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Piú viste - The Moon through LRO
LRO-1012-392894main_LCROSS_full.jpg
LRO-1012-392894main_LCROSS_full.jpgLCROSS Impact Location124 visiteLCROSS impact crater as seen with the Visible Light (VL) camera.14 commentiMareKromium
LRO-1011-392970main_LCROSS_9_full.jpg
LRO-1011-392970main_LCROSS_9_full.jpgLCROSS impacting the Moon: the "Flash"120 visitenessun commento11 commentiMareKromium
LRO-3002-Shackleton_Crater.jpg
LRO-3002-Shackleton_Crater.jpgShackleton Crater and its neverending Darkness119 visitenessun commento1 commentiMareKromium
LRO-M116365478LE-MF1-LXTT.jpg
LRO-M116365478LE-MF1-LXTT.jpgThe "Lunar Anthill" (EDM; credits for the additional process.: Dr Marco Faccin - Lunexit Team)115 visitenessun commento3 commentiMareKromium
LRO-M116365478LE-MF0-LXTT.jpg
LRO-M116365478LE-MF0-LXTT.jpgThe "Lunar Anthill" (CTX Frame; credits for the additional process.: Dr Marco Faccin - Lunexit Team)114 visitenessun commentoMareKromium
LRO-3001-Wallach_Crater.png
LRO-3001-Wallach_Crater.pngWallach Crater114 visitenessun commentoMareKromium
LRO-2000-eAGLE-WestCrater-01.jpg
LRO-2000-eAGLE-WestCrater-01.jpgThe Lunar Module "Eagle", from LRO (EDM - credits: NASA)110 visiteIl dettaglio magnificato del Descent Stage del Modulo Lunare "Eagle", il quale portò sulla Luna gli Astronauti Armstrong ed Aldrin, nel Luglio del 1969.
I "Complottisti", a questo punto, dovrebbero essere stati "serviti", non credete?

Ma è già totalmente ovvio quello che gli irriducibili detrattori della più GRANDE Avventura Umana e Scientifica mai compiuta nella Storia dell'Umanità ci diranno adesso...

Che cosa? Semplice: che ANCHE questi frames sono "tarocchi"...
4 commentiMareKromium
LRO-0003a-369440main_lroc_apollo11_lrg.jpg
LRO-0003a-369440main_lroc_apollo11_lrg.jpgSea of Tranquillity: the Apollo 11 Descent Stage from orbit106 visiteEd ora che è stato fatto quello che veniva chiesto da quasi 25 anni (e cioè FOTOGRAFARE le zone di Landing delle Missioni Apollo - affollate di mezzi abbandonati ed utensileria varia - così da essere "sicuri" che sulla Luna ci fossimo andati davvero), che cosa diranno mai i Saggi che, in dispetto dei sacrifici fatti e delle perdite sofferte (anche umane), hanno sempre negato che l'Uomo fosse arrivato a metter piede sulla Luna?
A che cosa si attaccheranno, questa volta?

Tranquilli, ve lo diciamo noi: diranno che queste immagini, ritraendo oggetti che "non possono" essere sulla Luna (perchè sulla Luna - ovviamente - non ci siamo mai andati...), sono a loro volta false. E così si potrà ricominciare a discutere, su libri, magazines e public forum (pieni, come sempre, di quegli individui che chiamiamo "Anonimi Sapienti"...) del "Nulla travestito da Qualcosa".
Perchè è così che si andrà avanti, sino a che il viaggio Terra-Luna non diventerà REALMENTE una routine, alla stregua di un "Roma - New York" o di un "Francoforte - Tokio".

Questo per gli Uomini di Domani.

Per quelli di Oggi, invece, solo una serie di fotografie, di ottima qualità ed altamente evocative, che ci riportano, quarant'anni dopo, a contemplare - come fossero "reliquie spaziali" - quello che i Valorosi "Apollo Boys" lasciarono sulla Luna: souvenir per le Generazioni che verranno e che, si spera, saranno più illuminate e lungimiranti di coloro che, oggi, calpestano il nostro Pianeta.

Caption NASA:"NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter, or LRO, has returned its first imagery of the Apollo Moon Landing Sites. The pictures show the Apollo Missions' Lunar Module Descent Stages sitting on the Moon's Surface, as long shadows from a low Sun angle make the modules' locations evident.
The Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Camera, or LROC, was able to image 5 of the 6 Apollo Sites, with the remaining Apollo 12 Site expected to be photographed in the coming weeks. The satellite reached Lunar Orbit June 23 and captured the Apollo Sites between July 11 and 15. Though it had been expected that LRO would be able to resolve the remnants of the Apollo Mission, these first images came before the Spacecraft reached its final mapping orbit. Future LROC images from these sites will have two to three times greater resolution.

