August 7, 2020

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The Top of the World

Originally published February 24, 2011 LPOD-Feb24-11.jpg
south up image by Carmelo Zannelli, Palermo, Italy

This is one of the best views of the Moon that we get from Earth. Peering over the rugged topography of craters and mountains, some seen in profile, gives a strong feeling of what it must be like to be in orbit. Mel's image shows, in addition to the depths and rises of craters, the roundness of many of the surfaces. Every crater starts out being sharp-edged and surrounded by fractured and broken boulders. Over time, bombardment by small projectiles smooths out asperities, producing the rolling terrain such as Apollo 16 astronauts rovered through. Here, parts of the rim scarps of Moretus (bottom right) and Schomberger (upper left) are still crisp, and Schomberger A (over its namesake's shoulder) and other small craters have very sharp rims. But seismic shaking and unceasing bombardment have smoothed out most of the other craters.
Chuck Wood

Technical Details
Feb 13, 2011, 1955 UT. C14 @ f/22 + PGR Fleas3 camera + Baader-Zeiss Abbe Barlow 2x + Baader IR-685 nm filter; The camera is very bright in Red/IR channel so, I could use high frame rates (about 90/ 100 fps) and fast times which give me about 4/5000 acquired frames for each AVi film. So, I stacked only 200 of about 5000 frames.
Related Links
Rükl plate 73


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