Elias Eduardo Salazar

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Elias Eduardo Salazar

Elias Eduardo Salazar

@eess_

Haciendo una pequeña locura cada dia

venezuela Se unió Ekim 2010
775 Siguiendo163 Seguidores
Elias Eduardo Salazar retuiteado
The White House
The White House@WhiteHouse·
EARTHSET. April 6, 2026. Humanity, from the other side. First photo from the far side of the Moon. Captured from Orion as Earth dips beyond the lunar horizon. Photo: NASA
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Guille Martín
Guille Martín@Farmaenfurecida·
Lo bueno del debate del terraplanismo y la llegada a la luna es que permite identificar de forma efectiva a todos los idiotas que se creen especiales por creer que nos fumigan, que las vacunas son malas o que los virus no existen.
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rocky happy not alone
rocky happy not alone@HeirPlain·
"And now whatever way our stories end, I know you have rewritten mine By being my friend." *cue Rocky scooting closer to Grace on the Eridian beach*
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Benjamin Cowen
Benjamin Cowen@benjamincowen·
Someone could go to school for 4 years and study aerospace engineering, then get a PhD with a dissertation related to orbital mechanics, and some instagram influencer who watched a youtube video will be like "actually that guy is wrong" on a topic related to space travel and people will believe them. I'm not sure how we got here, but I hope we go back to a society where credibility is earned with rigorous training in the associated field, not by a popularity contest.
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Anish Moonka
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka·
1969. NASA spent $355 million to put two men on the moon. The flag cost $5.50. And three months before launch, nobody at NASA had even thought to bring one. Congress started asking why the biggest space mission ever wouldn’t include an American flag. NASA scrambled. They handed the job to an engineer named Jack Kinzler, a guy everyone at the space center called “Mr. Fix It.” His problem was strange: there’s no air on the moon. No air means no wind. A normal flag would just hang there like a wet towel on a stick. So Kinzler thought back to watching his mom hang curtains as a kid. He designed a metal rod that slid through the top of the flag like a curtain rod, holding the fabric stiff so it would look like it was waving. The whole flagpole was aluminum tubing, weighed under 10 pounds, cost $75 to build. The flag rode to the moon strapped to the ladder of the landing spacecraft, directly in the blast path of engines that hit 2,000°F on the way down. Engineers had to wrap it in a metal sleeve with insulating blankets just to keep it from burning up before anyone could touch it. Then Armstrong and Aldrin tried to actually plant the thing. They could barely get the pole into the ground. Dirt on Earth has smooth, rounded grains because millions of years of wind and water have worn down the edges. The moon has no weather. Never has. So lunar dirt is made of tiny jagged shards that lock together like Velcro. The pole went in a few inches, nowhere near deep enough. Buzz Aldrin later told NASA engineers he spent the whole time terrified the flag would fall over on live television while hundreds of millions of people watched from their living rooms. It stayed up. It stood for 21 hours and 36 minutes. When Armstrong and Aldrin fired the engine to leave the surface, the rocket exhaust hit the flag, planted just 27 feet away, and blew it over. Aldrin watched it go down through the window. Every Apollo crew after that put their flag farther from the spacecraft. Six American flags were planted across six moon landings between 1969 and 1972. The last one, on Apollo 17, had actually ridden to the moon and back on Apollo 11 years earlier, then hung on the wall of Mission Control before going back to the lunar surface for good. In 2012, NASA pointed a spacecraft camera at the old landing sites. The lead scientist on the camera team confirmed that five of the six flags are still standing. Apollo 11’s is the only one down, lying in the dirt right where Aldrin watched it fall. Every one of them has almost certainly been bleached solid white. Fifty-seven years of raw ultraviolet light, with zero atmosphere to filter any of it, strips the color out of nylon. The Stars and Stripes on the moon are now, most likely, just blank white rectangles on sticks.
Physics & Astronomy Zone@zone_astronomy

Historic moment when Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin planted the flag on the Moon on July 20, 1969 (Apollo 11)

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Curiosity
Curiosity@CuriosityonX·
Insane footage from NASA Artemis I close flyby of the Moon
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Nostalgia
Nostalgia@nostalgiaa·
A Trip to the Moon (1902)
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Rosmina Suárez Piña
Rosmina Suárez Piña@sciencelover_rs·
Dato curioso de la semana: Los astronautas entrenan con realidad virtual y adivinen quién está detrás de eso 🫣 La ingeniera venezolana Evelyn Miralles, considerada la pionera de la realidad virtual en la NASA, quien entrenó a los cuatro astronautas de Artemis II. 🚀🇻🇪
NASA@NASA

LIVE: Watch with us as the Artemis II astronauts make their closest approach to the Moon, traveling farther from Earth than ever before. twitter.com/i/broadcasts/1…

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Agustín Antonetti
Agustín Antonetti@agusantonetti·
🇺🇸 — Momento histórico. El presidente Donald Trump establece comunicación con los astronautas de la misión Artemis II.
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Tendencias y Tuits Borrados
Tendencias y Tuits Borrados@tendenciaytuits·
“Luna” Porque acaba de emitirse el vídeo de mayor calidad de la luna.
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Elon Musk
Elon Musk@elonmusk·
NASA Artemis passing close to the Moon
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HevercastroB
HevercastroB@HeverCastroB·
LA ULTIMA CARTA DE LOS SOVIÉTICOS ANTES DEL APOLO 11, LA HISTORIA QUE POCOS CONOCEN. Hilo🧵: Como todos saben, llegar a la luna solo era una cuestión de orgullo en la guerra fría, ningún país (URSS o EE.UU) tenía un plan a mediano o largo plazo después de dicha conquista. 1/13
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Aura Sabia
Aura Sabia@AuraSabiaxX·
🚨: ¡La última foto de la superficie de Venus tiene ya 40 años! El módulo de aterrizaje Venera-14 llegó a la superficie en 1982, permaneciendo 52 minutos a la temperatura de Venus de 450 °C (847 °F
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All day Astronomy
All day Astronomy@forallcurious·
Moon stuns in the latest video released by NASA!
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Latest in space
Latest in space@latestinspace·
🚨 Live look at Orion, the Moon, and Earth lined up “Everyone is in this picture” 🌕🌏
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