For your first point, there are many reasons why, physically, a human moon landing is impossible, but you don’t need many to debunk it. How about these, to start?
Fuel capacity for the round trip. The spacecraft would need to be huge to launch that much cargo.
No blast zone around the landing/launch site.
No dust. Anywhere.
Van Allen Belt.
Communications.
“Wagging the Moondoggie Parts 1-4” covers your second point well (and loads more of the physical aspects of the hoax too). Have you read it? There’s audio files there too:
The surface dust was blown away down to the rock substrate. There’s not much loose “soil” on the Moon at any given time due to constant solar ablation in the first place.
no dust
There’s literally dust everywhere. It’s jagged, so it coated all the suits, the surfaces the suits touched, the interior of the LEM, and it overheated suits and the rovers, besides gumming up the axles and general operation. Apollo 12 landed a few hundred yards away from Surveyor 3, coating it with dust and interfering with one of the experiments to return parts from it to study the effects of vacuum solar exposure on machinery.
Van Allen belt
What about it. Don’t stay in it. They didn’t. In the same way that 10gs are survivable for under a minute and 100gs are survivable for under a thousandth of a second, radiation is survivable if you’re not around it for prolonged periods. Their parking orbit was below the belt, their outbound leg was at escape velocity, and their return leg was at almost twice that speed.
For your first point, there are many reasons why, physically, a human moon landing is impossible, but you don’t need many to debunk it. How about these, to start?
Fuel capacity for the round trip. The spacecraft would need to be huge to launch that much cargo.
No blast zone around the landing/launch site.
No dust. Anywhere.
Van Allen Belt.
Communications.
“Wagging the Moondoggie Parts 1-4” covers your second point well (and loads more of the physical aspects of the hoax too). Have you read it? There’s audio files there too:
https://centerforaninformedamerica.com/moondoggie/
Have you never seen a Saturn V?
The surface dust was blown away down to the rock substrate. There’s not much loose “soil” on the Moon at any given time due to constant solar ablation in the first place.
There’s literally dust everywhere. It’s jagged, so it coated all the suits, the surfaces the suits touched, the interior of the LEM, and it overheated suits and the rovers, besides gumming up the axles and general operation. Apollo 12 landed a few hundred yards away from Surveyor 3, coating it with dust and interfering with one of the experiments to return parts from it to study the effects of vacuum solar exposure on machinery.
What about it. Don’t stay in it. They didn’t. In the same way that 10gs are survivable for under a minute and 100gs are survivable for under a thousandth of a second, radiation is survivable if you’re not around it for prolonged periods. Their parking orbit was below the belt, their outbound leg was at escape velocity, and their return leg was at almost twice that speed.
Tells us next about the gas chambers and the holocoaster. I'm having a great laugh morning, thanks.
You’re shit at your job.