Difference between revisions of "June 2, 2023"

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=Chapelet Luna=
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=Imbrium Flasher=
Originally published July 7, 2013
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Originally published May 18, 2013
 
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{{Special:IframePage/YouTube?path=IYloGuUZCFM}}
<em>image by [mailto:jose.fernandez78@orange.fr José-Esteban], France</em><br />
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<em>video from [http://science.nasa.gov/science-news/science-at-nasa/2013/16may_lunarimpact/ NASA]</em><br />
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I had to google José's title for this LPOD. <em>Chapelet</em> is a French word for rosary or prayer beads,
 
and all his image lacks is the string between them. Prayers of mysteries are recited while fingering
 
a rosary. In this lunar rosary the mystery is what happened to the missing earthshine? The strange
 
wispy clouds that drape some beads don't seem thick enough to occult the illumination, and why
 
largely just the earthshine? The not quite dark blue and the panorama of stars in this image remind
 
me of the beginning of <em>Peter Pan</em> when Wendy and the children fly across the London skyline enroute
 
to Never-Neverland. Mysteries are to be expected.
 
 
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<br />
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Meteors streak across Earth's skies - remember February's monster fireball - mostly being consumed by the atmosphere and only infrequently reaching the surface as a meteorite or a crater-forming projectile. But on the Moon the lack of an atmosphere means incoming meteoroids are undetected until they smash onto the lunar surface, creating a momentary flash. And because there is no appreciable lunar atmosphere, meteoroids aren't slowed down, and thus hit at orbital velocities. That was 25 km/s for a 30-40 cm sized asteroid fragment that created a bright impact flash imaged by NASA on March 17, 2013. This flash was 4th magnitude, much brighter than any previous detection by NASA's [http://www2.lpod.org/wiki/May_22,_2008 Meteoroid Environment Office] in Huntsville, Alabama. Since the projectile velocity was only about half that of really high speed impacts, the extreme brightness was probably due to its larger than average size. Comparing the image in the video with a Full Moon image suggests that the impact point was in southern Mare Imbrium near the crater Pytheas. The MEO team derived accurate coordinates and already provided them to the LRO Camera team. It will be interesting to see if the roughly 20 m wide crater is fresher appearing than many other similar sized pits that may be hundreds of thousands of years old.<br />
 
<br />
 
<br />
 
<em>[mailto:tychocrater@yahoo.com Chuck Wood]</em><br />
 
<em>[mailto:tychocrater@yahoo.com Chuck Wood]</em><br />
 
<br />
 
<br />
<strong>Technical Details</strong><br />
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<strong>Related Links</strong><br />
100mm - 2s - 1600iso - Canon 600D<br />
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[http://www.nasa.gov/offices/meo/home/index.html MEO]<br />
 +
<em>[[21st Century Atlas of the Moon|21st Century Atlas]]</em> chart FM1.<br />
 
<br />
 
<br />
<p><b>Yesterday's LPOD:</b> [[June 1, 2023|Manufacturing Dreams]] </p>
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<p><b>Yesterday's LPOD:</b> [[June 1, 2023|Steps To the Pole]] </p>
<p><b>Tomorrow's LPOD:</b> [[June 3, 2023|Unstoppable]] </p>
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<p><b>Tomorrow's LPOD:</b> [[June 3, 2023|Layers of Speculation]] </p>
 
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Latest revision as of 02:14, 2 June 2023

Imbrium Flasher

Originally published May 18, 2013

video from NASA

Meteors streak across Earth's skies - remember February's monster fireball - mostly being consumed by the atmosphere and only infrequently reaching the surface as a meteorite or a crater-forming projectile. But on the Moon the lack of an atmosphere means incoming meteoroids are undetected until they smash onto the lunar surface, creating a momentary flash. And because there is no appreciable lunar atmosphere, meteoroids aren't slowed down, and thus hit at orbital velocities. That was 25 km/s for a 30-40 cm sized asteroid fragment that created a bright impact flash imaged by NASA on March 17, 2013. This flash was 4th magnitude, much brighter than any previous detection by NASA's Meteoroid Environment Office in Huntsville, Alabama. Since the projectile velocity was only about half that of really high speed impacts, the extreme brightness was probably due to its larger than average size. Comparing the image in the video with a Full Moon image suggests that the impact point was in southern Mare Imbrium near the crater Pytheas. The MEO team derived accurate coordinates and already provided them to the LRO Camera team. It will be interesting to see if the roughly 20 m wide crater is fresher appearing than many other similar sized pits that may be hundreds of thousands of years old.

Chuck Wood

Related Links
MEO
21st Century Atlas chart FM1.

Yesterday's LPOD: Steps To the Pole

Tomorrow's LPOD: Layers of Speculation



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