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C-La Condamine Crater 04.jpgRays of light through "La Condamine Crater" (4)106 visitenessun commento
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C-La Condamine Crater 06.jpgRays of light through "La Condamine Crater" (5)110 visiteCharles-Marie La Condamine studied at the Jesuit College of Louis-le-Grand in Paris. There he was taught mathematics by Père Louis Castel. On leaving the College he decided to take up a military career and, when war broke out with Spain he joined the army. He distinguished himself with his bravery at the siege of Rosas in 1719 but decided that army life did not suit him.
At this point La Condamine made contact with scientists in Paris and became a member of the Académie Royale des Sciences in 1730. The quiet life in Paris did not suit him either and he sailed on a voyage to Algiers, Alexandria, Palestine, Cyprus and Constantinople (now Istanbul) where he spent five months. On his return to Paris he published mathematical and physical observations of his voyage.
The Académie Royale was impressed and sent him on an expedition to Peru. In April 1735 La Condamine set out on the expedition to Peru to measure the length of a degree of meridian at the equator. Bouguer was a member of the same expedition and its third scientific member was the leader of the expedition Louis Godin. The three finished their journey by different routes, La Condamine going overland from Manta, the other two sailing to Quito where they joined up.
The three were soon involved in disagreements. Godin began to work on his own while La Condamine worked with Bouguer. In 1741 Bouguer discovered a small error in their joint measurements and these two fell out when Bouguer refused to allow La Condamine to recheck the results. All three made independent measurements, the work being completed in 1743. The three returned by different routes.
In 1743 La Condamine began his return journey which included a four month raft journey down the Amazon river. His was the first scientific account of the Amazon which he published as Journal du voyage fait par ordre du roi a l'équateur (1751).
La Condamine spent five months in Cayenne on his journey home and here he repeated Richer's experiments on the variation of weights at different latitudes.
By February 1745 La Condamine was back in Paris after his ten year journey. He returned with many notes, 200 natural history specimens and works of art which he gave to Buffon. Y Laissus writing in the Dictionary of Scientific Biography says:-
The last survivor of the expedition, La Condamine, who was a less gifted astronomer than Godin and a less reliable mathematician than Bouguer often received the major part of the credit, probably because of his amiable nature and his talent as a writer.
La Condamine was a close friend of Maupertuis for many years. He spent much effort in the last part of his life campaigning for inoculation against small-pox. His passion on this topic was partly due to the fact that he had suffered from small-pox as a child.
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Clavius GIF.gifClavius...on line!162 visiteUno spettacolare lavoro (davvero!) dell'Astronomo Robert Spellman (www.angelfire.com) il quale, nel tentativo di fissare su pellicola qualche TLP, ci ha regalato delle immagini davvero superbe di alcuni grandi (e famosi) Crateri Lunari e, come in questo caso, dei minifilmati GIF che ci fanno provare l'ebbrezza di essere "in diretta con la Luna", anche se siamo seduti davanti al nostro pc.
Un ottimo lavoro: i TLP "on line"...Verranno (almeno questo è quanto gli e ci auguriamo!).
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Clavius-3.jpgClavius (1)137 visiteClavius: uno spettacolare cratere, reso famoso dall'immortale "2001 - A Space Odyssey", così come ci appare dalla Terra, attraverso le eccellenti ottiche di un telescopio riflettore 'Celestron 11'.
Il seeing, con ogni probabilità, non era ottimale - come l'immagine dimostra ampiamente -; ma il risultato ottenuto (grazie anche al gioco di luci e di ombre che si ottiene scattando fotografie di Regioni Lunari che si trovano a ridosso o che sono prossime al terminatore) è - comunque - davvero notevole.
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Clavius-4.jpgClavius (2)108 visitenessun commento
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Clavius-6.jpgClavius (3)105 visitenessun commento
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Clavius-7.jpgClavius (4)114 visiteLa Regione di Clavius in piena luce: notate come questa immagine - pur restando molto bella - perda di "profondità" rispetto alle precedenti.
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ClaviusCrater.jpgClavius117 visitenessun commento
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Copernicus Crater from HST.jpgCopernicus Crater - HST (detail mgnf)274 visiteE' evento raro che l'Hubble Space Telescope "guardi" verso la Luna: essa è un'oggetto troppo luminoso e una simile luminosità - si è detto - potrebbe danneggiare le delicatissime ottiche del telescopio spaziale.
Sarà anche vero, ma rimane il fatto che, di tanto in tanto, l'HST ci offre comunque qualche "visione" del nostro unico Satellite Naturale.
In questa, per esempio, viene ripreso il grande (e chiaramente visibile, anche ad occhio nudo, da Terra) Cratere Copernico.
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Copernicus Gif.gifCopernicus...on line!126 visitenessun commento
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Copernicus.jpgThe Area of Copernicus Crater188 visiteIn questa immagine, invece, l'area ripresa è sempre quella del Cratere Copernico, ma il mezzo impiegato è la Sonda Galileo, in transito vicino alla Luna e diretta verso Giove.
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CopernicusSunrise.jpgSunrise on Copernicus Crater92 visitenessun commento
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