The Soviet's Secret Mars Landing

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  • Опубликовано: 28 май 2024
  • The Soviet's Secret Mars Landing
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Комментарии • 455

  • @andrewbrown6745
    @andrewbrown6745 Месяц назад +179

    “Our closest planetary neighbor” Venus: am I a joke to you?

    • @Wurtoz9643
      @Wurtoz9643 Месяц назад +23

      Mercury: Am I a joke to *you?*

    • @nathanielbyrne1132
      @nathanielbyrne1132 Месяц назад +6

      Thanks, you saved me the comment

    • @nathanielbyrne1132
      @nathanielbyrne1132 Месяц назад +5

      Wow I didn't know mercury is closer to us than Mars

    • @HeadyEddie
      @HeadyEddie Месяц назад +20

      ​@@nathanielbyrne1132most of the time the closest planet to Earth is Mercury. Only when planets are aligned in their orbit is Venus or Mars closer

    • @johnwenzel2003
      @johnwenzel2003 Месяц назад +9

      The joys of orbital dynamics. 😊

  • @JasperH5150
    @JasperH5150 Месяц назад +96

    Thank you for not playing obnoxious dramatic LOUD music in your videos... We can actually understand your narrator... Thank you!

  • @GneasYTC
    @GneasYTC Месяц назад +37

    That was a hell of an achievement for 1971, going in blind and managing to get the lander down safely.
    What happened then was just lousy luck on the timing.

    • @hendrickswart4122
      @hendrickswart4122 Месяц назад +3

      I do allways get the lotto numbers righ, but my timing is still way out.

  • @twojaygotbales9787
    @twojaygotbales9787 Месяц назад +101

    Imagine being the Russian guy probably running on 3 hours of sleep and mistyping “150” instead of “1.5” lmao

    • @raedwulf61
      @raedwulf61 Месяц назад +20

      "Gulag for you!"

    • @causewaykayak
      @causewaykayak Месяц назад +2

      @@raedwulf61 How does SpaceX handle such lapses. Presumably the have them regularly. People DO make mistakes ...

    • @tomsterbg8130
      @tomsterbg8130 Месяц назад +9

      @@causewaykayak technology advanced a lot, you can now have simulated tests to ensure the program works as expected

    • @causewaykayak
      @causewaykayak Месяц назад +1

      @@tomsterbg8130 Thanks for that. We can expect flawless performances. Dronescapes was saying something very similar about traditional test pilots and the modern methods

    • @raedwulf61
      @raedwulf61 Месяц назад +1

      @@causewaykayak Ask Musk.

  • @magnetospin
    @magnetospin Месяц назад +54

    That walking robot was pretty genius.

    • @rilluma
      @rilluma 16 дней назад +2

      ahead of its time

  • @philt7597
    @philt7597 Месяц назад +7

    Thank you for using all correct international units (i.e., km) without apology (miles in parentheses). You are one of the few RUclips science communicators willing to take this bold step. I salute you!

    • @clownassbutthead6378
      @clownassbutthead6378 Месяц назад +1

      WHAT THE FUCK IS A KILOMETER 🦅🦅🦅🇺🇲🇺🇲🇺🇲

  • @gabrielshansen
    @gabrielshansen Месяц назад +135

    Can we just relish the fact, that USSR/CCCP managed to - more or less blindly - land a vehicle on mars at 2nd attempt, setting the template for all future landings?
    Well-produced and well-told, thanks for the good work! Ending was a bit abrupt, though! :) Would have liked to know more about why the failure etc, since the archives were scrounged when the Soviet Republic collapsed....

