Moon landing conspiracy theories

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Moon landing conspiracy theories
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Moon landing conspiracy theories (also known as the moon landing hoax or Apollo hoax) say that men did not land on the Moon in 1969–1972 during the Apollo program; rather, NASA faked the information. Some conspiracy theorists believe the Skylab space station is also a hoax.[1](p. 162)[2]

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Astronauts Buzz Aldrin and Neil Armstrong in NASA's training mockup of the Moon and lander module. Conspiracy theorists say that the films of the missions were made using sets similar to this training mockup.

Historians and the scientific community believe that moon landing conspiracy theories are irrational. But debate continues on social media because it is easy for anyone to publish their ideas.[3]

There are cultures and subcultures around the world that believe that the Moon landings were faked. This view may have been taught in Cuban schools and wherever else Cuban teachers are sent (like Nicaragua and Angola).[4][5][6] The Taliban[7] and the International Society for Krishna Consciousness (ISKCON) also believe the Moon landings were a hoax.[8][9][10]

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History

On 12 April 1961, the Soviet Union (USSR) sent the first man into space in Vostok 1: cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin.[11] Six weeks later, United States President John F. Kennedy promised that the U.S. would land a man on the Moon by 1969 in order to win the space race with the USSR and impress the world with technical superiority. He said:

Finally, if we are to win the battle that is now going on around the world between freedom and tyranny, the dramatic achievements in space which occurred in recent weeks should have made clear to us all, as did the Sputnik in 1957, the impact of this adventure on the minds of men everywhere, who are attempting to make a determination of which road they should take. Full Text

Moon conspiracy theorists say that NASA had too many technical problems to meet the eight-year deadline for landing on the Moon. They say the United States faked the moon landings so it would seem like they had won the space race.[12]

In 2004, President George W. Bush announced that there would be a manned return to the Moon within 16 years (even though the technologies for it should have already been developed forty years earlier).[13][14] In 2010, President Barack Obama canceled this plan; to moon conspiracy theorists, this meant the USA still does not have the technology to go to the moon.[15]

Doubts about the authenticity of the Apollo Moon landings first appeared in December 1968, when Apollo 8 was launched.[16] Apollo 11 was almost perfectly executed, which amazed many people around the world, while others doubted that the voyage was real.[17]

The first book on the subject ("Did man land on the Moon?") was published in Texas by mathematician James J. Cranny in 1970.[18]

NASA commented on some of the conspiracy theories in June 1977.[19] Twenty years later, NASA's Director of Media Services, Brian Welch (1958–2000), said in a Sky TV News interview:[20](p. 68)[21](48:13–48:46)[22]

This is thirty year old stuff... I don't understand why we should spend the time to... prove to people that we went to the Moon; in fact of matters we did go to the Moon.

When Fox TV aired Bruce Nash's film "Conspiracy theory: Did we land on the Moon?" in 2001 NASA updated their web and FTP sites, adding information about why hoax claims are incorrect.[23] They also wrote suggestions for science teachers on how to refute the hoax claims using Lunar Sample Disk Kits.[19][24][25][26][27][28][29][30]

In 2002, NASA hired James Edward Oberg to write a book challenging moon landing conspiracy theorists. Oberg was a former rocket scientist who worked for MSNBC News as a space consultant, journalist, and analyst. It was later discovered that Oberg was a moon landing conspiracy theorist. NASA soon cancelled the project, but did not explain why. NASA spokesman Bob Jacobs later said the agency aborted commissioning the book because of criticism that NASA was displaying poor judgement.[31][32][33] For example, then NASA Administrator Sean O'Keefe said:[34]

The issue of trying to do a targeted response to this is just lending credibility to something that is, on its face, asinine.

In 2006, some of the recordings of the Apollo era were declared missing.[35] The question of what happened to the recordings was seen by conspiracy theorists as confirmation of their beliefs, and in 2009, NASA revealed that the tapes were erased.[36][37][38]

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Claims

The arguments about the moon conspiracy theories are detailed and complex. Some of the major points and counterpoints are listed below.

Complexity

Moon conspiracy theorists think that NASA faked the Apollo mission with a secret program. According to James Longuski, the complexity of the conspiracy theory scenarios make them impossible. More than 400,000 people worked on the Apollo project for almost ten years, and 12 men who walked on the Moon returned to Earth to talk about their experiences. Hundreds of thousands of people would have had to keep the secret. Longuski says that it would have been a lot easier to actually land on the Moon than to create such a large conspiracy to fake it.[39][40]

Photography and videos

1. In some photos, the crosshairs are seemed to be partially covered by objects. Some conspiracy theorists suggest that the NASA composed the photographs by "cutting and pasting" objects over the background images.

