Difference between revisions of "March 17, 2006"

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=Limb Strip=
 
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<p><b>Related Links:</b><br />
 
<p><b>Related Links:</b><br />
 
Astrophotography – A New Way of Looking at the Moon, J.-P. Metsavainio, <i>Sky &#038; Telescope</i>, January 2005, p. 142-146.</p>
 
Astrophotography – A New Way of Looking at the Moon, J.-P. Metsavainio, <i>Sky &#038; Telescope</i>, January 2005, p. 142-146.</p>
<p align="center"><b>SUPPORT LPOD - VISIT A SPONSOR (CLICK AN AD BELOW)!<br />
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<p><b>Yesterday's LPOD:</b> [[March 16, 2006|Smart Move]] </p>
<i>And you can now buy any book from Amazon thru [http://www.lpod.org/?page_id=102  LPOD!]</i></b></p>
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<p><b>Tomorrow's LPOD:</b> [[March 18, 2006|The Baby Spies a Rille]] </p>
 
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===COMMENTS?===
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Click on this icon [[image:PostIcon.jpg]] at the upper right to post a comment.
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Latest revision as of 22:45, 8 February 2015

Limb Strip

Limbs-Metsavainio
image by J-P Metsavainio

In 2004, J-P Metsavainio of Finland developed the technique of rectifying images of the lunar limb using Photoshop software. Now he is back using real 3-D software, SolidWorks, which is more accurate and provides realtime (up to 30 fps) rotations with very large bitmaps. J-P took screen shots from SolidWorks and then combined them in PhotoShop CS to produce the complete limb image strips shown here. The circular image at bottom right is his original (and excellent) full Moon image that was rectified as the series of strips. I have added the names of a few of the major features to provide orientation. Noteworthy are the craggy Leibnitz Mountains which are actually part of the rim of the farside South Pole-Aitken mega-impact basin. The East limb is darkened by three mare deposits - Marginis, Smythii and Australe. Each has its own character, with the curved basin rim of Smythii strongly depicted, expecially compared to the lack of circularity - and uncertain basin status - for Marginis. And Australe is seen to be a distributed mare with deposits of mare basalts on the floors of numerous large craters.

Chuck Wood

This LPOD was originally published June 13, 2005.

Technical Details:
Original full Moon image 27.11.200. Meade LX200 GPS 12″ + Canon EOS300D; prosessed with PhotoShop CS + SolidWorks 2005. Note that the directional indicators (N, SW, etc) are misaligned; true N is about where the NE label is.

Related Links:
Astrophotography – A New Way of Looking at the Moon, J.-P. Metsavainio, Sky & Telescope, January 2005, p. 142-146.

Yesterday's LPOD: Smart Move

Tomorrow's LPOD: The Baby Spies a Rille


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