    • @twitchy.mp3
      @twitchy.mp3 Месяц назад

      History is written by the victors
      and both of these countries are known for their disinformation.
      Hard to believe they landed on mars and decided NOT to say anything

    • @binnichtaktiv_
      @binnichtaktiv_ Месяц назад +6

      We watched the video…

    • @ShawnSaunders-vg3ms
      @ShawnSaunders-vg3ms Месяц назад +9

      Yes I agree. Congratulations America copying Russia and taking all the credit bravo

    • @HH-vb9tw
      @HH-vb9tw Месяц назад

      You must be russian loll

    • @remypascal4872
      @remypascal4872 Месяц назад

      It shows how competition entoxicates the science and all the other stuff. No sharing of informations and no really help.
      The US gov tried as well for the space progam the socialistic model of a public project in science and production. Companies were included like in a public, sharing of everything process and the rescources were used after they were available, not after the crazy artificial cost.
      Of course the german scientists like v Braun were extremely useful, or lets say decisive(He had his success as well in a public national cooperative-supportive system before).
      The SU had accidential tried once in their progam two a bit competing scientists projects, that shared not so much(information and rare stuff). So they were slower and less efficient like normal capitalistic big companies.

  • @MattNolanCustom
    @MattNolanCustom Месяц назад +34

    Only people on the fringes still thought there were canals on Mars before any flybys or landings in the 60s. In the early 1900s better telescopes had shown the canals not to be so visually and spectroscopy had shown that there simply wasn't enough water there.

    • @TomasFunes-rt8rd
      @TomasFunes-rt8rd 27 дней назад +2

      Arthur C Clarke did a nice debunking of them in a docu in the 80s.

  • @mazdarx7887
    @mazdarx7887 Месяц назад +23

    It was so secret that it was in Newspapers all over the world

  • @Sailor376also
    @Sailor376also Месяц назад +26

    "our closest planetary neighbor." Incorrect. At :55 seconds in. Venus is our closest planetary neighbor. The USSR also landed a probe on the surface of Venus. Further, you could make a case that 'on average' Mecury is closer to the Earth than Mars.

    • @TomasFunes-rt8rd
      @TomasFunes-rt8rd 27 дней назад +4

      Correction : they landed more than "a probe", they landed about 10 of them, some of which succeeded in beaming back footage.

    • @KailamiMwiinga
      @KailamiMwiinga 14 дней назад

      Mars has really got friend zoned by Earth a long time ago

    • @Sailor376also
      @Sailor376also 13 дней назад +3

      @@KailamiMwiinga "friend zoned" Spot on. And for some good reasons. Venus surface,,, the bottom of an acid based atmosphere at a temp that can melt lead and zinc, where as Mars with a pressure suit, you can walk around, 24 hour day, an atmosphere , very, very thin,, but CO2 and water vapour. Sooooo, you could say,, 'closer to Earth',, and mean surface conditions.

  • @raedwulf61
    @raedwulf61 Месяц назад +14

    Fascinating! Next time I go home to Mars, I will have to go see this lander.

    • @OnkarPawar-lr3hi
      @OnkarPawar-lr3hi Месяц назад

      Invite me

    • @stscc01
      @stscc01 9 часов назад

      you may not find much more than some debris... to call that a landing is somewhat ridiculous.

  • @petarswift5089
    @petarswift5089 Месяц назад +11

    It is a myth that the scientific community before the American and Soviet space programs did not know that Mars was cold and Venus was warm.

  • @Nonedless
    @Nonedless 11 дней назад +1

    I love how instead of the soviets being humble and admitting defeat, they just rename their failures to something else and pretend it's just a satellite. Thats like making a tank, but because the gun is all banged up, so you call it a really fancy car and call the "gun barrel" "the radio antenna"

  • @edschultheis9537
    @edschultheis9537 Месяц назад +11

    I'm 59 and grew up during the US-Soviet space race. Of note is that the US/NASA always covered its space launches and missions live on TV while the Soviet missions were always a secret until/unless they were successful. If successful, the world would hear about it in the news after the fact. During the space shuttle years, the US/NASA did have numerous missions that were entirely for the Department of Defense. We knew from the news that these missions occurred, but there were no details as to the specifics of those missions. Even to this day, I don't believe that much is known to the public about those NASA/DOD missions.

