The Moon

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The Moon Page 32

by Oliver Morton


  starting point debate, 131–133, 136, 158, 264

  Apennines (Montes Apenninus), 39

  apogee, 79, 81, 165

  Apollo 8 and Apollo 8, 24–27, 107

  photo of Earth, 26–30, 31, 32

  Apollo 9 and Spider, 105, 107

  Apollo 11, Eagle and Tranquility Base, 86, 112, 113–117, 207

  Apollo 12 and Intrepid, 112, 117–118

  Apollo 13, 174, 205

  Apollo 14, 112, 119

  Apollo 15, 112, 119–122

  Apollo 16 and Casper, 112, 122–123

  Apollo 17 and Challenger, 112, 123–124, 227, 247

  Apollo programme

  as ambition, 129, 130, 173

  cancellation, 169–170, 173, 197

  description and scale, 103–104, 201

  gender and race, 110

  human impact on the Moon, 134–135

  landing events and conversations, 113–124

  landing sites, 112 (map), 113, 117, 119, 122, 123, 227

  lunar-orbit rendezvous, 103

  post-programme expectations, 169–171, 177–178, 195

  post-programme realities and criticisms, 129–130, 182

  science done, 171–172

  simulators, 108

  Arago, Francois, 69

  Arctic Circle, 80

  Arden, Michel (character), 65, 69, 95

  Arendt, Hannah, 182–183, 262

  Aristarchus, 49

  Aristarchus crater, 39, 49

  Aristotle, 16–17

  Armstrong, Neil, 113–117, 133, 207–208

  art, 23–24, 28–29, 42–43, 44, 206, 208, 282–283

  artefacts and intelligence on the Moon, 231

  artists in space, 206, 207–208

  Asaro, Frank, 179

  Ascension Island, 28–29

  ashen light, 14–16, 32. See also earthlight

  Asimov, Isaac, 151–153

  asteroids, 68, 69, 166, 179, 192–193, 236

  Astounding magazine, 94

  astrobiology, 18, 35, 148–151, 154–156, 194–195

  Astrobotic (company), 217, 228

  astrogeology, 2, 83, 86

  astrology, 80

  atmosphere of Earth, 31, 55, 221

  atmosphere of the Moon, 38, 55, 159

  atmosphere of Mars, 18, 193

  atmosphere of Venus, 18, 74, 149, 161

  atmospheric chemistry, 18–19

  atomic weapons and explosions, 70–72, 94–95, 98–99, 132, 174, 180–181, 270, 272

  symbolic potency of, 133–134

  axis of rotation of Earth, 149, 150

  B1023 booster, 290

  Baldwin, Ralph, 68, 69, 73–74

  Barringer, Daniel, and family, 70–71

  basalt on the Moon, 73–74, 126, 145

  bases on the Moon. See moonbases

  basins, 74, 154, 157–158

  bats, 256

  Bean, Alan, 117–118

  Bear, Greg, 231, 276

  Beer, Wilhelm, 233

  Behn, Aphra, 56–57

  Beresheet lander, 225–226

  Berzelius crater, 225–226

  Bezos, Jeff, 215–216, 218, 219–220

  BFR (Big Fucking Rocket), 211, 212, 213–214, 239, 250, 282

  Bierce, Ambrose, 3

  big rockets development, 211–212

  birth of the Moon, 139–143, 144–147

  Blue Moon, 9

  Blue Moon vehicle, 216

  Blue Origin, 215–216, 219

  Boa Vista (location), 230

  bodily functions in spacesuits, 110

  BOLAS mission and satellites Bolas-L and Bolas-H, 226–227

  Bonestell, Chesley, 67, 95, 96, 273

  Borman, Frank, 24, 27

  Bova, Ben, 180–181, 187, 249

  Bradbury, Ray, 180, 181–182

  Brahe, Tycho, 49

  Brand, Stewart, 185

  breccia, 126

  brightness of the Moon, 14, 30, 47, 75

  British Interplanetary Society (BIS), 89, 186

  Brown, Jerry, 185

  Brownlee, Donald, 148, 149, 150

  Bush, George H. W., 194

  Bush, George W., 194, 212

  Butler, Samuel, 55–56

  calcium plagioclase, 145–146

  calendars, 8–9

  Campbell, John W., Jr., 94

  capitalism, and environment, 264–266, 267–268

  capture hypothesis, 145

  Carpenter, James, 59–60, 62

  “The Moon, Considered as a Planet, a World and a Satellite”, 60, 63–65, 274

  Carswell structure, 178

  Carter, Jimmy, and administration, 241

  cassette players, 24

