Strike one, Heiwa.
Do you deny the existence of aerodynamic drag?
No, evidently not, pls refer to my presentation - link in post #1. IMO
There are a number of professional engineers in this thread, some of whom actually work in aerospace. Please explain why any of us should pay any attention to
your opinion, when you have repeatedly demonstrated ignorance of even the most basic aspects of space flight and an inability to grasp even the most fundamental principles involved.
the drag and lift forces acting on, e.g. the Apollo 11 command module, when velocity was say 6 000 m/s will rotate the module and kill the people inside. The module was not stable ...
Wrong.
Inanimate Carbon Rod has already provided a detailed reference - the existence of which you were ignorant - refuting this silly claim:
NASA TN-D-4688, Aerodynamic stability characteristics of the Apollo command module. But you are also ignorant of other work, such as
NASA TN-D-3890, Stability characteristics of the Apollo command module, and
Simulation of the Apollo command module aerodynamics at high altitudes, and
Simulation of the Apollo Command Module aerodynamics at re-entry altitudes, and
NASA-TM-X-1395, Longitudinal aerodynamic characteristics of the Apollo command module at a Mach number of 20 and data comparisons over a wide Mach number-Reynolds number range, and on and on.
There is an enormous amount of documentation about the design and test of the Command Module and its stability and steering. I worked (long after Apollo) for the guys who
designed it. You simply
don't know what you're talking about, and you aren't even dimly aware of the work that went into it. You aren't even remotely qualified to render an opinion about it; you're just as spectacularly wrong about this as you have been about everything else to do with Apollo in particular and space flight in general.
like a Ford Edsel.
The Edsel, whatever its faults, was stable. Once again, you have no idea what you are talking about - to the point that you provided an example that
contradicts your own claim!
But I fear the module will burn up already at 7 000 m/s speed in the atmosphere.
You are wrong, and you don't get any less wrong by repeating your ignorant opinion, and I and others have already explained how ablative shielding works - and that it has been
standard engineering practice for more than half a century.
You still need to address another claim you made:
Only Apollo 11 is SF.
Is this an admission that you accept the reality of the other Apollo missions (and Mercury and Gemini and Soyuz and Shenzhou and Skylab and Salyut and Mir and ISS and Cygnus and Genesis and etc.)? Or that you were simply unaware of the other missions' existence? Or that you are simply unable to keep track of your claims? Or that you are simply trolling?
Now, as I have said several times before: Kindly stop dodging
the serious problems with your claims I brought to your attention in reply #558:
1. You are offering money you don't have, for a challenge you have defined poorly - and redefined - and has no proper adjudication. Your challenge is fraudulent.
2. Your primary calculation is completely wrong because you don't understand energy balances. Your errors have been explained to you in excruciating detail, yet you refuse to acknowledge them. You simply keep repeating your error - even after the simplest possible case provides an obviously wrong answer using your method.
3. You have no idea what you are talking about, and no apparent interest or ability in relieving your own ignorance. Yet you continue to offer you ignorant opinion without even acknowledging the corrections and voluminous references provided to you.Again,
strike one.