    • @stscc01
      @stscc01 9 часов назад

      Surprise, surprise, NASA did not reveal what they did on their military missions... 😂
      Of course not, and maybe a lot of this stuff is still classified even today, for good reasons.

    • @edschultheis9537
      @edschultheis9537 8 часов назад

      @@stscc01 I have no problem with the NASA/DOD missions being classified. The general public does not need to know any details of those missions. In 50, 75, or 100 years, we may learn the details of those missions, usually after all of the main people involved have died.
      For at least a couple of decades now, NASA/DOD (initially) and now (apparently) the US Space Force have been operating secret flights of the X-37B Orbital Test Vehicle. This is a vehicle that looks like a mini space shuttle, is unmanned, and is entirely remotely controlled. Google it to see photos. This spacecraft remains in space for often 1-2 years at a time. Then it returns and then goes on another mission. There has never been (to my knowledge) any credible information about the purpose of details of those missions.... only guesses.

  • @user-vp1sc7tt4m
    @user-vp1sc7tt4m Месяц назад +1

    Thank you. Great information about early landings on Mars. Subscribed!

  • @nutier
    @nutier Месяц назад +1

    Wonderful video ! I love it so much . Happy week to you !

  • @vulcan4d
    @vulcan4d Месяц назад +9

    Imagine what we could do if we didn't focus so much on war.

    • @thomasdykstra100
      @thomasdykstra100 Месяц назад

      "...we are looking forward to a new heaven and a new earth, where righteousness dwells." This prospect bodes well for future cooperation...

    • @thatguyoverthere8355
      @thatguyoverthere8355 Месяц назад +2

      And needless religions

    • @thomasdykstra100
      @thomasdykstra100 Месяц назад

      @@thatguyoverthere8355 , "needless", or worthless: "...Levi hosted a great banquet for Jesus at his house. A large crowd of tax collectors was there, along with others who were eating with them. But the Pharisees and their scribes complained to Jesus’ disciples, 'Why do you eat and drink with tax collectors and sinners?'
      "Jesus answered, “It is not the healthy who need a doctor, but the sick. I have not come to call the righteous, but sinners, to repentance.'”
      You seem in perfect sympathy with Christ!

    • @dingickso4098
      @dingickso4098 Месяц назад

      Over eight trillion dollars has been spent on lost or unwinnable wars in recent two decades. Imagine all the science that could have been done with that sort of budget. The (admittedly somewhat tragic) fact that even the first "space race" and the moon landings would nver have happened if it wasn't for the ARMS RACE.

  • @MythrealGaming
    @MythrealGaming Месяц назад +7

    As an American I feel like we owe a slight nod to Germany. But neither of us want to talk about that era.

    • @MrMoon-te5xw
      @MrMoon-te5xw Месяц назад +9

      The space race between USSR and American was basically our German scientists vs your German scientists

    • @user-uc2ox7fl6x
      @user-uc2ox7fl6x Месяц назад

      @@MrMoon-te5xw Немецкие ученые в СССР плохо приживались, потому он начал постепенно отставать от США. А после 1990 года последние могикане из немцев из РФ уехали и тут у нас все встало!.. ))

    • @STho205
      @STho205 Месяц назад +2

      Well German WW2 rocket engineers credited Robert Goddard and several 1930s British rocket engineers...all of whom published their results.

    • @jah886
      @jah886 Месяц назад +2

      @@MrMoon-te5xw you wrote complete nonsense. German scientists left the USSR even before the launch of the first satellite. and for that matter, these scientists did not make much of a contribution to the Soviet missile program, unlike the US

  • @ratrace468
    @ratrace468 Месяц назад +2

    All theses soviet space secrets are fascinating

  • @ch4.hayabusa
    @ch4.hayabusa Месяц назад +30

    In all but American English, the pronunciation of “Moscow” is “Moss-koh”

    • @NocturnalNews
      @NocturnalNews Месяц назад +11

      Nobody cares

    • @Hallvard0
      @Hallvard0 Месяц назад +18

      @@NocturnalNews Non-americans do :)

    • @Kawamura2
      @Kawamura2 Месяц назад +3

      @@NocturnalNews I mean, you're wrong, but at least you're confident in your wrongness!