  Catharina crater, 64

  caves on the Moon, 38, 228–231

  Cenozoic Era, 136

  Cernan, Gene, 123–124, 247

  Chakrabarty, Dipresh, 131, 264

  Chandrayaan missions, 1–2, 202, 225

  Chang’e missions, 167, 198, 202, 225

  Chaotian, 137–139

  China, 198, 202, 225

  Church and Christianity, 48, 50, 51

  cinema

  Moon in, 27, 28, 57

  on space and the Moon, 92–93, 95–96, 231

  Clarke, Arthur C., 71, 89, 96–97, 248, 249, 267, 286

  “The Challenge of the Spaceship” 177

  and communication satellites, 21, 174

  “Earthlight”, 95–96

  “A Fall of Moondust” 97

  “Prelude to Space” 180

  See also “2001: A Space Odyssey”

  Clementine, 202

  clouds on Earth, 4, 31, 33, 67, 167, 196, 271, 273–274, 287–288

  Club of Rome, 186, 265

  co-accretion hypothesis, 145

  Cockell, Charles, 268, 269, 273

  Colliers, 94

  Collingwood, Robin, 264

  Collins, Michael, 113

  colonialism, 132, 264–265

  see also Europeans, Age of Being Explored by

  colonisation of space, 216, 217–218

  colours of the Moon, 75

  comets, 69, 179

  command module, 24, 102–103

  Commoner, Barry, 263, 265

  computers

  on lunar module, 105–106, 107–109

  in science fiction, 107, 269–270, 271, 274

  as source of wealth, 198

  as tools for modelling, 107–109

  women as, 97

  Conrad, Pete, 117–118

  Copernicanism, 48–49, 50

  Copernician revolution, 17, 34, 153

  Copernicus, Nicolaus, 16, 17, 49

  Copernicus crater, 39, 49

  Cosmism, 87–88, 98, 187, 282

  countdown, in cinema, 93

  Coyote, 13

  Coyote Mountains (Arizona), 13

  craters on Earth, 70–71, 178–179

  craters on the Moon

  creation from impacts, 68–69, 72, 74

  darkness and light, 159–160, 233

  description, 39

  early research, 45–46, 58–59, 61, 64–65

  Galileo, 45–46

  and geological timescale, 153–154

  images (first), 58

  micrometeorites, 127

  naming, 49, 64

  reflection of light and rays, 47–48, 49, 65, 69

  story about nuclear bomb, 71–72

  See also specific craters

  crescent of the Moon, 42

  crust of the Moon, 37, 61, 125–126, 146, 157, 228

  Cygnus (spacecraft), 209

  Cyrano de Bergerac, 51

  da Vinci, Leonardo, 14–15, 43

  Darwin, George, 143, 144, 150

  Davis, Don, 145

  #dearMoon trip, 205–207, 214

  death, and the Moon, 43, 274

  Delanty, Rick (character), 179, 185

  deliveries to lunar surface, 193, 209, 213, 216, 217

  delta-v, 165, 166, 193, 238

  Descartes landing
site, 122

  Devil’s Ashpit station, 29

  diamonds, 175

  differentiated bodies, 138

  Digges, Thomas, 90

  direct ascent, 101

  distance to the Moon, 79

  distances on the Moon, 75, 76

  Doctorow, Cory, 279

  Douglas, Mary, 281

  Dragon capsules, 208–209, 210, 213, 288–289

  Duke, Charlie, 122–123

  dust of/on the Moon (moondust)

  dangers of, 247

  description, 68, 125

  in exposure of the Moon, 221, 222, 223

  in fiction, 97

  and lunar module, 111–112, 118

  magnetic properties of, 222, 247

  Thomas Gold and, 97, 141

  Eagle. See Apollo 11

  Earth

  atmosphere of, 18–19, 21, 31–32, 55, 130, 149, 184, 221, 226, 265, 275

  birth, 139–143, 144–147

  as centre of universe, 16, 34

  core of, 37, 142, 143, 221

  crust of, and tectonic plates, 3, 74, 125, 135

  photo from Apollo 8, 26–30, 31, 32

  rocks on the Moon, 161–162

  smallness, 90–91

  surface and rocks, 125

  view of the Moon, 74–75

  See also specific topics

  Earth-orbit rendezvous, 102

  earthlight

  experienced on or around the Moon, 35, 50, 75, 283

  reflected back to Earth from the Moon, 14–16, 17, 19, 32–35, 43, 151–152

  “Earthrise” photo, 28–29, 32

  eastern hemisphere of the Moon, 78 (map)

