No, NASA did not bomb the moon. However, in 2009, NASA did crash a probe into the moon to study its composition. This mission was called the Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite (LCROSS) mission.
No, the moon will not split in two with the NASA bomb. The NASA mission aims to simply crash a spacecraft into a crater near the moon's south pole to search for water ice.
The NASA missions which landed humans on the moon were called the Apollo Moon missions.
When NASA landed on the moon, they found a number of things, including a colony or homosexuals and a herd of dinosaurs.
No, NASA has not been operating a base on the moon for more than twenty years. NASA has not established a permanent base on the moon yet. They have plans for future lunar missions under the Artemis program, aiming to return humans to the moon by the mid-2020s.
Detonating a nuclear bomb on the moon would have long-lasting consequences such as creating a large crater, sending debris into space, and potentially disturbing the moon's surface composition. The resulting explosion could affect the moon's gravitational pull and impact future lunar exploration projects.
No, the moon will not split in two with the NASA bomb. The NASA mission aims to simply crash a spacecraft into a crater near the moon's south pole to search for water ice.
Not as far as we know.
in the middle of the moon
NASA's first moon program was called Apollo.The new moon program is called Constellation.
The NASA missions which landed humans on the moon were called the Apollo Moon missions.
NASA is the only agency to have landed humans on the moon. Russia, however, has landed probes and rovers on the moon's surface.
When NASA landed on the moon, they found a number of things, including a colony or homosexuals and a herd of dinosaurs.
No, NASA has not been operating a base on the moon for more than twenty years. NASA has not established a permanent base on the moon yet. They have plans for future lunar missions under the Artemis program, aiming to return humans to the moon by the mid-2020s.
In a rocket from NASA!
It was NASA.
No.
Detonating a nuclear bomb on the moon would have long-lasting consequences such as creating a large crater, sending debris into space, and potentially disturbing the moon's surface composition. The resulting explosion could affect the moon's gravitational pull and impact future lunar exploration projects.