    • @raedwulf61
      @raedwulf61 Месяц назад +1

      There's a book titled, "Is There a Cow in Moscow?" addressing this.

    • @comment8767
      @comment8767 Месяц назад +3

      @@raedwulf61 No, but there is a lot of bull.

  • @curtisquick1582
    @curtisquick1582 Месяц назад +1

    The photo shown was from the US Viking Lander 1. It was a wildly successful mission, unlike the Russian ones.

  • @biggles258
    @biggles258 Месяц назад +4

    I live and learn. First I've heard of the Russian landings on Mars.

    • @user-uc2ox7fl6x
      @user-uc2ox7fl6x Месяц назад

      В русском языке есть пословица: Век живи -- век учись!

  • @mrwhoo6329
    @mrwhoo6329 5 дней назад

    Amazing content! Keep up the good work!

  • @lh1690
    @lh1690 Месяц назад +5

    70 years ago or 1970? 70 years ago would be 1954 and Sputnik wasn't launched until 1957.

  • @pipersall6761
    @pipersall6761 Месяц назад +3

    Great report! Thanks!

  • @BedujiNuji
    @BedujiNuji 27 дней назад +1

    thank you for inspiring and educating with such passion!

  • @vast634
    @vast634 10 часов назад

    I would still count this as a first landing. Just not the most productive one. And the method the rover used to move is actually pretty good for some really sandy environments. More traction than wheels and less complex than tracks.

  • @lucashinch
    @lucashinch Месяц назад

    I like this, decent narration. all great information. thank you

  • @kend6693
    @kend6693 Месяц назад +10

    Nice production, as always, appreciated.

  • @Somebody_else_u_know
    @Somebody_else_u_know 28 дней назад +1

    Thank you for such an interesting and revealing piece. 🤝

  • @claing17
    @claing17 Месяц назад +1

    The mini walker haha i love it.

  • @Real_Claudy_Focan
    @Real_Claudy_Focan 12 дней назад

    NASA ; doesnt release weather forecast
    "In space exploration, this is considered as a dick move"

  • @screally1152
    @screally1152 Месяц назад +9

    Venus is closer than mars

    • @MattNolanCustom
      @MattNolanCustom Месяц назад +1

      Mercury is closer than both

    • @screally1152
      @screally1152 Месяц назад +2

      @@MattNolanCustom Mercury's average position is closer to Earth's, but Venus' orbit takes it the closest to Earths.

    • @MattNolanCustom
      @MattNolanCustom Месяц назад +1

      @@screally1152 I know

    • @Team-fabulous
      @Team-fabulous Месяц назад +2

      Yeah but what have the Venetians ever done for us?!.. Fuck em... 😅

    • @MattNolanCustom
      @MattNolanCustom Месяц назад +2

      @@Team-fabulous well there are the blinds and the glassware...

  • @malcolmmurphy2924
    @malcolmmurphy2924 Месяц назад +2

    Never new they landed on Mars.

  • @davidE.90151
    @davidE.90151 Месяц назад +6

    basically a very cool sciencey rock

  • @johnstewart579
    @johnstewart579 Месяц назад +2

    Thank you for this interesting history

  • @christophergoodrich4120
    @christophergoodrich4120 Месяц назад +13

    Our closest planetary neighbor is Venus, not Mars.

    • @IvanPlayStation4LiFe
      @IvanPlayStation4LiFe Месяц назад +1

      He means that we can colonize

    • @kaiserwhence2468
      @kaiserwhence2468 Месяц назад +1

      ​@@IvanPlayStation4LiFeyou can also colonize Venus tho

    • @STho205
      @STho205 Месяц назад +1

      Closest orbit, but on average Mercury is closer by straight line.

