Read my post it already happened and they're NASA engineers they're not idiots,and they just hit it with the LCROSS to make dust go up. Also they can't there's almost no atmosphere.
If they did they wouldn't be big enough to do any damage or get through the atmosphere. Plus they already did it so nothing happened,and it wasn't like a huge explosion,they just hit it with something it wasn't a "Bomb". Athrun if our atmosphere was bad enough for those to go threw we'd allready have been hit many times today,about 100 meteors burn up in the atmosphere every day. vid
Scientists hope to make a splash by "bombing" the Moon with two spacecraft. The plan is to slam the projectiles into a dark crater at the lunar south pole, kicking up a six-mile high dust cloud that may contain water. British researchers helped Nasa pick the spot for the drama, which will be broadcast live on the American space agency's website. The Cabeus south polar region was identified by the University of Durham team as a site with high concentrations of hydrogen - a key component of water. It is believed water ice could lie at the bottom of dark craters at the Moon's poles, where temperatures are lower than minus 170C. The crashing spacecraft consist of an orbiter, LCROSS (Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite), which is now mapping the lunar surface, and its 2.2 tonne empty Centaur launch rocket. Both are currently on collision course with the Moon and still attached together. In the early hours, British time, the probe and rocket will separate. Then at 12.31pm the larger rocket will smash into the crater at 5,600 mph, blasting out 350 tonnes of debris in a 6.2 mile high plume. Following close behind, the LCROSS satellite beaming live pictures back to Earth will fly through the material and four minutes later plunge into the crater itself. LCROSS will trigger its own dust cloud a third of the size of the first one. As the debris is propelled into sunlight, scientists on Earth will study its composition with ground-based telescopes. Amateur astronomers in dark parts of the world will be able to view the spectacle through their own instruments. But daylight will make this impossible in the UK. Live coverage of LCROSS Impact Event starts at 3:15 a.m. PDT or 6:15 a.m. EDT on NASA TV http://www.nasa.gov/ntv
It took me one or two try's a friend of mine kept lagging out around the middle of the second set. After he got his connection fixed it was easy we ended with six lives or something.
I know that game,my friend lagged out so many times before we got it. Then when I was doing annul we got to the cutscene twice and someone died and the cutscene ended,and we had to do it again.