January 29, 2008
A Field Test of Chuck's New Atlas
image by Henrik Bondo
We daily look at all the fantastic photos on this site - even during Chuck Wood's vacation.
Is it time to start making a new amateur-based Observer's Photographic Atlas of the Moon? On August 4, and again on 641x641 pixel screenshots at an identical 4x zoom, and finally created the above lunar mosaic. The smaller mosaic of uncalibrated images shown below identifies the longitude of the Morning Terminator in each tile, and shows how poorly the pieces would fit together if not corrected for the varying lunar distance and librations.
Wouldn't it be a happy welcome back for Chuck, if the imagers reading this were to look through their your shelves for better examples of the tiles needed to make this atlas and e-mailed one of their favorite tiles to tychocrater@yahoo.com with a "Welcome back and thanks for the LPOD site"? Imagine his smile if Chuck, upon returning home, opened his e-mail and found an atlas already there - or at least some of the building blocks needed to make one!!
Henrik Bondo
P.S.: Please don't take my test as a "Golden Standard". It is not meant like this. Especially regarding the polar areas there is a vast range of solar colongitudes that can be used with benefit. My spirit has only been a humble one of "Let's get started and give Chuck a little beginning-work-encouragement returning home from vacation".
Technical Details
- See Henrik's Calibrated Lunar Atlas
Related Links
- Rükl plates: all
- Henrik's website
- Related LPOD's: Impossible? Another Lunar Atlas
Yesterday's LPOD: The Long and Skinny
Tomorrow's LPOD: Evidence for a Lunar Tsunami
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