    • @STho205
      @STho205 Месяц назад +1

      ​@@IvanPlayStation4LiFecan't colonize Mars either. Just SciFi.
      In 50 years since manned flight to the Moon...we still have no colony because it is likely impossible to sustain humans on for longer than a few weeks. Thats even without an atmosphere...that is easier than hostile and corrosive atmospheres.
      Powerpoint animations are cool, but they aren't real

    • @kaiserwhence2468
      @kaiserwhence2468 Месяц назад

      @@STho205 who said you need to sustain human life to colonize
      Moon could be an automated industrial colony,most human presence will be for tourism and a few administration,
      Mars ...I don't think is that good for industry since everything there is also here and atmosphere,it will be mostly tourists

  • @josephp7788
    @josephp7788 6 часов назад

    Im sure Borat's father was behind the brilliant idea of making the self walking robo box, we all have those in kindergarden in Kazakhstan 🇰🇿 ❤

  • @liondriven9073
    @liondriven9073 Месяц назад +2

    Our closest planetary neighbor ? Edit that off dude !

  • @DL-kc8fc
    @DL-kc8fc 15 дней назад

    What secret landing? "Orange" - landing module, was a popular topic of children in painting lessons.

  • @looseyourzlf
    @looseyourzlf 9 дней назад

    11:23 at least they took photo in the electrostatic surface.

  • @sabirrugunate1286
    @sabirrugunate1286 Месяц назад +30

    So Mars is RED after all

    • @The1QwertySky
      @The1QwertySky Месяц назад +2

      who thought different?

    • @cardcasacardona8050
      @cardcasacardona8050 Месяц назад

      Si y el sol verdoso visto desde fuera de la atmósfera...

    • @user-uc2ox7fl6x
      @user-uc2ox7fl6x Месяц назад

      Марс не красный, а ржавый... ))

  • @woderick9465
    @woderick9465 6 часов назад

    Kubrick is King! NASA: um, we decided to scrap all moon technologies...yup, right in the dumpster 😂

  • @Alexandr_Lee
    @Alexandr_Lee Месяц назад +4

    Yeah, we had much better luck with Venus.

  • @stephen9892
    @stephen9892 День назад

    The camera man remains undefeated.

  • @DavidGalich77
    @DavidGalich77 Месяц назад +2

    Learn something new all the time. The space race is on and cooking!

  • @LegacyOfLearning123
    @LegacyOfLearning123 Месяц назад +3

    Your creativity knows no bounds; each video is a masterpiece.

  • @henrykieninger
    @henrykieninger Месяц назад

    How did we do any of this?! This is awesome! Im always blown away

  • @HenrykZ
    @HenrykZ Месяц назад

    We need a building platform on the moon first, would speed up the whole process, even the landing and starting of space crafts!

  • @Paul-qk6sy
    @Paul-qk6sy 11 дней назад

    I wonder how many of those Soviet scientists ended up in a Siberian gulag after that last Mars failure.

  • @xzox
    @xzox Месяц назад

    For those of you seriously interested in the Russian post war Space Programme I can highly recommend James Harford's 'Korolev' , the story of the Genius behind Sputnik ang Gagarin's first flight into outer space.

  • @waynegosson1793
    @waynegosson1793 Месяц назад +1

    Seems like it's missing a lot of info at the end. It's there a part 2?

  • @davebooth5608
    @davebooth5608 Месяц назад

    Awesome!

  • @theofulk5636
    @theofulk5636 Месяц назад +1

    Was the photography taken in MARS, NEVADA, or in MARS, NEW MEXICO ?

  • @christopherlewis1847
    @christopherlewis1847 Месяц назад +4

    The soviet space program sounds like a Pee Wee Herman line: I meant to do that.

  • @chompachangas
    @chompachangas 8 дней назад

    Wow, the Soviets had a few missions to Mars.

