Difference between revisions of "January 12, 2011"

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<em>image by [mailto:abraham@vadakcsillaga.hu" rel="nofollow Tamás Ábrahám], Zsámbék, Hungary</em><br />
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<em>image by [mailto:abraham@vadakcsillaga.hu Tamás Ábrahám], Zsámbék, Hungary</em><br />
 
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Its time for my ever so often lament on the dearth of remarkable lunar images. The stormy weather in the US and Europe, floods in eastern Australia, and the lack of image releases by LRO all result in few new views of the Moon being available. The Chang'e-1 and Chandrayaan-1 websites have no new images - those missions have been as secretive with their data as SMART-1; a mission that could be considered a failure based on the limited numbers of press releases. Maybe it is a jinx to place a &quot;-1&quot; at the end of a lunar mission name. Perhaps Apollo was successful because the lunar missions started with 8, not 1 (which was an on-ground disaster). LRO did have a new [http://pds-geosciences.wustl.edu/missions/lro/default.htm" rel="nofollow data dump] in December, for those who can deconvolve the data from LOLA, Mini-RF and the LRO WAC to produce pictures. In the meantime we are lucky to have a beautiful image of the recent conjunction of a corona-fied Moon and Jupiter, and a scary ruin. <br />
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Its time for my ever so often lament on the dearth of remarkable lunar images. The stormy weather in the US and Europe, floods in eastern Australia, and the lack of image releases by LRO all result in few new views of the Moon being available. The Chang'e-1 and Chandrayaan-1 websites have no new images - those missions have been as secretive with their data as SMART-1; a mission that could be considered a failure based on the limited numbers of press releases. Maybe it is a jinx to place a &quot;-1&quot; at the end of a lunar mission name. Perhaps Apollo was successful because the lunar missions started with 8, not 1 (which was an on-ground disaster). LRO did have a new [http://pds-geosciences.wustl.edu/missions/lro/default.htm data dump] in December, for those who can deconvolve the data from LOLA, Mini-RF and the LRO WAC to produce pictures. In the meantime we are lucky to have a beautiful image of the recent conjunction of a corona-fied Moon and Jupiter, and a scary ruin. <br />
 
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<em>[mailto:tychocrater@yahoo.com" rel="nofollow Chuck Wood]</em><br />
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<em>[mailto:tychocrater@yahoo.com Chuck Wood]</em><br />
 
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<strong>Technical Details</strong><br />
 
<strong>Technical Details</strong><br />
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<strong>Related Links</strong><br />
 
<strong>Related Links</strong><br />
Tamás' [http://www.vadakcsillaga.hu/" rel="nofollow website]<br />
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Tamás' [http://www.vadakcsillaga.hu/ website]<br />
 
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Revision as of 16:29, 11 January 2015

The Moon is Dead

LPOD-Jan12-11.jpg
image by Tamás Ábrahám, Zsámbék, Hungary

Its time for my ever so often lament on the dearth of remarkable lunar images. The stormy weather in the US and Europe, floods in eastern Australia, and the lack of image releases by LRO all result in few new views of the Moon being available. The Chang'e-1 and Chandrayaan-1 websites have no new images - those missions have been as secretive with their data as SMART-1; a mission that could be considered a failure based on the limited numbers of press releases. Maybe it is a jinx to place a "-1" at the end of a lunar mission name. Perhaps Apollo was successful because the lunar missions started with 8, not 1 (which was an on-ground disaster). LRO did have a new data dump in December, for those who can deconvolve the data from LOLA, Mini-RF and the LRO WAC to produce pictures. In the meantime we are lucky to have a beautiful image of the recent conjunction of a corona-fied Moon and Jupiter, and a scary ruin.

Chuck Wood

Technical Details
January 9, 2011

Related Links
Tamás' website