BTC 7724 resistance to overcome, stuck to the ceiling like a fly at present
Amazing footage, not seen it done that clearly before. There is a hand held photo camera which can zoom in on the moon, maybe a few hundred to buy. Theres a reflector left on the moon which returns a signal if you use the right type of light spectrum to shine at it. As far as actual visible object, I guess they are too small and the flag would need to be lying flat and far larger. So the angles are wrong.
The moon is quite boring afaik, its just similar composition to the earth except exposed horribly to the elements of all kinds from outer space. Never heard anything special about moon dust brought back.
Did Mars drilling ever return new elements of any kind, I followed really only the initial landings 25 years ago. Principally its been about engineering to me not so much physics discovery, but I know little :p
Anyway the main point I was going to mention is the sun dying off or cooling down is not a near term likely phenomena. The far more probable event before that is a solar spike or storm that would be similar to an EMP nuclear blast on the earths atmosphere.
Hopefully its a low probability but its a million times more likely then a big fall in Sun activity. This would at the extremes lead to the loss of electronics on earth, its not an unprecedented event, I'll just go find the wiki link for previous
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_storm_of_1859The now-standard unique IAU identifier for this flare is SOL1859-09-01.
A solar storm of this magnitude occurring today would cause widespread disruptions and damage to a modern and technology-dependent society.[2][3] The solar storm of 2012 was of similar magnitude, but it passed Earth's orbit without striking the planet.[4]
[northern lights] Auroras were seen around the world, those in the northern hemisphere as far south as the Caribbean; those over the Rocky Mountains in the U.S. were so bright that the glow woke gold miners, who began preparing breakfast because they thought it was morning.[6] People in the northeastern United States could read a newspaper by the aurora's light.[11] The aurora was visible as far from the poles as south-central Mexico[12], Queensland, Cuba, Hawaii,[13] southern Japan and China,[14] and even at lower latitudes very close to the equator, such as in Colombia
The difference from 1859 to now is obviously we rely on sensitive electronics. The positive is that I think we could predict this storm in time to save or shield alot of the equipment ? I think the whole thing is worth mentioning in terms of possibly globally changing events and related to finance and clearing systems.