The electronics company Nvidia have recently become
well-known for their dabbling into esoteric matters, in fact they launched a
viral marketing campaign for their Tegra K1 mobile chip with a crop circle,
see: http://hpanwo-voice.blogspot.co.uk/2014/01/crop-circle-in-california.html.
Maybe this wheeze piqued their interest and they began exploring other related
subjects, which maybe is what led them to their latest venture- an attempt to
debunk the "moon hoax theory". That term actually covers a wide range
of theories from the notion that no human being from Earth has ever travelled
beyond low Earth orbit by any means whatsoever, to speculation about the secret
space programme and how the massive public relations operation surrounding
NASA, the Soviet Union and the space race influenced the way we the people were
told about man's exploration of the heavens. Most sceptics- with a c, of the
Apollo missions fall into the first camp, that no man has ever walked on the
moon and that the moon landing footage and other data were faked, filmed
secretly in a film studio on Earth somewhere. I'm more a supporter of the
second camp, even though I agree that the photos and TV record were faked. I
personally don't doubt that men have walked on the moon, in fact I expect
humans from Earth have been going there for a long time and they still travel
there regularly today, and much further afield too for that matter. What I
question is whether the moon was first explored at the time, and using the
methods and personnel, that history tells us it was.
This moon landing project by Nvidia is essentially another
marketing campaign. They've analyzed one of the first and most famous
photographs allegedly taken on the moon using their new Maxwell hardware and
Voxel Global Illumination system which is very good at creating realistic
lighting effects for computer generated graphics. Graphics designers at Nvidia
have fashioned a virtual reproduction of the photograph of Buzz Aldrin climbing
down the ladder from the Apollo 11 Lunar Module to step onto the surface of the
moon. This had to factor in the geography of the location, the materials and
properties of the hull of the spacecraft, the astronauts' space suits and the
various pieces of equipment in the scene. The designers also had to recreate
the lighting effects. They then rendered what they claim is an electronic
facsimile of the photograph, their point being that it explains all the lighting
effects that we "conspiracy theorists" say is artificial studio lighting
from multiple angles, as nothing more than sunlight, therefore the original
1969 photo must be real, see: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O9y_AVYMEUs.
It took them a while though; at first the picture still wasn't correctly lit
even taking into account their estimates of the light reflection off the
surrounding moonscape. It then struck them that they'd failed to take into
account the sunlight shining off the photographer Neil Armstrong's white
spacesuit. After that had been added to the render it looked exactly like the
original Apollo 11 photo. However, there are some problems with that bold
statement. The facsimile does not look exactly like the photo. To begin with, Nvidia
haven't reproduced the lighting effects around the porch of the LM. The reason
for this could be because these effects are extremely incriminating. You can
clearly see the sharp line of a shadow on the roof of the porch indicating a
major nearby light source behind and to the left. They also haven't addressed
the work of Dr David Groves and his detection of another light directly to the
right of the photographer, see: http://www.aulis.com/nasa4.htm.
The presence of a secondary light source is even more apparent in other images
taken at the same scene, not least Buzz Aldrin climbing out of the LM cabin in
which Neil Armstrong is standing at the base of the LM ladder where he is in
the shade himself and so cannot be nominated as the human reflector board for
the Nvidia facsimile as the graphic design team claim. In fact even if he were
standing in the sun his relative size in relation to the photographic object
would not have reflected enough light to produce the right effect. This point
was not lost on moon hoax researcher Jarrah White, as well as many others. He's
produced a new video tackling Nvidia's answer to what many are calling "the
crazy lunar conspiracy believers", which includes me of course, see: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lIFBz2t3Ov0.
In this video Jarrah points out that Nvidia have not accurately gauged the
albedo, the proportion of sunlight reflected by the lunar surface. Many people,
including Jarrah himself, have attempted to recreate this photographic scene
physically, using a surface with the same albedo as the moon's, and they cannot
copy the lighting effects we see in the photo. Nor can the two Russians who
repeated the initially very misleading experiment done by the TV series Mythbusters; I've criticized that
programme myself, see background links below. It looks like Mythbusters made the same error as
Nvidia, albeit not in the Photoshop world, misjudging exactly how little light
is reflected by the moon's surface. Of course the moon appears very reflective
to us on Earth, it looks very bright indeed when full in a night sky, but its
average albedo is only 7 to 12 %. Apollo 11 also landed on one of the maria regions of the moon which are the
dark patches on the lunar disk that you can see from Earth with the naked eye,
so the albedo of the area around the landing site would probably be below that
lunar average. The recent missions to the moon by China
support that, although Jarrah claims that the Chinese space agency has been
tampering with its visual images too, maybe to boost NASA's official story of
Apollo. The older Soviet moon missions, which predate Apollo, seem to have more
realistic photographic effects. What Nvidia has done is not only fail to dispel
some people's very appropriate, sensible and rational concerns about the Apollo
moon landings, but they've reignited the entire dispute for an entire new
generation. It's a trick that has backfired badly, even if it does boost sales
of the Maxwell and VXGI system.
See here for Mary Bennett's article on Nvidia: http://www.aulis.com/nvidia.htm.
See here for Mary Bennett's article on Nvidia: http://www.aulis.com/nvidia.htm.
See here for
background: http://hpanwo.blogspot.co.uk/2014/03/megan-whewell-at-oxford-sitp.html.
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ReplyDeleteThanks for this post re Apollo Ben. Thanks also for a great HPANWO radio show tonight!
ReplyDeleteAlways useful and good to revisit this topic. It is pivotal.
For me, the fundamental problems are the facts that the moon has 1) little-to-no atmosphere and 2) it lies beyond the Van Allen belts.
The Van Allen belts provide the earth, and therefore humans, protection from the harmful radiation from outer space. (X-ray, cosmic, gamma, you name it). Any human astronaut on the moon in a flimsy canvas suit would be toast. Any photographic film would also be toast. In addition, we have the problem of the surface temperature of the moon in sunlight. No. For me, you can forget any notion of the official Apollo programme at all, let alone the 'official' photographs. Marcus Allen is 100% correct in this respect.
Please see also my article http://www.checktheevidence.co.uk/cms/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=348&Itemid=63 which Andrew Johnson very kindly hosted.
With regard to alternative visits to the moon and elsewhere (secret space programme etc), I can accept that sufficiently sophisticated means of propulsion exist and have been witnessed on earth many times. We must therefore however also assume, in the absence of direct evidence, that any sufficiently sophisticated forms of propulsion made by man must also convey similarly sophisticated means of radiation protection for the astronauts therein. I think that all of us are to quick to accept the notion of 'hidden' space travel. Propulsion isn't the only problem. Radiation is the real obstacle that has prevented exploration of space so far.
Nice Post Ben Thanks..
ReplyDeleteYou're welcome, Neil. Thanks for tuning in.
ReplyDeleteGreat article on Andrew's site! I didn't know that about the Osmonds tape. It sounds a bit like the 9/11 hijackers passport story to me. Aldrin did claim that he took a few things to the moon, including some Soviet cosmonauts' badges of the men who'd died in the N1 explosion. But they were made of metal. You're right about radiation. Mary Bennett calls it "the biggest show-stopper in space exploration". However she doesn't agree with me about the secret space programme.
Thanks, Myddrin. :-)
ReplyDeletenvidia would be better off proving that rockets indeed work in the almost perfect vacuum of space first!
ReplyDelete(sorry couldnt resist, as google will have some type of "sit on a skateboard and throw a bowling ball away from you is the answer" but if you quote newtons laws be sure to know their meaning first :P