May 31, 2017

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Streaks Across a Mauve Moon

Originally published October 11, 2007

Tycho-Pujic
Image by Zac Pujic

UPDATE - Thursday: I am at the meeting but my laptop hard drive isn’t - it seemed to have died somewhere enroute. So I have access to other machines briefly to check email but not to make an LPOD or even to reposition an old one. Fortunately, this is a beautiful image for you to look at for the next few days - I’ll get a new LPOD up by Monday - especially if I have some great new images when I return!

Wednesday: I am enroute to the Division of Planetary Sciences annual meeting in Orlaando, Florida and didn’t have time to make a new LPOD, but here is a wonderful older one from April 29, 2006 that deserves a second look.

How can the same old Moon continue to look new and different? The answers we see nearly everyday in LPOD are high resolution and creative imaging and processing. This deep pink lunar eye-opener is unusual both in color and perspective. Zac has enhanced the weak colors of his excellent mosaic and then re-projected the image so that it is centered above Tycho. The abundance of rays to Tycho’s east, and paucity to the west is evidence that Tycho formed from an oblique impact with the projectile coming from the west. The big and bright area north of Tycho is Cassini’s Bright Spot within Deslandres crater. Aristarchus is the brilliant beacon at top left and many other young ray craters dot the highlands. Do you notice that there seem to be more ray craters on the highlands than the maria? Hmm. Also I wonder what causes the ruddy rim of Arzachel. On the lower right a dark “ray” passes near the small bright craters near Stevinus, and three bluish arcs of brightness are visible on the western limb. Are these real features or artifacts? Similarly, the area from Tycho toward the South Pole is bluer than most of the highlands - is this a real difference in surface composition or something added by processing? Images like this cause us to ask new questions, perhaps leading to new discoveries and at a minimum allowing us to see old places with a new perspective.

Chuck Wood

Technical Details:
22 June 2005. 32 cm f/5.75 Newtonian (prime focus) + Phillips ToUcam Pro webcam. Composite of 95 separate images obtained from 95 separate 30 second avis. Avis stacked using Registax. Images where composited using AutoStitch. Saturated colour produced using Photoshop 9. Image rotated using method by Metsavainio.

Related Links:
Zac’s website

Yesterday's LPOD: First View with a New Scope

Tomorrow's LPOD: Good Night Moon


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