[meteorite-list] trips to the Moon (Moon bases and meteoriterecovery)

MexicoDoug mexicodoug at aim.com
Tue Jun 28 19:30:30 EDT 2011


Richard K says:

"There are no known Earth Trojans."

Hi Richard,

Come on ol' friend, even 2500 years ago Anaxagoras deduced:

"Under the stars are the Sun and Moon, and also certain bodies which 
revolve with them, but are invisible to us."

and we've observed enough meteorites to vindicate him!

The "invisible" he was talking about refers to them being too small to 
have enough light to reflect to be seen. What is the median threshold 
resolution we are talking about nowadays (in mass or diameter) at that 
distance?

Perhaps the points are not a pocket full of horses, but Chincoteague 
Ponies, some used, would be a coupe. Regardless, towing an asteroid 
back to earth wasn't what I had in mind at all. Look, we've even sent 
Stardust to play tennis with comets, in hope of getting some micron 
sized particles, while ignoring the voluminous information guaranteed 
to be on the shelves of these libration libraries, not in mass, but in 
rubble and dust, a page at a time and conveniently located.

Best wishes
Doug





-----Original Message-----
From: Richard Kowalski <damoclid at yahoo.com>
To: meteorite list <meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com>
Sent: Tue, Jun 28, 2011 5:59 pm
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] trips to the Moon (Moon bases and 
meteoriterecovery)


 

________________________________
From: MexicoDoug <mexicodoug at aim.com>
To: etmeteorites at hotmail.com; Meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com
Sent: Tuesday, June 28, 2011 2:35 PM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] trips to the Moon (Moon bases and
meteoriterecovery)



You want to go the the nearer Lagrangian Points in plain space between 
the Earth
and Moon. That is where the most fascinating stuff is to be found, 
written in
unaltered stone the genesis of the Moon and plenty more debris to keep
scientists and collectors busy and overworked for the nex 10,000 years!




There are no known Earth Trojans.

--
Richard Kowalski
Full Moon Photography
IMCA #1081
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