  eclipses, 79–80

  ecliptic, 79–80

  economy, and limits on Earth, 260–268

  Eisenhower, Dwight, 99

  electricity on the Moon and in space, 184, 232–233, 236

  “The Elephant in the Moon” (Butler), 56

  Elliott, Michael, 288, 290–291

  Elsheimer, Adam, 43, 44

  “The Emperor of the Moon” (Behn), 56–57

  endolithic panspermia. See transpermia

  energy crisis of 1970s, 184–185

  energy from Sun, 31–32. See also photosynthesis; solar energy

  engines, 84–86, 106, 212

  Eno, Brian, 24

  environment and environmentalism

  and control, 268–270

  and the future, 260–264, 265–268

  and the Moon, 275–276, 280–283

  private schemes in space, 185–187

  “The Eons of Chaos and Hades” (Goldblatt et al.), 137–138

  Erhlich, Paul, 186

  erratics, 125–126

  espionage, 22–23

  European Space Agency, 202, 216

  Europeans, Age of Being Explored by, 51–52, 132, 264

  Evans, Ronald, 123

  evolution, 60, 63, 67, 148, 155

  evolution of Earth, 60–61, 63

  evolution of humans, 75, 88, 133, 250, 272

  evolution of the Moon, 60–62, 63

  existential threat to Earth, 178–182, 194, 215

  exoplanets, 17–18, 34, 35, 148, 151, 285

  exposure to cosmos, 221–223

  extraterrestrial life, 17, 18, 35, 57, 148–151, 231

  see also Moonpeople

  F-1 engines, 84, 85–86, 101, 212

  fairground rides, 57

  Falcon 9, 208, 209, 210, 288–289

  Falcon Heavy launcher, 208, 210, 211, 290

  Fallaci, Oriana, and father, 181–182

  farside, lunar, 38–39, 43, 81, 284–286

  FBI, 94

  features on the Moon, 37–39, 45–50, 58, 75–76

  See also specific features

  fertility in Moon stories, 256

  figures (symbolic) in the Moon, 13, 41, 42–45, 56

  Flammarion, Claude, 233

  “The Flight into Egypt” (painting by Elsheimer), 44

  flight simulators, 108–109

  flight to space. See spaceflight

  Fontenelle, Bernard le Bovier de, 57–58

  formation of the Moon, 60–61, 139–143, 144–147, 283

  fossil fuels, 133, 184, 275

  Foster, Norman, and Foster + Partners, 230

  Fra Mauro landing site, 119

  France, 189

  fuel, 25, 84–85, 87, 93, 104, 106, 236, 238–239

  full Moon, 7, 9, 42, 47, 48

  names of, 9

  future

  and environment, 260–264, 265–268

  expansion and exploration, 90, 91, 92

  in science and science fiction, 91–92

  future for the Moon

  expectations post-Apollo, 169–171, 177–178, 195–196

  and humans, 274–283

  possibilities, 5–6

  and society, 260, 261–262, 267, 269, 275, 277–281

  See also Return to the Moon

  Gagarin, Yuri, 100, 207

  Gaia hypothesis, 19, 185

  Galilean moons, 49

  Galilei, Galileo, 11, 15–16, 45–47, 49

  gases, in rockets, 84

  Gateway programme (Lunar Orbiting Platform-Gateway), 237

  Gaye, Marvin, 129–130

  “Genesis rock”, 120–122, 146

  geological timescale

  Earth, 131–132, 136–138, 163 (illustration)

  Moon, 135–136, 153–154, 163 (illustration)

