| Ultimi arrivi - Original Nasa Apollo Frames: from Apollo 4 to Apollo 17 |

as11-36-5353.JPGAS 11-36-5353 - Little Blue, in the Darkness57 visiteMag 11, 2006
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as11-36-5344.JPGAS 11-36-5344 - Earth's going away...54 visiteMag 11, 2006
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as11-36-5319.JPGAS 11-36-5319 - Space "Sea-Horse"58 visiteI commenti a questo incredibile frame sono già contenuti nella Sezione "NASA - Original Apollo Frames" (Area Comune), ma la versione restaurata e raffinata di AS 36-5319 ci permette di dire che l'oggetto ripreso durante la "Trans-Lunar Coast" dell'Apollo 11 NON E', decisamente, un photoartifact.
Si tratta di un oggetto reale, tanto anomalo quanto l'altro "space debris" ripreso dall'Apollo 10. Di che si tratta?
Questo, forse, non lo sapremo mai...Mag 11, 2006
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as11-36-5308.JPGAS 11-36-5308 - Southern California and Mexico56 visiteMag 11, 2006
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as12-47-6890 detail mgnf.jpgAS 12-47-6890 - Rising Spark (new version) detail mgnf55 visiteMag 05, 2006
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as12-47-6890.JPGAS 12-47-6890 - Rising Spark (new version)56 visiteUn frame NASA Original Uncompressed di "Nuova Generazione": provate a confrontarlo con l'analogo NASA Original Uncompressed di "Vecchia Generazione".
L'immagine è la medesima, ma i due frames NON sono affatto uguali, e non parliamo in termini di contenuto generale del frame quanto, piuttosto, di qualità initrinseca dei dettagli: qualcuno (nuovo) appare, qualcuno (vecchio) scompare.
La "Rising Spark" - per fortuna - è rimasta...Mag 05, 2006
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as11-40-5941.JPGAS 11-40-5941 - Lunar Horizon and Armstrong's Shadow56 visite110:55:49 MT. Rightward of 5940. This down-Sun is the final frame in Neil's pan.
Mag 05, 2006
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as11-40-5940.JPGAS 11-40-5940 - Lunar Horizon (4)56 visite110:55:49 MT. Rightward of 5939. View to the South. Note the rounded crater rim on the horizon, just to the left of center.
Mag 05, 2006
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as11-40-5939.JPGAS 11-40-5939 - Lunar Horizon (3)56 visite110:55:49 MT. Rightward of 5939. View to the South.Mag 05, 2006
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as11-40-5938.JPGAS 11-40-5938 - Lunar Horizon (2)55 visiteMag 05, 2006
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as11-40-5937.JPGAS 11-40-5937 - Lunar Horizon (1)56 visiteMag 05, 2006
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as11-40-5936.JPGAS 11-40-5936 - Up-Sun (2)59 visite110:55:49 MT. Rightward of 5935 but without overlap because Neil has avoided the up-Sun view. The Southern part of East Crater on the lefthand side of the image. Part of the rim of West Crater can be seen faintly just above center. We can locate the approximate azimuths of the north and South rims of West Crater from Figure 3-15 in the Apollo 11 Preliminary Science Report and a detail from the USGS site map.
As indicated in Figure 3-15, Neil took the minus-Z pan from a location about 20 meters roughly southeast of the LM. The exact location has been added to the inset at the upper right, which shows that Neil was about 55 meters due west of the south rim of East Crater. From the site map detail we see that, from the south rim of East Crater, the north rim of West Crater is about 460 meters away on an azimuth of about 92.7 degrees. With the help of a little trigonometry, this information gives an azimuth of the north rim of West Crater from Neil's location of 92.4 degrees, with the south rim azimuth being about 112.4 degrees. During the Apollo 11 EVA, the solar azimuth was 88.1 degrees, which allows us to plot the relevant azimuths on a detail from 5936. The plotted azimuth for the south rim is very close to the lefthand edge of the horizon feature that is obviously a partly shadowed portion of the rim while the plotted north rim azimuth is close to the righthand edge of what is probably a sunlit, rock-strewn portion of the rim.Mag 05, 2006
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