  • @sanjaygavade9722
    @sanjaygavade9722 Месяц назад

    before any mission 100% preparation must be done and test must be carried out for any mistakes

    • @DirkThys
      @DirkThys Месяц назад

      Elon Musk disagrees

  • @kevingreen3781
    @kevingreen3781 14 дней назад

    The Russians wanted us to think that they had crashed on Mars even though they didn’t most did land safely well before America did they have also mapped it looking for. Alien tech same as the moon and Venus that’s why so many missions went to all three bodies

  • @jeffclarkofclarklesparkle3103
    @jeffclarkofclarklesparkle3103 Месяц назад

    You should have talked about the soviet probes, phobos i think were their names 1 and 2. Strange what happened, very strange

    • @STho205
      @STho205 Месяц назад

      Not really. Both probes were botched on their way by either flight controller human error or design mistakes.

  • @simongs99
    @simongs99 Месяц назад

    This is just 1 of millions of secret things going on no one knows about. Would not surprise me that humans are already on mars

  • @jgwizo
    @jgwizo Месяц назад

    The Russian products demonstrate that it has highly qualified and innovative research and development activists. At times when one hears of USA as Americans distorts the fact that such nomenclature supposed to cover North and south America.

  • @ardma02
    @ardma02 Месяц назад +5

    Your videos NEVER disappoint sir 💪🏼💪🏼

  • @pieceD399
    @pieceD399 21 день назад

    A few years ago i sended my microwaves to the Sun to find traces of water , some problems with the solar panels because it arrived at night but everything is working good now

  • @JesusisMySavior581
    @JesusisMySavior581 Месяц назад

    I don't call it a failure- I call it a beginning

  • @jamessharier7529
    @jamessharier7529 Месяц назад +1

    Too bad for the scientific community that russias probe failed after it landed. The data that it could’ve provided would’ve been invaluable for future missios

  • @susannadvortsin
    @susannadvortsin Месяц назад

    If you could have kept out the glib comments about how the USSR's first attempt at landing on Mars failed because the lander only transmitted once and went dead and focus on the fact that they did it first that may have helped keep this video on the objective and scientific side.

  • @THEScottCampbell
    @THEScottCampbell 9 дней назад

    VENUS is our closest planetary neighbor. 🌕

  • @Charlotte-xh4lt
    @Charlotte-xh4lt Месяц назад

    Wow! I didn't know that Russia went to Mars? I learn something new everyday.

  • @xro5841
    @xro5841 Месяц назад +1

    Hummm, Electrostatic you say...

  • @jn1mrgn
    @jn1mrgn 6 дней назад

    The proper grammar for this title would be "The Soviets' Secret Mars Landing".

  • @jasonm7634
    @jasonm7634 Месяц назад

    Very interesting 🎉

  • @anon_y_mousse
    @anon_y_mousse 10 дней назад

    It'd be kind of funny if we found a random mission from the Russians landed on Mars that wasn't even in the records and a monkey or a dog was inside a capsule.

  • @rawthe
    @rawthe Месяц назад

    Just picture being as sophisticated as the USSR in it's prime, but thinking it's still not good enough to own your shortcomings. This attempt to be perceived as superhuman cost them the valuable lessons of owning their mistakes and learning from them. Power through respect outlives power through fear.

    • @hinkelstein69
      @hinkelstein69 17 дней назад

      nothing sophisticated about USSR in its prime. A dirty industrial hole with low living standards and some north korean style focus on military technology at the cost of anyones wellbeing involved.

  • @ViceCoin
    @ViceCoin 10 дней назад

    Mars has isotopes from nuclear exxplosions.

  • @Legicore
    @Legicore Месяц назад +1

    Is that story real!?! I NEVER heared of that before!!! O______o

  • @joseph-mariopelerin7028
    @joseph-mariopelerin7028 Месяц назад

    Nice... planet wide dust storms... and we still thinking about a colony...

  • @paul9120
    @paul9120 Месяц назад +1

    Ohh, I guess this means that we must be sharing space on Devon Island with the Russians so that they can also provide their people with beautiful footage of their exploits on "Mars".