  geology and geologists

  epochs and ages naming, 131–132, 135, 136–137

  impacts and bombardments, 69–71, 179

  of the Moon, 12, 39, 61–62

  Germany, rocket development, 86, 89, 93, 94

  giant-impact theory, 144–145

  gibbous Moon, 7, 42

  Gifford, Charles, 69

  Gilbert, Grove Karl, 11–12, 69, 70–71

  Gilbert, William, 43–44, 54

  Glenn, John, 215

  Glennan, Keith, 99

  globes of the Moon, 11

  Goddard, Robert, 88–89, 93, 233, 282, 285

  Godwin, Francis, 50, 52

  Gold, Thomas, 97

  Goldblatt, Colin, 137–138

  Google Lunar X Prize, 3, 216–217, 281

  Gordon, Richard, 117

  Grail mission, 228

  Grant, Allan, 96

  gravity

  and health, 248–251

  theory and tides, 52, 53–54, 143, 144

  Gregorian calendar, 9

  Grinspoon, David, 133–134, 137, 139, 161

  Grumman, 106, 108, 209

  gunpowder, 87

  Hadean, 136–137, 139, 142, 158

  Hadley Rille landing site, 119

  Hall, James, 59, 63

  halo orbit, 167

  Harland, Brian, 137

  Harriman, Delos D. (character), 172–177, 184, 241, 274, 282

  Harriot, Thomas, 47

  Hartmann, Bill, 72, 73, 74, 145, 154, 156

  Heidegger, Martin, 183

  Heinlein, Robert, 71–72, 93, 94, 96, 186, 274

  “Destination Moon” movie, 95–96

  “The Man Who Sold the Moon”, 172–177, 241

  “The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress”, 38, 257–260, 261–264, 266–267, 268–271

  “Rocket Ship Galileo”, 71–72, 94, 95

  on society and future, 260, 261–262, 267, 269, 275

  helium-3, 188–189, 230, 236

  Hergé, 67

  highlands of the Moon, 39, 44, 126, 145, 157, 233

  Hipparchos crater, 58

  history (human) on the Moon, 281–282

  Holdren, John, 186

  Holocene, 136

  Hooke, Robert, 58–59, 69

  howling, 13

  Hubbard, Ron L., 94

  humans

  colonisation of space, 216, 217–218

  existential threat on Earth, 178–182

  first story of explorers to the Moon, 65–66

  and future of the Moon in Return to the Moon, 274–283


  health and body in space, 229, 247–251

  impact on Earth (see Anthropocene)

  impact on the Moon, 134–135, 281–282

  services from the Moon, 62–63

  uniqueness to Earth, 148–149

  walkers on the Moon, 5, 201

  Humboldt, Alexander von, 20

  Hutton, James, 63

  Huxley, Aldous, 91

  ICBMs, 99

  ice and frost on the Moon, 159, 160, 192

  imagination, and the Moon, 20, 275

  impacts on Earth, 70–71, 154–155, 178–179

  impacts on the Moon

  and craters, 68–69, 72, 74

  dust and objects, 68, 221–222

  early science, 69–70, 73–74

  and geological timescale, 135, 153, 158

  “Late Heavy Bombardment”, 154, 156–158

  markings and gouges, 69, 74

  models, 72–73

  rocks from elsewhere, 160–162

  rocks on the Moon, 125, 126, 157–158

  Theia and Tellus collision, 139–143, 144–147

  and water, 158–160

  India, 202

  intelligence and artefacts on the Moon, 231

  International Astronomical Union, 48

  International Commission on Stratigraphy, 131, 136

  International Latex Corporation, 109

  International Seabed Authority, 242

  International Space Station (ISS), 170, 196, 209, 213, 248

  Intrepid. See Apollo 12

  ionosphere, 21, 282, 284

  IPAT formula, 186–187

  iron core, 37–38, 142, 143

  Irwin, James, 119–122

  ISEE-3 (International Sun-Earth Explorer 3), 202–203

  Islam and Islamic calendar, 8–9, 42

  ITER reactor, 189

  Jangle U crater, 70

  Japan, 202

  Jefferson, Thomas, 280

  Johnson, Lyndon, 100, 101

  Jupiter, 49, 138–139, 156, 172, 202

  moons of, 37, 49, 193, 247, 291

  Jurvetson, Steve, 3

  Kennedy, John F., 98, 99, 100, 101, 110, 173, 197

  Kennedy, John Jr., 291

  Kepler, Johannes, 16, 49, 50, 52–53, 58

  Kessel, John, 278

  Kitt Peak (Arizona) telescope, 13, 14, 17, 19, 32

  Korolev, Sergei, 98–99, 207

  Kuiper, Gerard, 73

  L5 movement/society, 186, 187, 189, 241

  Lacus Mortis, 228

  Lagrange, Joseph-Louis, 167

  “Lagrangian points”, 167, 185, 187, 188

  landforms on the Moon, 48–49, 102

  landing of Falcon, 289–290

  landing on the Moon

  ambitions and limitations, 129–130

  and Anthropocene, 133–134

  architecture approach, 102–103, 210

  events and conversations in Apollo, 113–124

  rocket development, 101–102

  landing sites

  Apollo, 112 (map), 113, 117, 119, 122, 123, 227

  research, 1–2, 225, 226–228

  in Return to the Moon, 225–226, 232, 236, 240, 281

  Landis, Geoff, 232–233

  “A Walk in the Sun”, 233

  landscapes on the Moon, 12, 75–76, 95

 

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