Difference between revisions of "February 23, 2011"

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<strong>Technical Details</strong><br />
 
<strong>Technical Details</strong><br />
<ul><li>Today's title comes from SandiBandi's expressive comment in the [http://lpod.wikispaces.com/message/view/February+22%2C+2011/34616298 alert] he posted about this mosaic.</li></ul><hr />
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<ul><li>Today's title comes from SandiBandi's expressive comment in the alert he posted about this mosaic.</li></ul><hr />
 
<p><b>Yesterday's LPOD:</b> [[February 22, 2011|Ancient Mystery]] </p>
 
<p><b>Yesterday's LPOD:</b> [[February 22, 2011|Ancient Mystery]] </p>
 
<p><b>Tomorrow's LPOD:</b> [[February 24, 2011|The Top of the World]] </p>
 
<p><b>Tomorrow's LPOD:</b> [[February 24, 2011|The Top of the World]] </p>
 
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Latest revision as of 19:50, 27 October 2018

After Years of Wanting And Waiting*

LPOD-Feb23-11.jpg
image from LRO Featured Image (NASA/GSFC/Arizona State University). This image is
3% of the diameter of the full resolution one!

We had heavy enough snow overnight that my university was delayed 2.5 hr in opening. What a well-timed snowstorm, for I had the time to spend over 90 minutes with the full resolution version of this spectacular new LRO WAC mosaic of the nearside. About a third of the time was waiting for the 576 MB tiff file to download over my high speed connection. And the rest of the time I skimmed across the surface at 145 m/pixel resolution visiting so many well known places and discovering new things. Check out - on the full res view - the lava flows in western Imbrium, better seen here than ever before. Look at the weird cratered interior of Airy, pervasive secondary crater clusters, and almost any where you look, including some places in the highlands, there are tiny little rilles, many I am completely unfamiliar with. This Wide Angle Camera mosaic will be the new standard image for geologic interpretations, comparison with spectral and topographic data, and every other type of lunar investigation. This marvelous mosaic is not perfect - you can see many of the mosaic boundaries, there are many small gaps, and the regions near the limb are not always depicted well. But this is just the first of numerous (I hope) mosaics, with different illuminations. You may be thinking that your life as a lunar imager, and maybe even as an observer, is over. I don't agree. Yes, it will be difficult to image features that are not shown far better here, but until a very low Sun mosaic is released or the altimetry grid becomes considerably finer, observing near the terminator will reveal low-slope features unseen here. But even if there was no possibility to ever discover anything new on the Moon I would still observe from my back yard because I personally see and understand things I hadn't before. And just as when I went to Rome last fall the photos I took of the Coliseum and at the Vatican are more treasured than the far better pictures in books because I took my photos, I saw the buildings and I made a bond of emotion and understanding with them. That is what happens every time we look carefully at our Moon.
Chuck Wood

Technical Details

  • Today's title comes from SandiBandi's expressive comment in the alert he posted about this mosaic.

Yesterday's LPOD: Ancient Mystery

Tomorrow's LPOD: The Top of the World


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