Difference between revisions of "September 24, 2009"

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<em>image by [mailto:miguelclaro@sapo.pt Miguel Claro], Capuchos, Portugal</em><br />
 
<em>image by [mailto:miguelclaro@sapo.pt Miguel Claro], Capuchos, Portugal</em><br />
 
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From Thursday afternoon till Friday morning my wife and I will be on a plane - like one of these blinking across Miguel's sky. We travel because of the Moon - to give a talk at the 2009 Shannonside Astronomy Club Burren [mailto:tychocrater@yahoo.com Chuck Wood]</em><br />
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From Thursday afternoon till Friday morning my wife and I will be on a plane - like one of these blinking across Miguel's sky. We travel because of the Moon - to give a talk at the 2009 Shannonside Astronomy Club Burren [http://www.shannonsideastronomyclub.com/sac_burren_starparty.htm Starparty] in Ireland. I have been thinking of making some notes about each of the images shown - all from LPOD - thank you! - and posting the PowerPoint of the talk online so that any of you can use it to give talks to your local astronomy clubs or other interested groups. I would have to ask each of the LPOD imagers for their OK, but then you could use great images and some interpretation to promote observing and understanding the Moon to people all over the world. Interested?<br />
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Thursday is an important day for lunar science. Carle Pieters, recently featured in [http://lpod.wikispaces.com/August+10,+2009 LPOD], is leading a NASA press conference to announce, according to all the many [http://www.reuters.com/article/scienceNews/idUSTRE58N01V20090924 leaks], that there is decisive evidence of hydrated minerals on the Moon. Hydrated means that the rocks have water molecules in their structure. And this discovery is not just limited to dark polar craters. This will force a rethinking of the results from analysis of hundreds of pounds of Apollo samples that the Moon is &quot;bone dry&quot; - the phrase many of us have used for decades. I expect that the samples haven't lied, that most of the Moon has little to no water tied up in its rocks. What will be exciting to learn tomorrow is where the water is and how it got there. But these details will be secondary to the likely impulse that this discovery gives to renewed lunar exploration. The $3 billion/yr extra that the Augustine Commitee reports is necessary to send Americans to the Moon seems harder to refuse now.<br />
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<em>[mailto:tychocrater@yahoo.com Chuck Wood]</em><br />
 
Remember - no LPODs for the next 5 days unless someone else posts them! If you are addicted, check out the [http://lpod.wikispaces.com/2009 visual index] of the last 600 or so LPODs!<br />
 
Remember - no LPODs for the next 5 days unless someone else posts them! If you are addicted, check out the [http://lpod.wikispaces.com/2009 visual index] of the last 600 or so LPODs!<br />
 
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Revision as of 19:46, 1 January 2015

Happy Trails

LPOD-Sept24-09.jpg

image by Miguel Claro, Capuchos, Portugal

From Thursday afternoon till Friday morning my wife and I will be on a plane - like one of these blinking across Miguel's sky. We travel because of the Moon - to give a talk at the 2009 Shannonside Astronomy Club Burren Starparty in Ireland. I have been thinking of making some notes about each of the images shown - all from LPOD - thank you! - and posting the PowerPoint of the talk online so that any of you can use it to give talks to your local astronomy clubs or other interested groups. I would have to ask each of the LPOD imagers for their OK, but then you could use great images and some interpretation to promote observing and understanding the Moon to people all over the world. Interested?

Thursday is an important day for lunar science. Carle Pieters, recently featured in LPOD, is leading a NASA press conference to announce, according to all the many leaks, that there is decisive evidence of hydrated minerals on the Moon. Hydrated means that the rocks have water molecules in their structure. And this discovery is not just limited to dark polar craters. This will force a rethinking of the results from analysis of hundreds of pounds of Apollo samples that the Moon is "bone dry" - the phrase many of us have used for decades. I expect that the samples haven't lied, that most of the Moon has little to no water tied up in its rocks. What will be exciting to learn tomorrow is where the water is and how it got there. But these details will be secondary to the likely impulse that this discovery gives to renewed lunar exploration. The $3 billion/yr extra that the Augustine Commitee reports is necessary to send Americans to the Moon seems harder to refuse now.

Chuck Wood
Remember - no LPODs for the next 5 days unless someone else posts them! If you are addicted, check out the visual index of the last 600 or so LPODs!

Technical Details
Sept 21, 2009. Canon 400D, 30 images, each 30 seconds exposure, starting at 20:25 and ending at 20:47 with total time of 22minutes. Miguel setup the camera with an aperture of F-4.5, ISO 400 with a 34mm lens. Later, he combined them all manually, in Photoshop CS3 to produce a single image with the path of the Moon.

Related Links
Miguel's beautiful website



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