| Piú votate - MOON |

APOLLO_15_AS_15-M-R71-2495.jpgAS 15-M-R71-2495 - Scaliger Crater60 visiteCoord.: 29° South Lat. and 106° East Long.
Lens Focal Length: 3"
Camera Tilt: 40°
Camera Azimuth: 180°
Camera Altitude: 111 Km
Sun Elevation (on Local Horizon): 6° MareKromium     (5 voti)
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APOLLO_12_AS_12-55-8221.jpgAS 12-55-8221 - On the way to the Moon...54 visite...A proposito: anche il rullino 55 non c'è nella Collezione NASA dedicata all'Apollo 12 e pubblicata nell'Apollo Lunar Surface Journal, ma i frames in questione (anche se solo nelle loro versioni ultracompresse - e quindi qualitativamente scarse e - sovente - molto ingannevoli...) li potrete comunque trovare nell'Apollo Image Atlas custodito e gestito dal Lunar and Planetary Institute.     (5 voti)
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APOLLO 15 AS 15-85-11403 HR.jpgAS 15-85-11403 - Mount Hadley in the darkness (HR)222 visiteCaption NASA originale:"122:14:35 MT. Rightward of 11402, showing the view to the North along the in-bound Rover tracks with the deeply shadowed West Face of Mt. Hadley in the distance".     (5 voti)
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APOLLO 12 AS 12-50-7438-1.jpgAS 12-50-7438 - Shadowland... (HR)68 visitenessun commento     (5 voti)
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First Moon-1.jpgFirst Moon59 visitenessun commento     (5 voti)
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B-ZhiritskiyCrater.jpgZhiritskiy Crater (3D)94 visitenessun commento     (5 voti)
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The Moon~0.jpgWonderful, wonderful Moon!... (HR)88 visiteDa "NASA - Picture of the Day", del 7 Settembre 2006:"No single exposure can easily capture faint stars along with the subtle colors of the Moon. But this dramatic composite view highlights both.
The mosaic digitally stitches together fifteen carefully exposed HR images of a bright, gibbous Moon and a representative background star field. The fascinating color differences along the Lunar Surface are real, though highly exaggerated, corresponding to regions with different chemical compositions.
And while these color differences are not visible to the eye even with a telescope, Moon watchers can still see a dramatic lunar presentation tonight: a partial eclipse of the Moon will be visible from Europe, Africa, Asia and Australia".     (5 voti)
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VB-AS-Lobachevsky-A.jpgThe Lobachevsky Anomaly in HR (context image from AS 16-121-19407)139 visiteAn oblique view looking North-West at part of the wall of the crater Lobachevsky on the Lunar Far (or Dark) Side. It shows a small crater on Lobachevsky's wall with unusual streaks of dark material that appear to have originated from the lower rim of the structure and to have moved down toward the floor of Lobachevsky. This feature was first noticed by T. K. Mattingly, the Apollo 16 CMP, who described the darker streaks as probable lava flows (Mattingly, El-Baz, and Laidley, 1972).
However, the streaks can also be explained by the downslope movement of dark fragmental debris excavated from Lobachevsky's wall by the small crater. Closer to the lower border of the photograph is a bright area extending across Lobachevsky's rim. This area and other sinuous light-colored markings in the upper half of the photograph are on the periphery of an enormous field of light-colored swirls in this part of the Far-Side (El-Baz, 1972a).
The origin of the swirls is not well understood.     (5 voti)
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APOLLO 17 AS 17-146-22444-00.jpgAS 17-146-22444 (context image) - Reflection?149 visiteIl commento è semplice: l'oggetto evidenziato dal Dr Barca è un "riflesso" o un qualcosa di "reale"?
L'immagine è ultra-compressa e quindi, come ben sapete, non valutabile in maniera definitiva ed adeguata poichè i photoartifacts che possono emergere a seguito della eccessiva compressione sono tanti e tutti molto ingannevoli.
Certo, se dovessimo giudicare comunque e solo sulla base di questo frame, non esiteremmo a dire che quanto si vede NON è un riflesso nè un artefatto fotografico.
Guardate anche Voi il successivo detail mgnf.     (5 voti)
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APOLLO 17 AS 17-146-22444-01.jpgAS 17-146-22444 (extra detail mgnf) - Reflection?115 visitenessun ulteriore commento     (5 voti)
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ZZ-ZZ-ZZ-ZZ-ZZ-ZZ-ZZ-ZZ-Earth&Moon from Nozomi.jpgThe Earth-Moon System from Nozomi75 visiteCaption NASA originale:"Japan launched its first mission to orbit Mars, Nozomi (Hope), on July 3rd, 1998, from the Kagoshima Space Center on the island of Kyushu. Nozomi's goal is to explore the Martian atmosphere and magnetic field as well as Regions of the Planet's surface and Moons. Formerly known as Planet-B, the spacecraft will use highly elliptical orbits with successive Earth/Moon flybys to help slingshot itself along its ultimate trajectory toward Mars, arriving at the Red Planet in October 1999. This stunning picture of the crescent Earth-Moon system was taken by Nozomi's onboard camera on July 18 from a point in space about 100.000 miles from the Earth and 320.000 miles from the Moon. Vibrant and bright, the reflective clouds and oceans of Earth contrast strongly with the dark, somber tones of the Lunar Surface".     (5 voti)
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ZZ-ZZ-ZZ-Crater 297.jpgCrater 297 and "artificial blurring" over the Moon169 visiteUn bellissimo fotomosaico regalatoci dal Dr Alessio Feltri per vedere non solo la zona sorvolata dall'Apollo 10 al momento del suo 'strano incontro' con quello che abbiamo definito "space debris" (rottame spaziale), ma anche un (nuovo) esempio di come la NASA (o chi per essa...) manipola, altera ed infine confonde le immagini (probabilmente) imbarazzanti della superficie lunare.
Scopo della sfuocatura che vediamo nel frame Clementine alla Vostra Dx? Beh, noi non lo sappiamo, ma Voi potete sempre provare a chiedere lumi alla NASA...     (5 voti)
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