Inizio Registrati Login

Elenco album Ultimi arrivi Ultimi commenti Più viste Più votate Preferiti Cerca

Inizio > THE LUNAR EXPLORER ARCHIVES > Original Nasa Apollo Frames: from Apollo 4 to Apollo 17

Original Nasa Apollo Frames: from Apollo 4 to Apollo 17

as11-37-5522.jpg
as11-37-5522.jpgAS 11-37-5522 - Little Red Sphere: Outer Real Object or Inner Reflection? (credits for the additional process.: Dr Paolo C. Fienga - Lunexit Team)203 visiteUn vecchio "Enigma", ancora irrisolto: in questo frame NASA - Original (da noi riprocessato e, si spera, un pò migliorato nella qualità) abbiamo diversi elementi per azzardare una risposta al quesito originale.

Ma Voi cosa ne pensate?

Si tratta di un Oggetto Reale Esterno al LM o è un semplice Riflesso Interno (alla camera)? E come potreste spiegare il riflesso azzurro? Scrivete e commentate, se volete...
8 commentiMareKromium
as11-40-5846.jpg
as11-40-5846.jpgAS 11-40-5846 - Messier and Messier "A"55 visiteCaption NASA originale:"View from Armstrong's window of craters Messier and Messier A prior to the landing".
as11-40-5868.jpg
as11-40-5868.jpgAS 11-40-5868 - "Buzz" down the LM's ladder53 visiteCaption NASA originale:"109:42:42 MT - Buzz has reached the bottom rung of the ladder and is about the jump down to the footpad. As he said at the moment Neil took this picture: "Okay. I'm going to leave that one foot up there and both hands down to about the fourth rung up". The thermal shroud protecting the U.S. flag that Neil and Buzz deploy during the EVA can be seen on the underside of the lefthand ladder rail. See, also, NASA photo S69-38755. which shows the flag on a LM mockup in Houston".
as11-40-5873.jpg
as11-40-5873.jpgAS 11-40-5873 - Aldrin near the Solar Wind Collector53 visiteCaption NASA originale:"Neil took this picture of Buzz at about 110:03:24. Buzz has just deployed the Solar Wind Collector (SWC). Neil took the photo toward the southeast. Buzz is standing flat-footed next to the SWC, facing Neil, who is at about the 2 o'clock position out from the LM. In the lower right corner, notice the scratch marks that the TV cable made as Neil pulled it out. The multiple tracks were made by the individual cable loops scraping along the ground. We can see underneath the engine bell. Most of the surface in this image has not been disturbed as yet, and in the places where Neil and Buzz have walked, the disturbed surface is darker. Good illustration of this very common phenomenon. Jack Schmitt speculates that the Descent Engine plume swept away the smallest particles, leaving a higher than normal percentage of larger particles. The more jagged surface is a better reflector of sunlight than the normal surface and, therefore, appears brighter. Certainly, from orbit, the areas around the landed LM's are brighter than the normal surface. As they walk around, the astronauts disturb this modified surface and, in effect, restore it's normal condition. We see the MESA, in shadow, to the right of Buzz. On the front of Buzz's suit, we have the RCU, the camera bracket, and just above his crotch, the "Red Apple" activator for the purge valve. He has some dirt on his knees. A detail shows a carabiner fitted to the end of his neckring tiedown".
as11-40-5880.jpg
as11-40-5880.jpgAS 11-40-5880 - My foot...54 visiteCaption NASA originale:"Second photo of Buzz's second soil-mechanics bootprint"
as11-40-5902.jpg
as11-40-5902.jpgAS 11-40-5902 - Buzzin' Buzz!54 visiteCaption NASA originale:"110:42:14 MT - Buzz is standing just beyond the north strut. Note the distinctive dust smudges on Buzz's legs. The photo also shows the furrows in the bulk sample area and the area to the left of the footpad that shows unmistakable signs of sweeping by the descent engine exhaust. In a detail Ulli Lotzmann notes a reflected image of the rendezvous radar. Karl Dodenhoff writes that the strap hanging down from behind Buzz's RCU is the neck ring pull-down strap. It connected to the pull down locking mechanism that also served as the upper PLSS/RCU attachment fitting on the chest of the A7L suit." Mick Hyde provides a photo taken in 2002 of Bill Ander's Apollo 8 suit at the Science Museum London. The strap is tucked into a pouch. The A7L suit was used prior to Apollo 15, when the LM crews started using the A7L-B".
as11-40-5914.jpg
as11-40-5914.jpgAS 11-40-5914 - The "Eagle"53 visiteCaption NASA originale:"110:43:33 MT - Rightward of 5913. Minus-Z strut and the North-East quadrant of the descent stage".
as11-40-5918.jpg
as11-40-5918.jpgAS 11-40-5918 - Eagle's "Plus-Y" footpad53 visiteCaption NASA originale:"110:47:18 MT - Close-up of plus-Y (such as North) footpad.
Note the wind-swept appearance of the foreground soil, showing the effects of the Descent Engine plume".
as11-40-5930.JPG
as11-40-5930.JPGAS 11-40-5930 - Armstrong's Shadow55 visiteCaption NASA originale:"110:55:49. Neil has backed away from the LM to take a panorama. This down-Sun shows the bright halo - possibly a diffraction effect - that appeared around the shadow of Neil's helmet. Note, also, how washed out the scene is along the line of his shadow. This effect is due to the fact that, in this direction, all of the shadows - excepting only those cast by objects in the immediate foreground - are hidden by the objects that cast them. In addition there are also strong reflections off the soil particles which also contribute to the visual washout. The double crater below Neil's LM window is in the middle distance".
as11-40-5931.JPG
as11-40-5931.JPGAS 11-40-5931 - "Buzz", Lunar Module & various Equipment53 visite110:55:49 MT. In this second photo from Neil's minus-Z (East) pan, Buzz has removed the Passive Seismometer Package from the SEQ bay. The foreground object with the handle is the Gold Camera, designed to take close-up photographs of the very top layer of the Lunar Soil. Note, also, the split rock at the right edge, just below the center of the photograph. This boulder was probably ejected from a nearby impact, possibly West Crater, and broke into two pieces when it hit. A different boulder, just to the left of center near the tip of the LM shadow in 5883, appears to have suffered a similar fate.
as11-40-5932.JPG
as11-40-5932.JPGAS 11-40-5932 - Lunar Surface (1)54 visite110:55:49 MT. Rightward of 5931, with good overlap. The split boulder is at the lower left. Note the relative darkness of the areas disturbed by the crew at the center of the photograph.
as11-40-5933~0.JPG
as11-40-5933~0.JPGAS 11-40-5933 - Lunar Surface (2)53 visite
1322 immagini su 111 pagina(e) 1 - 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 - 111

 
 

Powered by Coppermine Photo Gallery