Difference between revisions of "October 19, 2006"

From LPOD
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 1: Line 1:
 
__NOTOC__
 
__NOTOC__
 
=Having Trouble with Mosaics?=
 
=Having Trouble with Mosaics?=
 +
<!-- Start of content -->
 
<div class="post" id="post-652">
 
<div class="post" id="post-652">
  
Line 14: Line 15:
 
<!-- Removed reference to store page -->
 
<!-- Removed reference to store page -->
 
</div>
 
</div>
 +
<!-- End of content -->
 
{{wiki/ArticleFooter}}
 
{{wiki/ArticleFooter}}

Revision as of 20:39, 7 February 2015

Having Trouble with Mosaics?

mosswb2.jpg
image byMIC onboard NOZOMI / ISAS

Making a mosaic is difficult and not even professionals with multi-million dollar spacecraft always get it right. Nozomi was an ill-fated Japanese probe launched toward Mars in 1998 but it suffered mechanical problems and solar flare damage before being abandoned into a rough two year orbit around the Sun. Nozomi made two flybys past the Moon for gravitational assists to escape Earth’s neighborhood, acquiring a handful of images of the lunar near and far sides. All the images seem not quite in focus, perhaps because the short focal length lens produced small images that need too much enlargement. Also, it appears that the compression (either on board the spacecraft or on ground) was too intense, resulting in artifacts. Nonetheless, a few of these images provide synoptic views of part of the farside that are useful for mapping.

Chuck Wood

Technical Details:
December 18, 1998. 21.4 mm aperture f/1.6 telescope + 2560 pixel ccd camera.

Yesterday's LPOD: More Steep Places - This Time on a Limb

Tomorrow's LPOD: A Gash and a River


COMMENTS?

Register, Log in, and join in the comments.