"The First Man on the Moon: Why Neil Armstrong?” Dr. James Hansen

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  • Опубликовано: 6 янв 2025

Комментарии • 91

  • @craigwall9536
    @craigwall9536 Год назад +9

    Why? Because Neil never got rattled. Witnessd his handling of the lunar landing simulator; the stuck thruster in the Gemini capsule; the X-15 overshoot; and finally the way he handler the 1201 alarms. No one else was that predicably, appropriately calm when it counted.

    • @larsjordan13
      @larsjordan13 10 месяцев назад +1

      Neil was probably one of the best, but likely any of the Commanders could have landed Apollo 11 - they were all outstanding, unflappable, calm and capable. That is why they were Commandersof these missions.

    • @hermeticxhaote4723
      @hermeticxhaote4723 6 месяцев назад

      Yup. I aspire to have 1% of Armstrong's temerity, resolve and guts. Neil Armstrong was the best of us, balls of steel and icewater in his veins paired with humility and intelligence.

  • @SassePhoto
    @SassePhoto 7 лет назад +5

    Excellent educational presentation! We need more of this, thank you so much!

  • @aljohnson5601
    @aljohnson5601 2 года назад +2

    Wow! This was fascinating. As someone who knows a lot about early space history, there were things I learned in this presentation I didn’t know. Very well done!

    • @crmay72
      @crmay72 Год назад

      Agreed! I really enjoyed this as well!

  • @rinsedpie
    @rinsedpie 5 месяцев назад +1

    I love everything about Neil Armstrong; this is my childhood icon and still is now

  • @jostillman6796
    @jostillman6796 4 года назад +2

    Excellent presentation. Informative and insightful, even for a non technical and scientific mind.

  • @brucevilla
    @brucevilla 3 года назад +1

    Thanks for Uploading.

  • @thomasafb
    @thomasafb 2 дня назад

    he is right about the accent....there are times in his presentation when you close your eyes it's almost like you hear Neil speaking

  • @kdlofty
    @kdlofty Год назад +7

    Because he had no ego, was an introvert, was very cool under extreme pressure and was probably the best pilot. The fact that he was the first civilian astronaut and NASA was a civilian agency might have had something to do with it.

    • @xyz.ijk.
      @xyz.ijk. Год назад +2

      Nope, nothing.

  • @ronaldgarrison8478
    @ronaldgarrison8478 Год назад +1

    This is my second post on this in a video comment section. Maybe someone has a real answer. We know that the LM was essential for the Apollo 13 crew to get back alive. We also know that this potential importance was on the minds of those planning Apollo 8, so going without it was a known risk. Here's what I don't understand: The LM was not ready for its intended mission. But couldn't it be made ready, in time for Apollo 8, to serve as an emergency vehicle? It could have been along, unfueled, but with electrical power, some consumables, and so forth? Also, some things could have been learned from having it along, even in that limited role. So why not?

    • @valinormons
      @valinormons 10 месяцев назад +1

      Maybe because they weren't supposed to go to the Moon with Apollo 8. But then as events played out, they went. And they went with what they had ready to go. There wasn't a lot of time to waste waiting around. It was a very daring mission that caught a lot of people off guard.

  • @MikeSuley
    @MikeSuley 6 лет назад +1

    Excellent presentation.

  • @martinap1961
    @martinap1961 Год назад

    Thank you….very nice insight on “The Man” !

  • @UAL320
    @UAL320 Год назад

    Collins has discussed “1930” many times as being absolutely pivotal.

  • @valinormons
    @valinormons 10 месяцев назад +1

    That's right. Armstrong was first because they wanted him to be first. At least he didn't have any trepidations about having Buzz along for the ride. But I think Buzz is a lot more interesting than Armstrong. Much more colorful. And now he's the last of the 3. I hope he's around for another few years.

  • @tomb1198
    @tomb1198 6 лет назад +6

    My father ( navy test pilot ) shared an office with Neil Armstrong back in the early 60's and told Neil that he would be the first man on the moon. When Neil asked why, my father told him because he had the All American Name. Might have also had something to do with it.

    • @David-bg3ct
      @David-bg3ct Год назад

      Who was your father?

    • @tomb1198
      @tomb1198 Год назад

      @@David-bg3ct William Brook,jr

    • @byronbuck1762
      @byronbuck1762 11 месяцев назад

      What astronaut in those days didn’t have an all-American name? There were all white male prodestants

    • @craigwall9536
      @craigwall9536 11 месяцев назад +10

      @@byronbuck1762 ...and they could spell...

    • @JamesOberg
      @JamesOberg 10 месяцев назад +1

      Also, his name spelled backwards included the sequence "Mr. Alien".