  • Bright sunlight can wash-out thin lines over the white objects.[41]
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An example of "partially covered" crosshair.

2. In some photos, the crosshairs are rotated.

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An example of "rotated" crosshairs.
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Original version of the photo (Photo ID: AS11-40-5869).

3. The letter "C" appears on some rocks. This is maybe a designation by the studio props.

  • The "C"-shaped objects are printing mistake and do not appear in the original film from the camera. It has been suggested that the "C" is a hair or other fiber.[43]
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An example of "C" rock.
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Original version of the photo (Photo ID: AS16-107-17446).

4. The book Moon Shot[44] contains a fake photo of Alan Shepard hitting a golf ball on the Moon with another astronaut.

  • It was used instead of the original photos, because the editors thought that the original photos would be too grainy for their book. The book publishers did not work for NASA.

Environment

1. The Apollo 16 crew could not have survived solar flares when they were on their way to the Moon.

  • No large solar flare occurred during the flight of Apollo 16. There were large solar flares in August 1972, after Apollo 16 returned to Earth and before the flight of Apollo 17.[45][46]

2. During the Apollo 15 mission, David Scott did an experiment by dropping a hammer and a falcon feather at the same time. Both hit the ground at the same time.

David Scott drops a hammer and a feather on the Moon.

Missing data

Blueprints and drawings of the machines used in the Apollo project are missing.[47][48] Some Apollo 11 tapes containing telemetry and high quality video of the first moonwalk are also missing. Moon landing conspiracy theorists believe that this is because they never existed, since the mission was faked.[49]

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Original high-quality image from the missing tapes.

Dr. David Williams (NASA archivist at Goddard Space Flight Center) and Apollo 11 flight director Eugene F. Kranz acknowledged that some of the Apollo 11 tapes are missing. When the recordings were sent back to Earth to be shown on TV, they were converted to a different format which was lower quality.[50] Now the lower quality tapes are available, but the original high quality videos received in Australia are missing. Some pictures of the original high quality image are still available, and videos have been released from other missions too, like the Apollo Lunar Surface Experiments Package.[51]

Some people at NASA are looking for the tapes to help them plan for future missions. They believe the Apollo 11 tapes were sent for storage at the U.S. National Archives in 1970, but by 1984 all the Apollo 11 tapes had been returned to the Goddard Space Flight Center. The tapes may have been stored rather than re-used, and efforts to determine where they were stored are ongoing.[52] Goddard was storing 35,000 new tapes per year in 1967, even before the lunar landings.[53]

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Apollo 16 Lunar Module

On November 1, 2006 Cosmos Magazine reported that 100 data tapes recorded in Australia during the Apollo 11 mission had been found in the basement of the Curtin University of Technology in Perth, Australia. One of the old tapes was sent to NASA for analysis.

On July 16, 2009, NASA said that it must have erased the original Apollo 11 Moon footage years ago so that it could reuse the tape. On December 22, 2009 NASA issued a final report on the tapes.[54] Senior engineer Dick Nafzger concluded that approximately 45 tapes of Apollo 11 video were erased and reused.[55] For the 40th anniversary of the Apollo moon landing, Lowry Digital of Burbank, California restored the low quality videos. Some pieces of the restored footage are available on the NASA website.[56]

Deaths of Apollo workers

Some conspiracy theorists say that some astronauts were killed as part of a cover up. In a television program about the conspiracy theory, Fox Entertainment Group listed 10 astronauts and 2 others who conspiracy theorists said were killed.

  • Theodore Freeman (plane crash, 1964)
  • Elliot See and Charles Bassett (T-38 accident, 1966)
  • Gus Grissom (Apollo 1 fire, January 1967).
  • Edward Higgins White (Apollo 1 fire, January 1967)
  • Roger B. Chaffee (Apollo 1 fire, January 1967)
  • Edward Givens (car accident, 1967)
  • Clifton Williams (plane accident, October 1967)
  • Michael James Adams (the only X-15 pilot killed during a X-15 test in November 1967. He was not a NASA astronaut).
  • Robert Henry Lawrence, Jr., planned to be an Air Force pilot, but he died in a plane crash in December 1967.
  • Thomas Ronald Baron (died with family in a car crash with train, 1967 after being fired for talking to Congress about the cause of the Apollo 1 fire). Ruled as suicide. Baron wrote a report critical of the Apollo program and was a critic after the Apollo 1 fire.[57][58]
  • Brian Welch, died a few months after debunking a Fox television show about the 'moon hoax'.[59]

All the deaths except for Irwin's were related to their job with NASA or the Air Force. Mike Adams and Robert Lawrence were not involved with the civilian space program. James Irwin already had several heart attacks before his death. All except two of the deaths happened at least one or two years before Apollo 11. Also, Brian Welch was speaking out against the moon hoax, so he would not have been a good target to be killed.

