years is astronomically low. We have spacecraft in orbit that have been working that long without being hit (AMSAT-OSCAR 7 is an example, 45 years and still going). Neither Voyager has been hit in 42 years. Snoopy certainly has not been "clobbered" into "swiss cheese" or "pumice". It quite likely hasn't been damaged at all - at least not by meteoroids.

  • @JohanMsWorld
    @JohanMsWorld 5 лет назад +1

    If you know the trajectory you could sent an Starship out to retract it as rehersal mission for the Mars landing. We know how much Elon love good PR and retracting Snoopy would be such an accivement. And with the Starships power you can get there and back much faster than 15 years anyway. Johan.

    • @commscan314
      @commscan314 6 месяцев назад

      You won't get there and back any faster than 15 years. If that's the cheapest way to do it then that's the way they're gonna do it.

  • @therugburnz
    @therugburnz 5 лет назад

    I remembers hearing the word Snoopy on our TV when I was three and my mother told me it was really important because it was real people in space doing Science. At the time, because of cartoons, I thought people already lived in space as a part of daily life. Then when I was ten years old and knew the moon and space exploration was just getting started, I was glad my mom made sure I watched as the Eagle landed ! God Bless those that were involved with Charley Brown&Snoopy doing highly dangerous maneuvers just so others could get to the surface of the moon.
    God Bless America Long Live the Republic