  • @elijahoyetunde5867
    @elijahoyetunde5867 7 лет назад +2

    Wonderful!

  • @ronaldgarrison8478
    @ronaldgarrison8478 Год назад +1

    ~49:00 It seems notable that the four Artemis 2 crew members are in their mid-forties, so significantly older than the Mercury/Gemini/Apollo guys.

    • @narajuna
      @narajuna 10 месяцев назад

      Yes and I have seen laments on Apollo crew ages, and women are more sensitive to Radiations? Seems are Karmin Line is more dangerous than deep space.

    • @ronaldgarrison8478
      @ronaldgarrison8478 10 месяцев назад

      @@narajuna I don't understand. Can you expand this a little more?

    • @narajuna
      @narajuna 10 месяцев назад

      @@ronaldgarrison8478 ....? Rather simple this one, Some say they were getting old to do it: late 30s to 40s. No one died in deep space, Shuttle was a killer.
      Four of them are alive as of January 2024 with an average age of 90 years. Most astronauts at ... See more

  • @rothbj1
    @rothbj1 7 месяцев назад +1

    I wonder if any of the other 11 Moonwalkers would, in hindsight, traded places with him, and have to carry the burden of being first.

  • @xyz.ijk.
    @xyz.ijk. Год назад

    Frank Borman received a telegram which read, "You saved 1968." That's according to Frank Borman.
    Deke Slayton was famous for saying, "Any man, any mission." He wanted one of the Mercury astronauts to be the first on the moon. And it would have been in the same rotational order, meaning (in order) Shepard, Grissom, and then Schirra with the others already being out of the rotation.

    • @airplanes42
      @airplanes42 11 месяцев назад

      Deke was biased and wrong. Schirra says in his book that there was a lot of talk that the Mercury Astronauts were not selected for moon missions. Indeed, the moon program had not yet been announced when the Original 7 were selected. The Next 9 were really the class of the space program IMHO.
      Certain men were clearly picked for certain roles. Deke was not going to select just any of the astronauts to be a mission commander, or even a CMP for that matter.

    • @stephenkehl7158
      @stephenkehl7158 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@airplanes42 Schirra had already decided to leave NASA prior to the Apollo 7 flight, and even if he hadn’t, his rebellious attitude during that flight would’ve grounded him. Grissom certainly would have commanded a lunar landing, and Shepard did land on Apollo 14, so I don’t see where it can be said that the Mercury astronauts were not being selected for lunar missions.
      Edit for clarity

    • @jimlakey8366
      @jimlakey8366 9 месяцев назад

      Deke spearheaded the next nine selections and did the hiring of them and all subsequent astronauts until the early 70’s. He chose all Gemini and Apollo crews, subject to upper management approval. Change my mind.@@airplanes42

  • @hermanheine3291
    @hermanheine3291 6 лет назад +1

    Very nice presentation Dr. Hansen

  • @jamiegodman715
    @jamiegodman715 7 лет назад +1

    Very interesting

  • @nickyl9040
    @nickyl9040 Год назад

    Neil Armstrong was chosen bc his logbook showed that he had more hours being the PIC of rocket powered aircraft than any other astronaut

  • @zdelacruz6296
    @zdelacruz6296 5 лет назад +1

    it's a great film.

  • @mikem5043
    @mikem5043 7 месяцев назад +3

    Neil was the perfect selection

    • @sergei6572
      @sergei6572 7 месяцев назад

      I completely agree with you. One can even say more, he was the best representative of the planet Earth. In the Soviet Union, as now in Russia, Cosmonautics Day is celebrated every year on April 12, in honor of the first human flight into space. I believe that the day of man's first moon walk should also be celebrated by the whole world. This is also an epoch-making event in the history of mankind.

  • @ABitOfTheUniverse
    @ABitOfTheUniverse 7 лет назад +1

    Hello San Mcnellis, let's chat here.

  • @SamIIs
    @SamIIs 2 года назад

    32:59

  • @SamIIs
    @SamIIs 2 года назад

    1:14:30

  • @SamIIs
    @SamIIs 2 года назад

    1:11:49

  • @xyz.ijk.
    @xyz.ijk. Год назад +1

    For historian and biographer, it's frightening the number of absolute verifiable facts that he gets wrong. I don't understand this at all.

    • @airplanes42
      @airplanes42 11 месяцев назад +1

      Can you please cite a few?

