Patrick1000
Banned
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- Jul 22, 2011
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Same thing pretty much Laton, slightly different focus, approach on this next go...
Same thing pretty much Laton, slightly different focus, slightly different approach with this go 'round mate...
Here is our old friend the Apollo 11 Mission "Flown"(NOT) LAM-2 Map that we all know and love;
http://history.nasa.gov/alsj/a11/LAM2_CMP-flown.jpg
Though this does not seem to be a point of discussion in any meaningful sense, it seems rather clear now that this map and the flown(NOT) map of the Apollo 10 Mission were of Lunar Orbiter II image origins. They used the November 1966 Lunar Orbiter II images to make the flown maps, not unreasonable so far. But boy does this ever get interesting....
Here again is another now favorite, an image allegedly taken by Aldrin/Armstrong of the Columbia while they were in the Eagle before the boy scout and his free wheeling "navigator" descended. The youngsters have yet to become "moonwalkers". This is the Harland rotated and ellipse superposed version of the well known shot from 07/20/1969, or so it is claimed that this shot was taken on that day anyway. We now know otherwise.
http://history.nasa.gov/alsj/a11/ALS-2_vertical_w-ellipse.jpg
Collins and Armstrong are 60 miles up with the Columbia give or take, one hundred kilometers. It is early in the lunar day, earth day 07/20/1969, with the sun angle very low to the moon's horizon at 10 or 12 degreesish. The Eagle and the Columbia track a course one degree north of the lunar equator as they roll east to west..
Remember, that LAM-2 map is of Lunar Orbiter II image vintage, November 1966. How come it looks just like the image taken from the Eagle on 07/20/1969, an image made/taken allegedly 2 and one half plus years and a different sun angle altogether later?????????
Take a good look at the pics Laton, fold them, measure them up against one another. The images are identical at least very very very close to identical. This, despite the Orbiter being said to have been only half as high up as the Eagle supposedly was when it snapped this shot of Collins hot rodding 'round the moon.. The Orbiter was 50 kilometers/30 miles up. The Eagle was presumably/allegedly roughly as "high" as the Columbia, 100 kilometers/60 miles up, when the Eagle "photographed" its partner on this most interesting of all days, 07/20/1969.
Back in Nobvember of 1966 when the LAM-2 map image was taken/made, the Lunar Orbiter II tracked at about 0.75 degrees north of the equator, a quarter of a degree "below"/south of where the Eagle was said to have been tracking before descent. But one would never know the Eagle was supposed to be tracking a quater of a degree to the north of the Orbiter II's old track and flying 30 miles higher, not given these images. No no No Sir Ree. The landmark ratios are IDENTICAL, no measurable difference, and the shadowing pattern is more or less indistinguishable. That is, you wouldn't know that in the Orbiter II/LAM-2 image, the sun's azimuth was 90.80 degress with an incident angle of roughly 60 degrees.
If the images are not identical, if they do not derive from a common ancestor, a common negative Laton, why do they look identical I would like to ask?
You really, really need to read up on map projections.
As I've pointed out before the LAM2 flown map (UTM) and the Grollier map (transverse mercator) use different projection systems and datums which, in part, will result in the 'rotation' and coordinate shift that you seem to find so diabolical.
Really, when you work with maps and airphoto or satellite imagery all the time, datum shifts, affine transformations, projection changes, scale shifts, false origins and rotations are just every day occurences.
Same thing pretty much Laton, slightly different focus, slightly different approach with this go 'round mate...
Here is our old friend the Apollo 11 Mission "Flown"(NOT) LAM-2 Map that we all know and love;
http://history.nasa.gov/alsj/a11/LAM2_CMP-flown.jpg
Though this does not seem to be a point of discussion in any meaningful sense, it seems rather clear now that this map and the flown(NOT) map of the Apollo 10 Mission were of Lunar Orbiter II image origins. They used the November 1966 Lunar Orbiter II images to make the flown maps, not unreasonable so far. But boy does this ever get interesting....
Here again is another now favorite, an image allegedly taken by Aldrin/Armstrong of the Columbia while they were in the Eagle before the boy scout and his free wheeling "navigator" descended. The youngsters have yet to become "moonwalkers". This is the Harland rotated and ellipse superposed version of the well known shot from 07/20/1969, or so it is claimed that this shot was taken on that day anyway. We now know otherwise.
http://history.nasa.gov/alsj/a11/ALS-2_vertical_w-ellipse.jpg
Collins and Armstrong are 60 miles up with the Columbia give or take, one hundred kilometers. It is early in the lunar day, earth day 07/20/1969, with the sun angle very low to the moon's horizon at 10 or 12 degreesish. The Eagle and the Columbia track a course one degree north of the lunar equator as they roll east to west..
Remember, that LAM-2 map is of Lunar Orbiter II image vintage, November 1966. How come it looks just like the image taken from the Eagle on 07/20/1969, an image made/taken allegedly 2 and one half plus years and a different sun angle altogether later?????????
Take a good look at the pics Laton, fold them, measure them up against one another. The images are identical at least very very very close to identical. This, despite the Orbiter being said to have been only half as high up as the Eagle supposedly was when it snapped this shot of Collins hot rodding 'round the moon.. The Orbiter was 50 kilometers/30 miles up. The Eagle was presumably/allegedly roughly as "high" as the Columbia, 100 kilometers/60 miles up, when the Eagle "photographed" its partner on this most interesting of all days, 07/20/1969.
Back in Nobvember of 1966 when the LAM-2 map image was taken/made, the Lunar Orbiter II tracked at about 0.75 degrees north of the equator, a quarter of a degree "below"/south of where the Eagle was said to have been tracking before descent. But one would never know the Eagle was supposed to be tracking a quater of a degree to the north of the Orbiter II's old track and flying 30 miles higher, not given these images. No no No Sir Ree. The landmark ratios are IDENTICAL, no measurable difference, and the shadowing pattern is more or less indistinguishable. That is, you wouldn't know that in the Orbiter II/LAM-2 image, the sun's azimuth was 90.80 degress with an incident angle of roughly 60 degrees.
If the images are not identical, if they do not derive from a common ancestor, a common negative Laton, why do they look identical I would like to ask?