JAXXE: To je husta knizka, nedavno jsem si ji precetl podruhy - osvezujici. Pri prozkoumavani tematu jsem narazil na dalsi matros k prostudovani:
http://www.kathleenmcerlain.com/...-%20Suppressed%20Findings%20of%20the%20Space%20Program%5B1%5D.pdf
Tahle a Swannova kniha se na Amazonu prodavaji za vice nez 400 Liber, tzn., ze o ni je velky zajem a neni k dostani. Proc si nechce nektery z vydavatelu namastit kapsu a vydat tak zadany titul?
THE_BALROG: Rekolonizace je jedna vec a vedecka zakladna vec druha. S nasima soucasnejma (i oficialne priznanejma) technologiema bychom na mesici klidne nakej srubik mohli uz davno mit. ISS je taky mrnava, bez gravitace i vseho ostatniho a taky do ni furt tlacej penize. Za ty prachy jsme mohli mit davno neco takovyho, a hezky podsklepenyho, i na Mesici. Mit zakladnu s pevnou pudou pod nohama je mnohem strategictejsi a bezpecnejsi nez ji mit nekde ve volnym prostoru bez moznosti uniku.
Co se atmosfery a vody na mesici tyce, tak takhle:
"On 5 March 1998 it was announced that data returned by the Lunar Prospector spacecraft indicated that water ice might be present at both the north and south lunar poles, in agreement with interpretations of Clementine results for the south pole reported in November 1996. The ice originally appeared to be mixed in with the lunar regolith (surface rocks, soil, and dust) at low concentrations conservatively estimated at 0.3 to 1 percent. Subsequent data from Lunar Prospector taken over a longer period has indicated the possible presence of discrete, confined, near-pure water ice deposits buried beneath as much as 18 inches (40 centimeters) of dry regolith, with the water signature being stronger at the Moon's north pole than at the south (4). The ice was thought to be spread over 10,000 to 50,000 square km (3,600 to 18,000 square miles) of area near the north pole and 5,000 to 20,000 square km (1,800 to 7,200 square miles) around the south pole, but the latest results show the water may be more concentrated in localized areas (roughly 1850 square km, or 650 square miles, at each pole) rather than being spread out over these large regions. The estimated total mass of ice is 6 trillion kg (6.6 billion tons)."
Ice on the Moon
http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/planetary/ice/ice_moon.html
Takze vody je dost.
Neco tady proste nehraje. ;)