"The LROC team anxiously awaited each image", said LROC principal investigator Mark Robinson of Arizona State University.
"We were very interested in getting our first peek at the Lunar Module Descent Stages just for the thrill -- and to see how well the cameras had come into focus. Indeed, the images are fantastic and so is the focus".
Although these pictures provide a reminder of past NASA exploration, LRO's primary focus is on paving the way for the future. By returning detailed lunar data, the mission will help NASA identify safe landing sites for future explorers, locate potential resources, describe the moon's radiation environment and demonstrate new technologies.
"Not only do these images reveal the great accomplishments of Apollo, they also show us that Lunar Exploration continues", said LRO project scientist Richard Vondrak of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. "They demonstrate how LRO will be used to identify the best destinations for the next journeys to the Moon".

The spacecraft's current elliptical orbit resulted in image resolutions that were slightly different for each site but were all around four feet per pixel. Because the deck of the descent stage is about 12 feet in diameter, the Apollo relics themselves fill an area of about nine pixels. However, because the Sun was low to the horizon when the images were made, even subtle variations in topography create long shadows. Standing slightly more than ten feet above the Surface, each Apollo Descent Stage creates a distinct shadow that fills roughly 20 pixels.

The image of the Apollo 14 Landing Site had a particularly desirable lighting condition that allowed visibility of additional details. The Apollo Lunar Surface Experiment Package, a set of scientific instruments placed by the astronauts at the landing site, is discernable, as are the faint trails between the module and instrument package left by the Astronauts' footprints.

Launched on June 18, LRO carries seven scientific instruments, all of which are currently undergoing calibration and testing prior to the spacecraft reaching its primary mission orbit. The LROC instrument comprises three cameras - 2 High-Resolution Narrow Angle Cameras and one lower resolution Wide Angle Camera. LRO will be directed into its primary mission orbit in August, a nearly-circular orbit about 31 miles above the Lunar Surface.

Goddard built and manages LRO, a NASA mission with international participation from the Institute for Space Research in Moscow. Russia provided the neutron detector aboard the Spacecraft".
8 commentiMareKromium
LRO-1015-Lunar-Plume.jpg
LRO-1015-Lunar-Plume.jpgAfter the Impact: the "Plume"106 visiteDa "NASA - Picture of the Day" del giorno 18 Novembre 2009:"In October 2009, the LCROSS Mission crashed a large impactor into a permanently shadowed crater near the Lunar South Pole and a "Plume" (---> pennacchio) of dust rose enough to be visible by the LRO, although hard to discern from Earth.

The Plume in question is now shown in this frame - taken in Visible Light.

The results of a preliminary chemical analysis gave a clear indication that such a Dust Plume contained water, and water is of high importance not only for understanding the history of the Moon, but also as a possible reservoir for future astronauts trying to live on the Moon for long periods.
The source of the Lunar Water is still a topic of debate (water could have been carried by many small meteorites, or a comet, or - maybe - it was an inborn component of the Primordial Moon Soil").
3 commentiMareKromium
LRO-M114308099LE-EDM-GravityWasting-MF-LXTT.jpg
LRO-M114308099LE-EDM-GravityWasting-MF-LXTT.jpgEvidence of Gravity Wasting (an High-Def Image Mosaic by Dr M. Faccin - Lunexit Team)99 visiteUn piccolo-grande Capolavoro regalatoci non solo dalle ottiche di cui è dotato il Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter, ma anche dalla Pazienza del nostro Marco Faccin.

Il risultato? Portate il frame a pieno schermo e definizione completa e quindi...cercate anche Voi le evidenze di Gravity Wasting che caratterizzano i piedi della collina: ce ne sono tante!

Noi ne abbiamo evidenziate alcune, in una zona omogena. Ma c'è ancora TANTISSIMO da vedere...
1 commentiMareKromium
LRO-M102215743LC-2-MF-LXTT.jpg
LRO-M102215743LC-2-MF-LXTT.jpgOrbital View (2)98 visitenessun commentoMareKromium
LRO-M116628790RE-2-MF-LXTT.jpg
LRO-M116628790RE-2-MF-LXTT.jpgJust a Mound or, maybe, a Remnant? (EDM n.2 - credits for add. process.: Dr Marco Faccin - Lunexit Team)98 visitenessun commentoMareKromium
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