Difference between revisions of "November 29, 2007"

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Rükl plate 14<br />
 
Rükl plate 14<br />
 
Another great [http://www.lpod.org/?m=20070428 view]</p>
 
Another great [http://www.lpod.org/?m=20070428 view]</p>
<p align="center"><em>Now you can support LPOD when you buy ANY book from Amazon thru [[LPOD]]</em></p>
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<p><b>Yesterday's LPOD:</b> [[November 28, 2007|Full Res!]] </p>
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<p><b>Tomorrow's LPOD:</b> [[November 30, 2007|A Beer Belly Crater]] </p>
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===COMMENTS?===
 
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Revision as of 20:20, 1 February 2015

Not From Orbit

Posidonius-08-03-07.jpg
image by Wes Higgins

There is no doubt that spacecraft orbiting the Moon can take higher resolution images than amateurs on Earth using backyard telescopes; but spacecraft can’t outdo Wes for stunning beauty. Posidonius is a favorite crater because of the tilted floor, criss-crossed with rilles, and the lighting of this image gives a hyper-realistic feel for the plasticity of the surface. At the southern part of the plateau, where two rilles cross like an X, there seems to be a subtle doming. In fact, the crossed rille pattern is exactly what modelers get when they uplift a solid surface - cracks made by fracturing, not volcanism. Of course, a rising blob of magma is probably what tilted and uplifted the floor of Posidonius, as well as creating the smaller localized swelling. Wes pointed out another intriguing feature - the worm on the northern part of the lava-covered floor. I don’t remember ever seeing this feature and am baffled by it. It is too even in width to be a mare ridge, and its abrupt northern end is strange. Perhaps some day we’ll have a higher resolution orbital view to help interpretation, but I doubt if it will be more dramatic.

Chuck Wood

Technical Details:
08-03-07. 18" Reflector, Infinity 2-1m camera, MAP /99, Registered AVI processing, stack of 540 frames.

Related Links:
Rükl plate 14
Another great view

Yesterday's LPOD: Full Res!

Tomorrow's LPOD: A Beer Belly Crater


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