November 21, 2011

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Albedo Atlas Needed

LPOD-Nov21-11.jpg
65% enlargement mosaic by " rel="nofollow Maurice Collins, New Zealand

Do you recognize this mosaic? Probably not because it never existed before yesterday. Recently, I have been lamenting to Maurice
that I need a high resolution mosaic or atlas of the lunar surface under full Moon lighting. A number of times over the last week or so
I wanted to check an LPOD image under high Sun - for example, does Sirsalis have rays? Is Cassini's Bright Spot in an image? Full
Moon imaging still lags behind low Sun imaging probably because it is not as dramatic. But the images are the only way to investigate
the brightness and darkness of the surface. The Consolidated Lunar Atlas, like Kuiper's previous Atlas of the Moon does show every
part of the near side in multiple illuminations, but they are individual sheets and often what I am interested traverses two or more sheets.
So Maurice used " rel="nofollow ICE to stitch together 12 mosaics (which, sadly, don't cover the entire Moon). The sample here shows the wonderful
contrast and relatively high resolution. Three craters are visible on the floor of Plato, as is the dark band up the wall of Aristillus, and
what causes the dark blotches along the rim of Aristoteles? There are dozens of full Moon " rel="nofollow images in the LPOD Photo Gallery, but
very few have the needed resolution. Among the best are the huge " rel="nofollow mosaics of the Minsk Miracle Imagers.

" rel="nofollow Chuck Wood

Related Links
The CLA high Sun images are from the LPI digitized " rel="nofollow version of the atlas.