Let's work with 1/10th mission dosage. We know that the reported range for the apollo missions during solar cycle 20 was 2.4 mgy/day to 6 mgy/day. Now 1/10 of .22 mgy/day is .022. Now if we add 1.35 times .24 we get .324 mgy/day while in lunar orbit assuming they spent two days in lunar orbit or on the surface of the moon you can see the total mission dosage comes up short, don't you think?
No, let's work with the actual data. Your values for their exposures have been shown to be inconsistent with the data you did use, and irrelevant as they were from either average doses over a long time span, or taken from measurements of less intense solar cycle. Try again.
The actual data from Apollo is taken from their dosimeters. Their dosimeters (as long as they functioned properly, and they would know this during their read-out) are their official, legal record for the exposure received. An ex-nuc should already know this.
That is like defining a word by using the word. No, if you truly want to prove the deception you can't use the liars words. You have to corroborate the data external to the claim. Show me the corroborating data for the apollo claims.
No, that is how things work. If you accept the instruments aboard the radiation probes are accurate, you need to also accept that the dosimeters are accurate. In fact they are considered more accurate overall, as this is why they are used for the legal tally of received dose. You cannot claim one instrument works and another does not with nothing more than your own ignorance as reasoning.
You are the one who thinks their doses were too low. Everything I have seen, INCLUDING your own source material, has not supported your position. The data we do have is consistent with every known factor that we know can modulate those dose rates. You refuse to accept this, and have offered NOTHING that has held up to scrutiny, but that is not my problem. YOU made the accusation. YOU support it, or just maybe have the integrity to admit you don't have any collaborating evidence.