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Post Info TOPIC: Did LCROSS Moon Mission fail?


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RE: Did LCROSS Moon Mission fail?
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Obama-Star-Party5.jpg

Even Obama was cheated

Before this "non-event" (and the intense negativity it has engendered ...) even the Obama White House had become involved.

The 44th President of the United States, ostensibly as part of "The International Year of Astronomy -- 2009," coincidentally chose the night of October 7th -- just one night before the Main LCROSS Impact Event -- to host the first public "star party" in the history of the American Presidency ... with almost two hundred middle-school students, celebrities, amateur astronomers (and probably as many reporters and TV cameras ...) personally invited to look through "a couple dozen small telescopes, and several NASA mini-planetariums," set up on the White House South Lawn ....

 

Source: http://www.fourwinds10.com/siterun_data/space/space_exploration/news.php?q=1256591096

 

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Results from the LRO/LCROSS mission in six scientific papers. confuse


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In this image of the Palomar there are a number of things which I see as 'wrong' but I have been conditioned to believe that this is a real image of the LCROSS impact area. Looking closely at it, I am not so sure, and I feel that it may have been altered to hide things - possibly evidence of habitation where the LCROSS part of the spacecraft impacted the Moon.

As I understand it, this is an infrared photograph has been taken from Earth by the Palomar Observatory and has been processed with "Adaptive Optics" to reduce the effects of the Earth's atmosphere. We can all see the vertical 'scan lines'in the image but what we cannot see is the vertical join in the middle, running right the way through the main crater.

I understand that the sun is very low and this can make shadows appear completely wrong. Also the perspective of this photgraph makes it very difficult to understand the topography and features in the area.

In spite of this, there are a few things which I feel are out of place in this image, but as always, I could be just a conspiracy theorist and there may be nothing wrong at all.



The coloured arrows and lines are interpreted by me as follows:

Yellow lines show unnatural straight lines and I cannot see any hill or feature which would cause these absolutely straight lines to occur naturally.

Green line is the direction of where I assume the light source is located (ie, the sun)

Working from the left to right:
Royal blue arrow is another straight line which I cannot see any reason for.

Red arrow shows an isolated shadow area.

Light blue arrow is an obvious 'Z' shadow and at 6 o'clock another smaller one.

Orange arrow shows what some articles say is the plume of dust or its shadow showing on the top ridge of the crater wall, and, along with a small oval light coloured grey area on the opposite side of the crater in the middle or the black crater 'shadow'. I just do not believe it because I do not see any plume and in my opinion, it is wishful thinking.

Left Pink arrow points to an area of shadow which looks like the letter H or rectangular in shape and does not appear to be related to any ground feature.

Right Pink arrow points to an entrance of some kind with a 'shadow' area just in front of it. I suspect the shadow is hiding maybe a craft or something similar. The tunnel entrance/inverted U is clearly seen behind to the left of the 'shadow' in front of the arrow.

Dark Pink top arrow points to a platform of some kind with maybe a real shadow underneath it to its left. It definitely does not look like a natural feature.


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I am sorry for future reference. Whoever processed this image to make it look like the plumes' smoking gun was targetting a kid's audience. lol

LCROSS-visible-plume_341.jpg


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lol if you think the image from that article shows authentic plumes, you must be kidding. Just a  photoshop ordinary blurring effect on the area. You should know better by now Q. lol. smile

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It appears that the IR picture taken 10s after the impact by Palomar Observatory has a join running down the middle. Now I dont think this is anything strange and I am just pointing it out.


Good article and lists the observatories which did not detect any plume. Aslo makes reference to Lunar Orbiter heat detected images too as well as a 'highly processed' NASA image of the plume.

added this too which is a good link to JAXA image
Google translation to JAXA in japanese
large JAXA image tc_038



-- Edited by qmantoo on Tuesday 2nd of November 2010 02:55:59 AM

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Mount Palomar's Cabeus observation turned to litograph, making the relief of the area come to view. This crater I suspect, is no ordinary crater.

Anomalies.jpg



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I’ve taken the yellow annotated image, disaturated it, flipped it 180% and turned it into a lithograph. The craters are full of surprises. Look at the core of the craters and at the apparently rather voluminous towers and geometries around.

Anomalies.jpg



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I do not think we all realise just how big an issue this was at the time. Many observatories wanted to see the plume and take the best pictures of the crash(sorry, "impact") into the Moon. One of these articles says that NASA were at pains to make clear that there were no explosives involved...

