Moon makes exactly one rotation every revolution. It's a peculiar thing that we never got to see the far side of the moon, and I am speaking to you midway on my journey to this place, no one's been. It is crazy to know that I am somehow even going there, history in itself, but the observation will be the ultimate thing. I am in hope, of nothing too extraordinary, maybe ordinary, but geologically complex.
After a few days...
I have successfully landed on the visible side of the moon, somewhere actually closer to the far side, and the lunar rover is in excellent condition, and the lunar turf too is perfect. I can considerably travel in this rover at a speed of 60 kph. A couple of days more, and I shall have posted images, and the exploration would've begun, into what man would never have thought of...
Trim-Tram-Trop-Trip-N-BOOM! I had never had such a fact to groom, I can't say the names of the astronomical looms which would have made this room. I have seen half-cut tennis balls but never such a mammoth module of it! Looks like the bowl in which sun drinks its soup. Where from does this moon of ours get its gravity? Just tell me how one can believe, "The Far Side Was HOLLOW?!"
How slippery it was, on the rear side, seemingly no friction, no my rover wasn't up to it. A perfect bowl for ice skating, skiing, skateboarding, just slide down an end and reach the top of the other.
I could see nothing but an inner surface made of, some eatable soil, rich with minerals and nutrients, a middle layer hydrated with liquid oxygen all throughout, and a layer of reactive plasma, and a top layer made of invisible matter.
My colleagues in Rocket Lunar 2 are approaching, they and I will be restless to tell the world, about a never-thought-about new home for we energy and resource-guzzling humans. It's time we realise the possibility of a lunar world, all on the rear side of our dearly known, owned, and called Moon.
Ready? Get Set! Rush!
After a few days...
I have successfully landed on the visible side of the moon, somewhere actually closer to the far side, and the lunar rover is in excellent condition, and the lunar turf too is perfect. I can considerably travel in this rover at a speed of 60 kph. A couple of days more, and I shall have posted images, and the exploration would've begun, into what man would never have thought of...
Trim-Tram-Trop-Trip-N-BOOM! I had never had such a fact to groom, I can't say the names of the astronomical looms which would have made this room. I have seen half-cut tennis balls but never such a mammoth module of it! Looks like the bowl in which sun drinks its soup. Where from does this moon of ours get its gravity? Just tell me how one can believe, "The Far Side Was HOLLOW?!"
How slippery it was, on the rear side, seemingly no friction, no my rover wasn't up to it. A perfect bowl for ice skating, skiing, skateboarding, just slide down an end and reach the top of the other.
I could see nothing but an inner surface made of, some eatable soil, rich with minerals and nutrients, a middle layer hydrated with liquid oxygen all throughout, and a layer of reactive plasma, and a top layer made of invisible matter.
My colleagues in Rocket Lunar 2 are approaching, they and I will be restless to tell the world, about a never-thought-about new home for we energy and resource-guzzling humans. It's time we realise the possibility of a lunar world, all on the rear side of our dearly known, owned, and called Moon.
Ready? Get Set! Rush!
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