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za 2004 god.
The End of Lunar Studies
15.01.2004 | Lunnoe foto dnya
In 1837 a map and book appeared that were so masterful that it was widely assumed that the study of the Moon was then completed. Wilhelm Beer and Johann Heinrich Madler were the authors...
Gassendi Compared
14.01.2004 | Lunnoe foto dnya
The advent of webcams and image compositing and enhancing software has given amateur astronomers with modest size instruments the ability to acquire lunar images that equal or surpass the very best professional images. Now amateurs are pushing up against the resolution of space craft imaging.
First and Last
13.01.2004 | Lunnoe foto dnya
In 1959 the Soviet probe Luna 3 swept behind the Moon and took the first photograph (left) of the lunar farside (in fact, the first picture EVER of any extraterrestrial planetary body from space). And the most recent image of the lunar farside is this (right) mosaic of Clementine frames acquired in 1994.
Apollo 15 Panned
12.01.2004 | Lunnoe foto dnya
It was so long ago that it seems science fiction rather than fact, but humans have been to the Moon. After the grab and go, proof of concept Apollo 11 mission, astronauts progressively spent more time on the Moon with more sophisticated tools and experiments.
Western Tranquillitatis
11.01.2004 | Lunnoe foto dnya
This magnificent photo of nearly all of the western half of Mare Tranquillitatis reveals enough fascinating landforms to fill a textbook. The left side of the mare lavas embay ridges of ejecta from the Imbrium-forming impact.
Straight Wall
10.01.2004 | Lunnoe foto dnya
The Straight Wall is the most conspicuous fault scarp on the Moon. Discovered by Huygens in the 1670s, the fault appears as an 120 km long nearly straight line of shadow for a few days after first quarter (lunar day 9).
Photo of the Century
9.01.2004 | Lunnoe foto dnya
Thirty-eight years ago, near the beginning of the Space Age, Lunar Orbiter II snapped this low oblique photo of the inside of Copernicus crater, and the press labeled it the Photo of the Century.
Posidonius: Rilles and Uplift
8.01.2004 | Lunnoe foto dnya
Posidonius is a beacon of interest along the otherwise bland north-eastern shore of Serenitatis. The large (95 km wide, 2.3 km max depth crater may have originally looked like Copernicus with broad terraced walls and a scattering of peaks centered on a deep, flat floor. But thats not how it looks now!
The Right Stuff in Lunar Science
7.01.2004 | Lunnoe foto dnya
In 1949 the University of Chicago published a small book that established the modern understanding of the Moon. The Face of the Moon was written by Ralph Baldwin, a PhD astronomer who worked full time in the family furniture-making business.
Petavius: Rilles & Volcanic Spots
6.01.2004 | Lunnoe foto dnya
One of the most skillful lunar imagers is Hong Kong amateur KC Pau. His picture of Petavius (Sept 11, 2003, 10" newtonian and Phillips Toucam) reveals details that I have never seen on any Earth-based photo, nor on the best Lunar Orbiter image!