As of November 2018, four of the twelve Apollo astronauts who landed on the Moon between 1969 and 1972 were still alive, including Buzz Aldrin. Also, eight of the twelve Apollo astronauts who flew to the Moon without landing between 1968 and 1972 are still alive.

During 1961 to 1972, at least eight Russian cosmonauts died:

  • Valentin Bondarenko (ground training accident, March 1961)
  • Grigori Nelyubov (suicide, February 1966)
  • Vladimir Komarov (Soyuz 1 accident, April 1967)
  • Yuri Gagarin (MiG-15 crash, March 1968)
  • Pavel Belyayev (complications following surgery, January 1970)
  • Georgi Dobrovolski, Vladislav Volkov, and Viktor Patsayev (Soyuz 11 accident, June 1971)

Additionally, the chief of their spaceflight program, Sergei Korolev, died in January 1966.

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Third-party information of Moon landings

Landing sites

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A later LRO photo of the Apollo 14 landing site
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Apollo 17 landing site

Conspiracy theorists say that telescopes, for example the Hubble, should be able to take pictures of the moon where Apollo landed, and if people really did land on the moon, then the pictures should show the scars on the moon's surface and equipment it left behind. They believe that our major observatories will not take pictures of the landing sites because it would expose the cover-up.

NASA has said that images have been taken of these landing sites, but the pictures taken by Hubble are too low quality to see very much detail.[60] In 2009 NASA released pictures from the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter showing the Apollo landing sites in more detail. These photographs have not convinced the conspiracy theorists because the pictures were taken by NASA, and they think NASA is behind the cover-up.[61]

Technology

Bart Sibrel (a conspiracy theorist) says that the Soviet Union had much more time in space than the United States before the Apollo Program. The Soviet Union put the first satellite in orbit in October 1957 named Sputnik 1.[Note 1] They also put the first animal in space in Sputnik 2, and were the first country to safely bring back an animal from space in Sputnik 5. Yuri Gagrin was the first man to orbit the Earth in Vostok 1, who was also from the Soviet Union. Sibrel believes that since the Soviet Union was so far ahead of the United States in the Moon race, the United States had to fake the landings to win.

On January 27, 1967, Apollo 1 caught fire and killed 3 astronauts. Two years later, NASA said that the problems which caused the fire were fixed. Bart Sibrel believes that the problems could not be fixed, so NASA decided to fake the landings to win the Moon race.

NASA says that the Soviet Union's achievements were not as impressive as the United States.[62] According to the Encyclopaedia Astronautica, the US spent 1,864 hours in space, while the Soviets spent 697 hours at the completion of Soyuz 5. Apollo 7 launched in October 1968, 21 months after the Apollo 1 fire, with an astronaut on board. By Apollo 11, the United States' lead was even bigger.

Both the United States and the Soviet Union had many problems during the Moon race. The Soviet Union had the first in-flight death in 1967, only 3 months after the Apollo 1 fire. According to NASA, most of the accomplishments first made by the Soviets were also made by the US within a year. By 1965, the US started to beat the Soviets to a few important steps. The Soviets had never developed a rocket which could land on the Moon, and they never tested landing on the Moon with an astronaut on board.[63]

Moon rocks

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Genesis Rock brought back by Apollo 15 - older than any rocks on Earth

Some conspiracy theorists say that the Moon rocks collected by the Apollo Program are actually meteorites from Antarctica. Wernher von Braun, the Marshall Space Flight Center Director, and three others traveled to Antarctica in 1967 (three years before the Apollo launch) to explore for future space missions.[64] Some conspiracy theorists believe that Braun collected meteorites during this trip to use as fake moon rocks.

The Apollo Program collected 380 kilograms (840 pounds) of moon rocks during the Apollo 11, 12, 14, 15, 16, and 17 missions. According to scientists around the world, these rocks are very different from meteorites and other rocks found on Earth.[65] The rocks are also 200,000,000 (200 million) years older than any rock found on Earth, and are similar to moon rocks later brought back by the USSR.[66]

Some moon rocks could have been collected without landing on the moon, but the first moon rock was found on Earth in 1979, and it was only discovered in 1982 that it came from the moon.[67][68][69] Also, moon rocks are very rare on Earth, and only 30 kilograms (66 pounds) have ever been discovered, while the Apollo missions brought back 380 kilograms.[69]

Research

In 2004, Martin Hendry and Ken Skeldon from the University of Glasgow investigated the 'Moon Hoax'.[70] In November 2004, they spoke at the Glasgow Science Centre and examined the top ten lines of evidence that a hoax had taken place.[71]

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Notes and references

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