Difference between revisions of "November 13, 2008"

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<em>image from [http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2008-11/12/content_10347379.htm China View]</em><br />
 
<em>image from [http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2008-11/12/content_10347379.htm China View]</em><br />
 
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China is very proud of its lunar orbiter, Chang'e 1. Its [http://www.lpod.org/?m=20071127 first] image was released by the prime minister of China, and now a complete image map of the entire Moon has been released by China National Space Agency. According to the news story, the map is <em>the most complete image of the moon surface, and also the richest in detail</em> of any published. This may be true for a while. The only other complete image map of the Moon is from Clementine which does have some small gaps (e.g. plate 24 in <em>The Clementine Atlas of the Moon</em>). According to another online report from [http://english.people.com.cn/90001/6532737.html China Daily], the Chang'e map has a resolution of 120 m, considerably better than the <em>Clementine Atlas</em> 200 m. Hopefully, both of these maps will be bettered soon with the higher resolution imaging of the Japanese, Indian and American lunar orbiters. Based on the brightness of ray craters Tycho, Copernicus and others, this mosaic is like the Clementine one in depicting much of the surface (apparently between about 50°N and 50°S) under full-Moon lighting conditions, with progressively lower illumination toward the poles. For multispectral mapping to determine compositions of the surface such high lighting is excellent, but it is of less use in studying lunar topographic features. Apparently, the Japanese Kaguya orbiter is mapping the entire Moon at Sun angles of 10°-20°, which will be an excellent complement to the Chang'e map. The map was presented to the National Museum of China and there is no information of when it will be released to the world. So far we only have a news photographer's snapshot of this great achievement.<br />
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China is very proud of its lunar orbiter, Chang'e 1. Its [[November_27,_2007|China Daily]], the Chang'e map has a resolution of 120 m, considerably better than the <em>Clementine Atlas</em> 200 m. Hopefully, both of these maps will be bettered soon with the higher resolution imaging of the Japanese, Indian and American lunar orbiters. Based on the brightness of ray craters Tycho, Copernicus and others, this mosaic is like the Clementine one in depicting much of the surface (apparently between about 50°N and 50°S) under full-Moon lighting conditions, with progressively lower illumination toward the poles. For multispectral mapping to determine compositions of the surface such high lighting is excellent, but it is of less use in studying lunar topographic features. Apparently, the Japanese Kaguya orbiter is mapping the entire Moon at Sun angles of 10°-20°, which will be an excellent complement to the Chang'e map. The map was presented to the National Museum of China and there is no information of when it will be released to the world. So far we only have a news photographer's snapshot of this great achievement.<br />
 
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<em>[mailto:tychocrater@yahoo.com Chuck Wood]</em><br />
 
<em>[mailto:tychocrater@yahoo.com Chuck Wood]</em><br />

Latest revision as of 22:26, 22 March 2015

Snapshot Map

LPOD-Nov13-08.jpg
image from China View

China is very proud of its lunar orbiter, Chang'e 1. Its China Daily, the Chang'e map has a resolution of 120 m, considerably better than the Clementine Atlas 200 m. Hopefully, both of these maps will be bettered soon with the higher resolution imaging of the Japanese, Indian and American lunar orbiters. Based on the brightness of ray craters Tycho, Copernicus and others, this mosaic is like the Clementine one in depicting much of the surface (apparently between about 50°N and 50°S) under full-Moon lighting conditions, with progressively lower illumination toward the poles. For multispectral mapping to determine compositions of the surface such high lighting is excellent, but it is of less use in studying lunar topographic features. Apparently, the Japanese Kaguya orbiter is mapping the entire Moon at Sun angles of 10°-20°, which will be an excellent complement to the Chang'e map. The map was presented to the National Museum of China and there is no information of when it will be released to the world. So far we only have a news photographer's snapshot of this great achievement.

Chuck Wood

Related Links
Sparse details on Chang'e-1 science instruments

Yesterday's LPOD: Platoization

Tomorrow's LPOD: A Rim?



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