Where did that energy go? It was dumped! What are you trying to say?
Yes, it was dumped - that is exactly the point. According to
your layman's energy-balance technique, since V
f = V
i in this scenario, the kinetic energy of the vehicle
did not change - while even you acknowledge it did.
His scenario was intended to demonstrate to you how your method doesn't work. And it doesn't work;
real engineers have been telling you this for quite a while now. Now that it has been presented to you in the simplest possible form, do you finally get it?
This discussion is getting sillier and sillier. Like the post about space navigation by sextant and compass and charts
The Apollo navigation solutions were all computed beforehand with allowances for variances in actual mass, performance, event times, and so on. They were updated constantly on the ground by some of the most powerful computers available. In any case,
I already provided you detailed references on the methods and means of Apollo navigation. Feel free to provide an
informed criticism, if you have one; all you have at this point is an appeal to ignorance, which is rejected as unfounded and uninformed.
at high g
The LOI burn duration was 357.5 seconds long with a velocity change of 2917.5 ft/sec, for an average acceleration of 8.2 ft/sec
2, or approximately 1/4 G. "High g"? Really? How do you survive living in a 1 G environment? Or would you simply care to admit your mistake?
(like in a WWII bomber)
Wrong again. Or do you really believe bomber navigators took Sun sights while their ships were maneuvering to avoid FW-190s?
while swinging into Moon orbit
Wrong again. The spacecraft computer managed the burn, including attitude control.
or that weak structures like tin boxes
Wrong again. The CM featured an outer stainless-steel honeycomb structure around the inner pressure vessel, an aluminum honeycomb structure - a very common construction technique in air- and spacecraft. Your characterization is nothing more than an appeal to ridicule, but once again serves only to make you look ridiculous because - once again - you have no idea what you are talking about.
can slow down from 11 200 m/s to 100 m/s (re-entry) by friction/turbulence without burning up.
Wrong in many ways: first, not by turbulence, as has been explained to you already. Second, by use of an ablative heat shield - standard engineering practice, as has been explained to you already. Third, the absolute maximum G load at any point during any Apollo reentry was 7.19 during Apollo 16 reentry - less than that commonly encountered during aerobatics or air combat.
Sorry, you have to do much better to earn topic!
You've already been proven wrong on almost everything you've said in this thread. All you accomplished in this post was to demonstrate further ignorance.
Now, I ask you again to address
the three main issues with your "challenge":
1. You are offering money you don't have, for a challenge you have defined poorly and has no proper adjudication.
2. Your primary calculation is completely wrong because you don't understand energy balances.
3. You have no idea what you are talking about, and no apparent interest or ability in relieving your own ignorance.
In light of these issues, I ask again - do you have any intention of actually learning anything at all, or are you just trolling? Because right now, the bit-bucket yawns wide.