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  1. augustus pugin ? (augustus@shitposter.club)'s status on Monday, 07-Dec-2020 02:47:52 JST augustus pugin ? augustus pugin ?
    best moon hoax arguments so far:- the entire of the Apollo mission lasts right up to the end of the US wars in Vietnam and Cambodia and then is never heard from again (wag the dog)- the moon's temperature is either +100C in day or -173C at night with no in between, Buzz and Neil would fry- the moon experiences massive deadly amounts of radiation and NASA in 2005 said without good shielding space missions couldn't happen (and they also don't say what shielding was used in the Apollo missions)but i'm also realising just how hard this shit would be to fake and as a result how impressive Apollo and Gemini are even if they did do some little smoke and mirrors here and there
    In conversation Monday, 07-Dec-2020 02:47:52 JST from shitposter.club permalink
    • バツ子(痛いの痛いの飛んでけ;; (shmibs@tomo.airen-no-jikken.icu)'s status on Monday, 07-Dec-2020 02:47:52 JST バツ子(痛いの痛いの飛んでけ;; バツ子(痛いの痛いの飛んでけ;;
      in reply to
      @augustus astronauts are irradiated all the time, and there are mission limits etc. exposure-limiting protocolsneed to look again, but read was something like a one-way trip to mars would be significantly more than the typical exposure for a life-work in-magnetosphere, iss, so better shielding for mars missions would definitely be neededbut that's months, and moon is just a few days, soalso, https://www.nature.com/articles/srep29901 ?also always a chance of solar flares or out-system bursts to worry over XX
      In conversation Monday, 07-Dec-2020 02:47:52 JST permalink

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      1. Domain not in remote thumbnail source whitelist: media.springernature.com
        Apollo Lunar Astronauts Show Higher Cardiovascular Disease Mortality: Possible Deep Space Radiation Effects on the Vascular Endothelium
        from Payal Ghosh
        As multiple spacefaring nations contemplate extended manned missions to Mars and the Moon, health risks could be elevated as travel goes beyond the Earth’s protective magnetosphere into the more intense deep space radiation environment. The primary purpose of this study was to determine whether mortality rates due to cardiovascular disease (CVD), cancer, accidents and all other causes of death differ in (1) astronauts who never flew orbital missions in space, (2) astronauts who flew only in low Earth orbit (LEO) and (3) Apollo lunar astronauts, the only humans to have traveled beyond Earth’s magnetosphere. Results show there were no differences in CVD mortality rate between non-flight (9%) and LEO (11%) astronauts. However, the CVD mortality rate among Apollo lunar astronauts (43%) was 4–5 times higher than in non-flight and LEO astronauts. To test a possible mechanistic basis for these findings, a secondary purpose was to determine the long-term effects of simulated weightlessness and space-relevant total-body irradiation on vascular responsiveness in mice. The results demonstrate that space-relevant irradiation induces a sustained vascular endothelial cell dysfunction. Such impairment is known to lead to occlusive artery disease and may be an important risk factor for CVD among astronauts exposed to deep space radiation.

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