Wednesday, June 12, 2019

Nick Howes, a fellow of the Royal Astronomical Society, told SkyNews he is “98 per cent convinced” that his team has finally tracked down the Snoopy module from Apollo 10


Apollo 10, which involved a mock mission with everything but the actual landing. Astronauts Thomas Stafford and Eugene Cernan flew a lunar module, nicknamed “Snoopy” by the agency, nearly all the way to the Moon during Apollo 10, and then shot the module off into space once they’d completed their task.

There was never any intent to return Snoopy to Earth — it was sent into an orbit around the sun beyond the Moon after the astronauts completed their maneuvers and returned to the command module, and NASA did not track its trajectory. The effort to discover its location began in 2011, undertaken by a group of amateur U.K. astronomers led by Nick Howes — the same who now claim they’re “98 percent convinced” they’ve discovered where it ended up, according to Sky News. Howes’ further speculated that if they confirm its location,

“What our hunt for Snoopy did prove though is the huge interest in space archeology,” Howes tweeted.

For now, he says “we have 102 observations… some good orbital data… some ‘interesting’ radar (observations) and a very small manmade object hurtling through space.”

Anyway ..given the problems our world currently faces .. spending millions to go out and image a lunar module from 1969 may seem very frivolous .. and the scientific value as I said in my talk.. would be minimal

https://nationalpost.com/news/world/nasas-snoopy-lunar-module-may-finally-have-been-found-50-years-after-it-disappeared
https://techcrunch.com/2019/06/10/nasa-snoopy-lunar-module-likely-found-50-years-after-being-jettisoned-into-space/

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