Difference between revisions of "March 23, 2012"

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=Little Cameras for Little People=
 
=Little Cameras for Little People=
 
 
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<em>image from GRAIL [https://moonkam.ucsd.edu/ MoonKAM]</em><br />
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<em>image from GRAIL [https://moonkam.ucsd.edu/" rel="nofollow MoonKAM]</em><br />
 
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A new lunar orbiter is now providing images for school kids. And the rest of us can see them too. Here are three examples from [http://images.moonkam.ucsd.edu/main.php 60 images] requested by kids at Emily Dickinson Elementary School in Montana. Each of the two GRAIL gravity-measuring spacecraft, Ebb and Flow, has three 6 mm focal length cameras and one 50 mm one. Because the spacecraft fly close to the lunar surface - 38 to 64 km elevation for most of these images - these small camera can provide pleasing views. On each spacecraft one of the cameras points ahead and another behind the spacecraft - similar to Kaguya - giving out-the-porthole perspectives. One of the images here even captured the Earth over a lunar horizon. All of the images released thus far appear to have been processed with a quantization that reduces the tonal variation, resulting in tonal smoothing. But for the kids who request that GRAIL image their areas of interest these images will be personal treasures that, according to Maria Zuber, GRAIL mission principal investigator, may have a major effect: <em>a picture from lunar orbit may be worth a classroom full of engineering and science degrees...</em><br />
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A new lunar orbiter is now providing images for school kids. And the rest of us can see them too. Here are three examples from [http://images.moonkam.ucsd.edu/main.php" rel="nofollow 60 images] requested by kids at Emily Dickinson Elementary School in Montana. Each of the two GRAIL gravity-measuring spacecraft, Ebb and Flow, has three 6 mm focal length cameras and one 50 mm one. Because the spacecraft fly close to the lunar surface - 38 to 64 km elevation for most of these images - these small camera can provide pleasing views. On each spacecraft one of the cameras points ahead and another behind the spacecraft - similar to Kaguya - giving out-the-porthole perspectives. One of the images here even captured the Earth over a lunar horizon. All of the images released thus far appear to have been processed with a quantization that reduces the tonal variation, resulting in tonal smoothing. But for the kids who request that GRAIL image their areas of interest these images will be personal treasures that, according to Maria Zuber, GRAIL mission principal investigator, may have a major effect: <em>a picture from lunar orbit may be worth a classroom full of engineering and science degrees...</em><br />
 
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<em>[mailto:tychocrater@yahoo.com Chuck Wood]</em><br />
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<em>[mailto:tychocrater@yahoo.com" rel="nofollow Chuck Wood]</em><br />
 
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Revision as of 22:28, 4 January 2015

Little Cameras for Little People

LPOD-Mar23-12.jpg
image from GRAIL " rel="nofollow MoonKAM

A new lunar orbiter is now providing images for school kids. And the rest of us can see them too. Here are three examples from " rel="nofollow 60 images requested by kids at Emily Dickinson Elementary School in Montana. Each of the two GRAIL gravity-measuring spacecraft, Ebb and Flow, has three 6 mm focal length cameras and one 50 mm one. Because the spacecraft fly close to the lunar surface - 38 to 64 km elevation for most of these images - these small camera can provide pleasing views. On each spacecraft one of the cameras points ahead and another behind the spacecraft - similar to Kaguya - giving out-the-porthole perspectives. One of the images here even captured the Earth over a lunar horizon. All of the images released thus far appear to have been processed with a quantization that reduces the tonal variation, resulting in tonal smoothing. But for the kids who request that GRAIL image their areas of interest these images will be personal treasures that, according to Maria Zuber, GRAIL mission principal investigator, may have a major effect: a picture from lunar orbit may be worth a classroom full of engineering and science degrees...

" rel="nofollow Chuck Wood