The thing that gets me about moon mission
The thing that gets me about your posts, inconceivable, is why you make them. You drop in, post stuff like this, then utterly fail to return to it before dropping in randomly later and posting another comment like this. What are your reasons for being here?
are the unknowns that have come to light over the years about craters on the moon using computer models and analyzing newer data.
Yes, amazing how science keeps finding new things, isn't it?
Amazed that they were just so lucky for instance with no threatening solar flares during the missions?
That was not just dumb luck, that was a calculated risk. What exactly is the frequency of major, life-threatening solar flares that are directed right at us? How does that compare to minor flares, or those that don't blast us directly? And how does that fit with a two-week mission duration?
Not that I expect an answer. You have a pretty consistent record of failure to respond.
Driving buggies around not concerned with the density or the properties of the regolith?
How exactly do you conclude they were 'not concerned'? They had several lunar landings, manned or otherwise, under their belt by the time the first rover was used. Properties of the regolith were well known.
Hitting golf balls, not concerned with static discharge?
Why would static discharge be a problem for anyone encased in a spacesuit? They're not exactly conductive. What would provide the route to earth the static charge?
Not knowing that the leading edges of craters could potentially have 100s of volts of electricity created by the solar wind, waiting to be discharged.
Again, what would it discharge through? And is hundreds of volts actually a problem? A simple static shock of the kind you get touching a doorknob is on the order of
thousands of volts. And that's the voltage required to allow the charge to travel across the
air between the thing with the accumulated charge and your finger. What would the voltage need to be to allow discharge across a vacuum? In any case, it's not the voltage that is an issue, it's the current.
It's amazing they picked all the right areas to avoid the dangerous affects of solar radiation.
This is why I don't actually believe you are anything but a rather mild example of a troll. This entire thread is literally devoted to this subject. They didn't 'pick the right areas', the radiation a) wasn't at a damaging background level anyway for someone in a spacecraft or spacesuit, and b) the chance of a damaging flare was calculated and considered an acceptable risk for the mission goal. Everything you just said about static discharge is meaningless because, like the radiation, it is a) not high enough to be of concern and b) unlikely to discharge anyway.