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za iyul' 2004 goda.
Taurus-Littrow Route Map
21.07.2004 | Lunnoe foto dnya
With the use of a rover, astronauts on the last three Apollo missions could travel so far that a route map was need before the mission and afterwards to get a geographical (or selenographical for purists) understanding of their explorations.
The Beginning of the End of the Future
20.07.2004 | Lunnoe foto dnya
Thirty-five years ago today humans took the first step onto another world. The picture demonstrates that we - in this case Edwin Aldrin setting up a seismic station - could do meaningful work on another planetary surface. And with the odd contraption in the background, we could land, take off and fly through space.
The Best Lunar Lava Flow
19.07.2004 | Lunnoe foto dnya
Samples brought from the Moon confirmed that the maria are made of basaltic lava. But their ages are so ancient that little morphological evidence remains of the millions of individual lava flows that built the thick mare piles. Only one set of relatively young lava flows - perhaps 2.5 billion years - is still detectable, barely.
A New Hit DVD
18.07.2004 | Lunnoe foto dnya
The Lunar & Planetary Institute in Houston, TX facilitates and promotes studies of the Moon and planets. LPI is famous for co-hosting the annual Lunar and Planetary Science Conference for the last 35 years. And they are making a huge contribution to lunar studies by digitizing and posting online thousands of lunar photos and maps.
Our Moon
17.07.2004 | Lunnoe foto dnya
During the 1800s lunar studies were dominated by the great German selenographers: Schroeter, Lohrmann, Madler and Schmidt. In the late 1800s and the 1900s the Moon mapping mantle passed to the British: Nasmyth and Carpenter, Neison, Elger, Goodacre, and Wilkins and Moore.
Raisin Pits
16.07.2004 | Lunnoe foto dnya
Rays and pits go hand in hand. The formation of crater rays was one of the totally misunderstood features on the Moon until Gene Shoemaker studied Meteor Crater in Arizona in the 1950s.
Licking the Moon
15.07.2004 | Lunnoe foto dnya
During the 1960s and 70s the space race competition was played out not only with rockets and probes but also with stamps. And the winner here was clear - the Soviet Union and its Eastern Europe colonies issued hundreds to thousands of different colorful and fascinating space stamps.
Jim and Davy
14.07.2004 | Lunnoe foto dnya
Feast your eyes on this remarkable telescopic image of the Davy crater chain! Jim Phillips took it with his 8" refractor and got a result that's closer to spacecraft views than Earthly images.
A Strange Depression
13.07.2004 | Lunnoe foto dnya
The southeastern highlands of the Moon are infrequently visited by amateur and professional students of the Moon rarely observe the southeastern highlands of the Moon because the region doesn't seem very interesting. Other than Janssen there aren't any large, dramatic craters.
Look Twice, Twice
12.07.2004 | Lunnoe foto dnya
Wade Clark has combined four images showing the two day old moon with earthshine setting behind Lyman Hill in Skagit County, Washington State, USA. Wouldn't it be fun to live on a planet with multiple Moons! — Chuck Wood Technical Details: June 19, 2004.