Difference between revisions of "January 1, 2009"
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=Year 6 Begins= | =Year 6 Begins= | ||
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− | <em>image by [mailto:aldiam1@hol.gr | + | <em>image by [mailto:aldiam1@hol.gr Alexandros Diamantis], Greece</em><br /> |
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− | Well, it has happened again. Another year has rolled by and LPOD, which started on Jan 1, 2004, is another year older. For the | + | Well, it has happened again. Another year has rolled by and LPOD, which started on Jan 1, 2004, is another year older. For the 1000 or so people who check LPOD every day the Moon looms large overhead. During 2008 there were [[Archive_2008|360 images]] published (but [[March 4, 2008|361 stories]]) by more contributors than I can easily count. Just in December images came from 12 countries (Australia, Greece, France, Hong Kong, Hungary, Italy, Myanmar, Romania, Spain, Switzerland, the USA and Ukraine), 9 spacecraft (Ap 12, Ap 15, Ap 17, Chang'e-1, Chandrayaan-1, Clementine, Kaguya, Luna 21 and Lunar Orbiter IV), 2 atlases (<em>Consolidated Lunar Atlas</em> and <em>USGS Digital Atlas of the Moon</em>) and one movie (<em>Moon Zero Two</em>) And somewhere it must be mentioned that one lunar image was a [[March 23, 2008|tattoo]]. Highlights of the year include the appearance of spectacular [[December 10, 2008|images]] and [[April 10, 2008|data]] from the Kaguya/Selene spacecraft, the beginning of [[December 18, 2008|results]] from Chandrayaan-1, new atlases by [[February 13, 2008|Phil Stooke]] and [[January 21, 2008|Chuck Byrne]], and hundreds of exquisite new amateur images! In 2009 the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter will be launched and we hopefully will be flooded with wonderful new data from that orbiter plus Kaguya, Chandrayaan-1, Chang'e-1 and maybe even SMART-1. In 1959, Luna 1 was launched on January 2, and so in 2009 we begin a decade of 50th anniversaries of lunar exploration. And for those interested in the rest of the universe, 2009 is also the [http://www.astronomy2009.org/ International Year of Astronomy], tied to Galileo's observations of the Moon in 1609. Stick around (and keep submitting great amateur images) - 2009 will be a great year!<br /> |
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− | <em>[mailto:tychocrater@yahoo.com | + | <em>[mailto:tychocrater@yahoo.com Chuck Wood]</em><br /> |
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+ | <p><b>Yesterday's LPOD:</b> [[December 31, 2008|Pro-Am Observing]] </p> | ||
+ | <p><b>Tomorrow's LPOD:</b> [[January 2, 2009|A Lot of Nodding]] </p> | ||
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Latest revision as of 20:30, 27 October 2018
Year 6 Begins
image by Alexandros Diamantis, Greece
Well, it has happened again. Another year has rolled by and LPOD, which started on Jan 1, 2004, is another year older. For the 1000 or so people who check LPOD every day the Moon looms large overhead. During 2008 there were 360 images published (but 361 stories) by more contributors than I can easily count. Just in December images came from 12 countries (Australia, Greece, France, Hong Kong, Hungary, Italy, Myanmar, Romania, Spain, Switzerland, the USA and Ukraine), 9 spacecraft (Ap 12, Ap 15, Ap 17, Chang'e-1, Chandrayaan-1, Clementine, Kaguya, Luna 21 and Lunar Orbiter IV), 2 atlases (Consolidated Lunar Atlas and USGS Digital Atlas of the Moon) and one movie (Moon Zero Two) And somewhere it must be mentioned that one lunar image was a tattoo. Highlights of the year include the appearance of spectacular images and data from the Kaguya/Selene spacecraft, the beginning of results from Chandrayaan-1, new atlases by Phil Stooke and Chuck Byrne, and hundreds of exquisite new amateur images! In 2009 the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter will be launched and we hopefully will be flooded with wonderful new data from that orbiter plus Kaguya, Chandrayaan-1, Chang'e-1 and maybe even SMART-1. In 1959, Luna 1 was launched on January 2, and so in 2009 we begin a decade of 50th anniversaries of lunar exploration. And for those interested in the rest of the universe, 2009 is also the International Year of Astronomy, tied to Galileo's observations of the Moon in 1609. Stick around (and keep submitting great amateur images) - 2009 will be a great year!
Chuck Wood
Yesterday's LPOD: Pro-Am Observing
Tomorrow's LPOD: A Lot of Nodding
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