    • @narajuna
      @narajuna 11 месяцев назад

      Many of these Docs do, this one is good, with some "thinking", and Zealots bash Unbelievers for small mistakes. People dont really remember #8 nor #10, many dont know 9 travels.
      19:20👍 for Science Worshippers :)

  • @SamIIs
    @SamIIs 2 года назад

    40:14

  • @phillipwilliams3544
    @phillipwilliams3544 10 месяцев назад +2

    The first man on the moon was not an American it was an Englishman with his dog i saw it on TV . Wallace and grommet

  • @JTrailman
    @JTrailman 4 месяца назад +1

    Well sir you were wrong gus would have been the first man on the moon

  • @SamIIs
    @SamIIs 2 года назад

    12:10

  • @Rajibuzzaman_STEM_Rajibuzzaman

    COSMIC PORTAL AND ETM

  • @luckyirvin
    @luckyirvin 6 лет назад +3

    bein damn hard to kill is helpful too!

  • @ronaldowalkerez-sg2yq
    @ronaldowalkerez-sg2yq Месяц назад

    I can think of one, #2, yes 2 would be #1, bully his way to it, if allowed., with some due respect,to #2.

  • @ianmasters4225
    @ianmasters4225 7 месяцев назад

    Mike Collins was the real hero

  • @antr7493
    @antr7493 7 лет назад +2

    who the hell down votes this? The Soviet Union?

    • @dicksatan6444
      @dicksatan6444 10 месяцев назад +1

      Most likely the same people who have left the poorly spelled, conspiratorial comments here.

  • @davidharrington50
    @davidharrington50 Год назад +1

    He believed in God and strongly, I do myself. If someone asks me to put my hand on the Bible and say I went to the moon, I would say give me the Bible because I know what I have done in my life but he would not ever do it. Then u have the 3 that burn up and they were supposed to go first but one talked about it and said it's noway this is going to happen but I believe he was going or not going and it wasn't going to be no fake job. U have to have people to agree and I believe they tell you it's for ur country it happens and he did it for that reason and if ur sworn to never say nothing u can't. But we lost the technology to go back they say. Nasa looses everything when u say prove it but nobody can prove or diss prove it. The only way u can, do it again and shoe us because u never will settle it until you go now. U can't say u lost the technology, tell me how u loose it. U only get better at technology and it never will stop until someone goes back and I don't think they can but it's just my opinion

  • @robertfoertsch
    @robertfoertsch 6 лет назад +1

    Evolution, The Moon Landing , And The Globe Are Science Fiction

  • @larsjordan13
    @larsjordan13 10 месяцев назад

    Sorry to be a naysayer, but "First Man" was one of the worst movies I have ever seen: it portrayed Neil as a depressed angry man obsessed with his daughters death, and this was the tone of the whole movie. Ask anyone who worked with him, and they'll tell you he was a cheerful (albeit a quiet) man, who always asked about fellow workers children and families.
    Hansen himself misqouted John Young in his treatment of the Apollo 16 astronaut in a matter of geology in "Always Young," but "First Man" was pretty accurate.

  • @Rajibuzzaman_STEM_Rajibuzzaman

    EARTH AND PLANETARY ORIENTATION AND OR NOT PROPER ATMOSPHERIC CONDITIONS

  • @TomasKuciauskas
    @TomasKuciauskas 10 месяцев назад +4

    Nobody was on the moon

    • @hermeticxhaote4723
      @hermeticxhaote4723 6 месяцев назад +2

      Your mom was.

    • @wimkuijpers1342
      @wimkuijpers1342 5 месяцев назад

      Really?

    • @TomasKuciauskas
      @TomasKuciauskas 5 месяцев назад

      @@wimkuijpers1342 Yes

    • @wimkuijpers1342
      @wimkuijpers1342 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@TomasKuciauskas What was I watching on TV in 1969, 1971 and 1972? And all the thousands of photos in newspapers and magazines? Not to mention the thousands of hours of 16mm films that are now available on the internet.

    • @TomasKuciauskas
      @TomasKuciauskas 5 месяцев назад

      @@wimkuijpers1342 Trust me.Its all just fake news and big Cold War competition.Open your eyes and Mind
      read more info about who brings the Moon to orbit and why he is not turning around 😇😇😇

  • @krugerfuchs
    @krugerfuchs Год назад

    Borman resigned because his wife was an alcoholic

  • @nightstrider391
    @nightstrider391 4 года назад +4

    Because he was easy to manipulate,
    He responded to nlp and hypnosis easier than most,
    He was the ideal puppet.
    No one has been into space,
    No one.

  • @wipemysmile
    @wipemysmile 7 лет назад +5

    Because they had to Kill Gus Grissom because he wouldn't go along with this Disney garbage.

    • @luckyirvin
      @luckyirvin 6 лет назад

      not to mention lettin Livia loose in rome

    • @cceaser7
      @cceaser7 5 лет назад +1

      where can i find this innfo

    • @mike.j3913
      @mike.j3913 4 месяца назад

      And Thomas Baron people that admire lying Neil Armstrong has brain damage