Posted on Feb 5, 2020
APOD: 2020 February 5 - Lunar Eclipse Perspectives
1.52K
69
12
26
26
0
Good morning, Rallypoint. Today's Astronomy Picture of the Day (APOD) is titled "Lunar Eclipse Perspectives." There's a lot going on in today's composite image. When you mouse over the APOD, the different labels disappear (at least that's how it worked for me). That allows one to clearly see the difference between how the Moon looked to a viewer in the American versus the European Hemispheres. But what is most interesting is the label "LI-21J". A meteorite estimated to be 10-27 centimeters (4-10 inches) in diameter and weighing between 7-40 kilograms (15-88 pounds) impacted the Moon during the eclipse. Scientists estimated the velocity at impact at 47,000 kilometers per hour (8 miles per second). If the size and velocity assumptions are correct, there will be an impact crater at least 5 meters (16 feet) for a future lunar probe to investigate. Pretty cool stuff.
APOD: 2020 February 5 - Lunar Eclipse Perspectives
Posted from apod.nasa.gov
Posted 4 y ago
Responses: 11
Posted 4 y ago
Provided to YouTube by CDBaby Lunar Eclipse Song · Soft Tags Blue House 2009 Richard Shirk Released on: 2009-01-01 Auto-generated by YouTube.
Thank you, my friend Maj William W. 'Bill' Price for posting the NASA Astronomy Picture of the Day (APOD) for Wednesday, February 5, 2020 entitled "Lunar Eclipse Perspectives."
Image: Lunar Eclipse Perspectives - Image Credit - F. Pichardo, G. Hogan, P. Horálek, F. Hemmerich, S. Schraebler, L. Hašpl, R. Eder; Processing & Copyright - Matipon Tangmatitham; Text - Matipon Tangmatitham (NARIT)
"Explanation: Do we all see the same Moon? Yes, but we all see it differently. One difference is the apparent location of the Moon against background stars -- an effect known as parallax. We humans use the parallax between our eyes to judge depth. To see lunar parallax, though, we need eyes placed at a much greater separations -- hundreds to thousands of kilometers apart. Another difference is that observers around the Earth all see a slightly different face of our spherical Moon -- an effect known as libration. The featured image is a composite of many views across the Earth, as submitted to APOD, of the total lunar eclipse of 2019 January 21. These images are projected against the same background stars to illustrate both effects. The accurate superposition of these images was made possible by a serendipitous meteorite impact on the Moon during the lunar eclipse, labeled here L1-21J -- guaranteeing that these submitted images were all taken within a split second."
Lunar Eclipse Song
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pNhxfnujGIA
FYI Capt Dwayne Conyers PO1 William "Chip" Nagel Sgt Kelli Mays SSG Michael Noll Cynthia Croft SMSgt Lawrence McCarter TSgt Joe C. TSgt David L. Lt Col John (Jack) Christensen SP5 Mark Kuzinski LTC (Join to see) Col Carl Whicker Sgt (Join to see) CPT Paul Whitmer Maj Bill Smith, Ph.D. MAJ Bill Maynard Maj Kim Patterson
Image: Lunar Eclipse Perspectives - Image Credit - F. Pichardo, G. Hogan, P. Horálek, F. Hemmerich, S. Schraebler, L. Hašpl, R. Eder; Processing & Copyright - Matipon Tangmatitham; Text - Matipon Tangmatitham (NARIT)
"Explanation: Do we all see the same Moon? Yes, but we all see it differently. One difference is the apparent location of the Moon against background stars -- an effect known as parallax. We humans use the parallax between our eyes to judge depth. To see lunar parallax, though, we need eyes placed at a much greater separations -- hundreds to thousands of kilometers apart. Another difference is that observers around the Earth all see a slightly different face of our spherical Moon -- an effect known as libration. The featured image is a composite of many views across the Earth, as submitted to APOD, of the total lunar eclipse of 2019 January 21. These images are projected against the same background stars to illustrate both effects. The accurate superposition of these images was made possible by a serendipitous meteorite impact on the Moon during the lunar eclipse, labeled here L1-21J -- guaranteeing that these submitted images were all taken within a split second."
Lunar Eclipse Song
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pNhxfnujGIA
FYI Capt Dwayne Conyers PO1 William "Chip" Nagel Sgt Kelli Mays SSG Michael Noll Cynthia Croft SMSgt Lawrence McCarter TSgt Joe C. TSgt David L. Lt Col John (Jack) Christensen SP5 Mark Kuzinski LTC (Join to see) Col Carl Whicker Sgt (Join to see) CPT Paul Whitmer Maj Bill Smith, Ph.D. MAJ Bill Maynard Maj Kim Patterson
(6)
Comment
(0)
Posted 4 y ago
Good morning Bill. Quite interesting APOD. Thanks for posting it.
(6)
Comment
(0)
Posted 4 y ago
Good morning sir, thank you for the great astronomy picture share, have a great morning and day sir
(6)
Comment
(0)
Read This Next