It is my opinion based on knowledge.
No, it is your delusion based on your advancing dementia.
Anyway no missiles or vehicles dropping down from space produce 'shock waves' when encountering atmosphere.
You have posted no evidence for this but:
- I have posted evidence that the X-15 flight data fitted almost exactly the hypersonic wind-tunnel measurements.
- I have shown hypersonic wind-tunnel images that show otherwise.
They just heat up and are destroyed.
Rubbish!
If you had anything supporting you crap you would post it so it's obvious that you are posting fairy stories fabricated to prop up your delusion that human space travel is not possible.
You go on and on about NASA this and NASA that, forgetting that U.S.S.R. was first in so many milestones in space:
First manmade satellite in orbit -
Sputnik I - Oct. 4, 1957.
First spacecraft to reach the vicinity of the Earth's Moon -
Luna 1 - Jan. 3, 1959.
First spacecraft to be placed in heliocentric orbit -
Luna 1, accidentally but it still happened - Jan. 3, 1959.
First surface impact on the moon -
Luna 2 - Sep. 12 1959.
First photograph of the far side of the moon -
Luna 3 - Oct. 4, 1959 - and it returned to earth and the film package reentered!
First
human in space -
Yugi Gagarin - Apr. 12, 1961.
First human to orbit the earth -
Yugi Gagarin - Apr. 12, 1961.
First woman in space -
Valentina Tereshkova - Jun. 16, 1963.
First crew of
three astronauts in one spacecraft -
Konstantin Feoktistov, Vladimir Komarov and
Boris Yegorov - Oct. 12, 1964.
First spacewalk -
Alexey Leonov - Mar. 18, 1965.
And then, because of poor management and inadequate ground testing, the
Russian Manned Lunar Space Program all went awry!
Stuff that in your pipe and smoke it,
Mr Story Teller Extraordinaire!
For my fairy tales, I'll read
Hans Christian Andersen and
Aesop's Fables are far more believable than yours.
Take a look at:
Inside the Soviets' Secret Failed Moon Program - I hope you can access that one.
THE SOVIET MANNED LUNAR PROGRAMLargest explosion in space history rocks Tyuratam.
Largest explosion in space history rocks Tyuratam
On July 3, 1969, on the very eve of the Apollo-11 Moon landing, Soviet engineers made their second clandestine attempt to fly their giant Moon rocket. However, the mission ended just seconds after liftoff with a colossal explosion, effectively knocking down the USSR in the Moon Race, just days before NASA astronauts walked on the lunar surface.
Escape rockets fire at the top of the doomed N1 No. 5L vehicle, as it begins a devastating collapse back to its launch pad.