Bombing in Moon
Experiment In moon by NASA to find the water content based on the research done by ISRO. This is the crucial moment in the Scientific Research.
To those people who may may have been misled by the overuse of the word “bomb” — at The Monitor and elsewhere
Nothing exploded, although two spacecraft — one about the size of a bus, the other a subcompact car — did crash on the surface of the moon. For background on the whys and wherefores for instance.
How would the moon have felt about it? It’s hard to ask an inanimate, non-sentient object. But using Sir Isaac Newton’s action-reaction law — the one that describes why a rocket moves one direction when its exhaust flows out the back in the opposite direction — researchers estimate that the two collisions combined would have the same effect on the moon that dropping an eyelash in the aisle would have on the speed and direction of a Boeing 747.
In effect, these two human-made objects were artificial meteors. The moon takes hits from natural meteors several times a month. So from the moon’s perspective, it will have gotten tickled a few more times in October than it usually does. The Hunter’s Moon merely became the hunted, briefly.
Was the mission a test bed for space weapons? Don’t laugh, some have suggested this. But this would have yielded nothing the Pentagon doesn’t already know about orbits or depositing objects with precision from space onto the ground. Precision orbits? They already know how to do that with reconnaissance satellites. Dropping things from space? They already can deliver a small cluster of nuclear warheads — each against its own target — with a precision greater than the one LC ROSS displayed as it hurtled into the moon.
What the misuse of the word “bomb” reminds us scribes and those charged with keeping our more outlandish prose in check is that words matter. Space geeks who tend to follow these missions clearly realize “bomb” is not a literal description for what’s happening. They may roll their eyeballs at the “hype.” But they generally don’t take it seriously.
Those who don’t follow space-science matters much, however, or who are working their way up through school and are looking for information for that next report or project, might take the image more literally.
In the end, we’re responsible for the words we choose. It’s one thing to accurately describe something and have people misunderstand. Sometimes that can be cured by selecting a different approach to the description. Sometimes the misunderstanding is willful. But it’s something else again to intentionally use words clearly open to misinterpretation, and let the chips fall where they may. (Nice cliche, Pete!)
Be at ease. The moon is very little worse for the wear, no matter how many times you see “bomb” associated with this NASA mission. Here’s hoping folks in my business drop the bomb. Get it?
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2 Responses to “Bombing in Moon”
On October 14, 2009 at 8:38 am
This is very good article. If we found water in moon possibly we can live there one day.
On October 14, 2009 at 3:04 pm
This is very good article…………………………..
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