  • @Renshen1957
    @Renshen1957 Месяц назад +1

    The canals were a mistaken translation of the word channels.

  • @keithstevens5614
    @keithstevens5614 27 дней назад

    Amazing story

  • @nixter57
    @nixter57 Месяц назад +1

    VENUS AS WELL !!

  • @user-vy5jw1zm1o
    @user-vy5jw1zm1o Месяц назад

    Imagine being a Martian (marsian) hiding from the deadly sun rays in your cave
    All your friends and family call you crazy for thinking aliens are real
    Then a weird looking spaceship crashes into your planet

    • @DirkThys
      @DirkThys Месяц назад

      Yeah, that would whip up a storm for sure ! 😁

  • @aleksanderkuncwicz7277
    @aleksanderkuncwicz7277 Месяц назад

    Satilities to mine water and make a atmosphere on mars.

  • @Rene-uz3eb
    @Rene-uz3eb Месяц назад

    Sounds more like a russian author sci fi story, intended as a hello to the moon mission, but their cinematography wasn't up to spec so they kept it to themselves

  • @mikewallace8087
    @mikewallace8087 Месяц назад

    Secret Soviet Mars mission . Ha , the U.S. would know of the launch and mission.

  • @D.von.N
    @D.von.N Месяц назад

    When you say Kazakhstan, it reminds me the need for rockets to launch from as near to equator as possible. When countries part with RuSSian federation, Kremlin is losing ground to keep launching its stuff (if they had any at this point). We could see how their attack on Moon ended last year. It wasn't a normal mission that is planned and worked on for years and years. It was a sudden decision to prop up the opinion of public when everything has been failing.

  • @janklaas6885
    @janklaas6885 Месяц назад +3

    📍10:04

  • @thomasstevenrothmbamd2384
    @thomasstevenrothmbamd2384 Месяц назад +1

    Wow!

  • @dennisdriscoll7830
    @dennisdriscoll7830 Месяц назад

    Mars is not our closest planetary neighbor, Venus is!

  • @smokeysky
    @smokeysky Месяц назад

    Was it really more red (mars)? as we know now they added a red filter to the mars photos.

  • @johncarr2333
    @johncarr2333 Месяц назад

    Just think how ridiculous this is.
    The Russians can keep boats afloat or planes in the air

  • @willie714
    @willie714 Месяц назад

    Matt Damon may need that

  • @thatguyoverthere8355
    @thatguyoverthere8355 Месяц назад

    The only thing new in the world is the history you don't know. Thanx 4 this!

  • @einzelgalger52223
    @einzelgalger52223 Месяц назад

    It's unfortunate, even tragic, that instead of the working together if brilliant people, albeit from different countries, the government of these countries instead competed and fought against each other because of foolish political ideals. If only people strive to pursue common interests in making a better world through science and technology, and not try to kill each other militarily.

  • @gigmaresh8772
    @gigmaresh8772 Месяц назад

    I still want to know who put that giant red standard Poodle up there?
    And what is that dog's name?

  • @andrewball2511
    @andrewball2511 24 дня назад

    Secret? No. See (for example) this journal article published in 1973:
    Marov, M. Ya. and Petrov, G. I. (1973). Investigations of Mars from the soviet automatic stations Mars 2 and 3. Icarus, 19, 163-179.

  • @josh656
    @josh656 10 дней назад

    “We all know they landed on the moon in 1969” 🥺

  • @davidrennie8197
    @davidrennie8197 Месяц назад

    It was known for many, many years that there were no canals

  • @jamesburke6078
    @jamesburke6078 Месяц назад

    Was it me? Or was those some nice blue missiles she had...

  • @neo-YoutubeStoleMyHandle
    @neo-YoutubeStoleMyHandle 29 дней назад +1

    What have we learned from this video...if anything??? NASA rocks!!

  • @randy5894
    @randy5894 Месяц назад

    If the Soviets were so secrative... Why are we to believe that all of their missons were a failure?