Difference between revisions of "September 14, 2006"

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Rükl charts 51 &#038; 52<br />
 
Rükl charts 51 &#038; 52<br />
 
[http://www.ludiver.com/conquerir_espace_scientifique_lune.php  Ludiver’s Moon photos]</p>
 
[http://www.ludiver.com/conquerir_espace_scientifique_lune.php  Ludiver’s Moon photos]</p>
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<p><b>Yesterday's LPOD:</b> [[September 13, 2006|Sunset on the Wasatch Mountains]] </p>
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<p><b>Tomorrow's LPOD:</b> [[September 15, 2006|Not Quite a Bulls-Eye]] </p>
 
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Revision as of 14:45, 1 February 2015

Unbelievable Image

GASSENDI WEST-daversin
image by Bruno Daversin

My travels continue - I’m enroute to Baltimore for an Astronomical Society of the Pacific meeting on astronomy education - so more of the greatest hits of LPOD will also continue! This remarkable image was originally published as LPOD on March 9, 2006.

LPOD is used to receiving remarkable images but this is one of the best I have ever seen, taken by any telescope on Earth or in orbit. The rilles within Gassendi are beautifully depicted, but what is extraordinary and never before seen so well from Earth is the hilly area to the west of Gassendi. The series of nearly parallel thin rilles was totally unknown to me. Looking at the Lunar Orbiter IV image reveals the rilles, but not so dramatically as in Bruno’s image. The middle rille has a very unusual nature – it looks like a series of short curved segments that aren’t necessarily connected together. This may be a sinuous rille, but I am not certain. The sinuous-like rille and three other linear ones, and the edge of the knobby region to the left are all parallel and roughly evenly spaced. I don’t know what the spacing means here, and these rilles aren’t obviously related to the Humorum basin. Mysteries abound. But there is one interpretable feature on the smooth area to the far left – a small dome (unknown?) cut by a very delicate rille. And further south, is that a second very flat dome with a rimless pit? I can’t tell, can you? Congratulations to Bruno Daversin for once again setting a new imaging standard. This is a truly remarkable image, just like the others he sent…

Chuck Wood

Technical Details:
Feb 9, 2006. Ludiver Observatory 600 mm (24″) Schmidt-Cassegrain + webcam + IR filter.
Related Links:
Rükl charts 51 & 52
Ludiver’s Moon photos

Yesterday's LPOD: Sunset on the Wasatch Mountains

Tomorrow's LPOD: Not Quite a Bulls-Eye


COMMENTS?

Register, and click on the Discussion tab at the top of the page.


Contributions to http://www2.lpod.org/ are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution No-Derivative-Works Non-Commercial 3.0 License. by-nc-nd_3.0_80x15.png