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answers:
Quadrillian say: Could, yes, and the sooner the human goes there the better off the rest of the world will be.
Cheers!
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poornakumar b say: No
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Bill say: No. The Moon can not support life of any kind. There is no AIR or Water.
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Nyx say: sure. Whomever goes there just needs to have an environment that can support them. People have been living in space for years now.
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Jim Moor say: Given supplies, adequate shelter, etc. then yes.
However, after a long period there, they would not be able to return to earth.
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Donut Tim say: Yes.
Some, like Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin, did that. When they came back, they were just fine.
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Dixon say: I would be difficult because there are few natural resources on the moon and no atmosphere, so it would really be not much different to living permanently in a remote space ship. IE you would live inside buildings all the time or in a spacesuit to go outside. All resources would have to come from Earth, apart from recycled stuff like water and oxygen. There is also a 28 Earth day "day" on the moon, so a Earth 14 day period of night. That is going to get very cold and you would be without solar panels for that.
Mars is a much better planet for living on, if you can get there in the first place. Almost the same day/night as Earth, an atmosphere of sorts and plenty of water ice in the ground and mineral deposits.
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Jim say: Do you think thaf i could become an astranuat if my bowels are mostly wartery those werird toliets the have ill have to stick it all over my *** cuase it just explodes out what can i do
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Them say: I think there will continue to be problems with bone loss in a more weightless environment. Other than that, air, water and food is what you need and we can take those with us.
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Jack say: Not without support. But they could do it. It would not be cost effective. But it can be done.
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mbbs say: The moon itself is a craggy rock over 2,000 miles in diameter. During the Apollo missions between 1969 and 1972, 12 American spacemen set foot on the moon, and hauled back a whopping 842 pounds of rock and soil samples. Those samples revealed that the moon’s makeup is similar to Earth’s. The rocks also revealed some of the moon’s possible origin: As one theory goes, a Mars-sized planetoid rammed into Earth 4.5 billion years ago, and a chunk of cosmic shrapnel flew into Earth’s orbit, becoming the moon.
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