The planetary society
(The image referred to is the same as posted above)
Here's the sharpest optical image shown today of the Moon, from Palomar Observatory. You can see a notch in the bright mountain ridge in front of the crater, and a sunny spot on the far wall, which together appeared to look like a plume and its shadow in the much blurrier MMT image posted earlier. I see no plume in this image, and Jennifer Heldmann, who coordinated the Earth-based observations, didn't see one either.

Palomar Observatory Adaptive Optics image of Cabeus after LCROSS impact
This sharp image of the crater Cabeus near the Moon's south pole was taken by the Palomar Observatory's 200-inch telescope using its adaptive optics system. The image was taken at a near-infrared wavelength of 2.1 microns. No impact plume is obvious, but analysis of the data may yet reveal something subtle in the shadows within the crater. Credit: Palomar Observatory / Caltech



10 and 15-second images after impact
In each of the images the field of view is 71 km (40 arcseconds, with ~200m resolution), recorded at 2.1 microns wavelength. Images were produced by Antonin Bouchez.

Caltech university page on LCROSS impact giving names of the 13 observatories that were watching the impact.
MPEG Movie of Cabeus Crater from Palomar (18.8 mb). The movie compresses 12 minutes (4 prior to LCROSS impact, 8 minutes after) into 34 seconds.

Schedule (Times UT, updated 10/6/09)

* ~02:00 Spacecraft separation
* 08:30 Acquire Cabeus crater; determine best feature to use for AO lock
* 10:30 Acquire 1st set of sky background frames
* 11:00 Begin impact imaging sequence
* 11:31:19 Centaur impact
* 11:35:45 Shepherding spacecraft impact
* 11:50 End impact imaging sequence, acquire 2nd set of sky background frames
* 14:00 NASA ARC press conference (submit graphics by 12:30)

Observing Plan
Our goal is to image the evolution of the LCROSS debris plume at the highest possible spatial resolution. We plan to use the Palomar Adaptive Optics system to lock on a bright lunar feature, probably a crater wall or mountain peak, near the predicted impact location. Full AO correction should provide spatial resolution of ~0.1 arcseconds (180 meters at Cabeus crater) across the 40 arcsecond (71 km) field of view of the PHARO near-infrared camera.

The debris curtain is expected to expand at ~150 m/s, reaching maximum brightness after ~60s at a diameter of ~20 km. We will acquire 1.4s integrations every 2.8s, thus providing a ~40 frame movie of the expanding debris plume during its highest density phase. We will observe at K band (2.1 microns), to maximize AO correction and sensitivity to large particles.

We have allocated 2 hrs (8:30-10:30 UT) to locate Cabeus crater and test surrounding features for that providing the best AO correction. We will then offset to blank sky to acquire bias/background frames, and begin our impact imaging sequence at 11:00 UT. We intend to continue the image sequence through impact and for at least 15 minutes after Centaur impact.


Context area image

Area as seen by Palomar Observatory



The movie shows absolutely NOTHING - it is almost as if it never happened... no dust cloud, no change that I can see at all.

NASA LCROSS website Now going on about the water they just found.
Frequently Asked Questions - except for the one about "Why was a plume NOT seen?"
...The LCROSS impact will not be noticed by the Moon and only noticed by those on Earth with telescopes trained on the impact site. What makes the LCROSS impact special, compared to the ongoing, natural barrage, is that we control the LCROSS impact to occur at a precise place and time. allowing us to sample a specific piece of lunar real estate and be in position to monitor it

I added the bold bit...
...While we have a bit of an advantage over Deep Impact in that we have a better understanding of the Moon and its physical properties compared to those of a comet, that fact that we are purposely targeting a part of the Moon we can’t see (it being permanently shadowed) does keep things interesting!

In addition to the observations made from the LCROSS spacecraft, we are organizing efforts for both ground- and space-based assets (telescopes, cameras, spectrometers) to observe the impact. As the impact date nears, LCROSS will provide the exact impact location and time to the science community and public via the web. The goal is to muster as many eyes and instruments as possible to observe, record and analyze the impact event and the following ejecta and vapor cloud.
Yes, why ARE they targeting an area which is in the shadowed part of the Moon? What reason do they have?

More links than you can wave a stick at Both before and after.

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possibly the impact did not throw up a plume because it punctured the surface? Consequently, how do you explain that??? Only by saying that you DID get a plume and THIS is what was found in it, which is what they have done.

I just think that at the time, no-one reported seeing any plume (10 - 30 miles high or any height in fact), so how did they suddenly find a plume when all of the Earth observatories did not see anything.

The whole point of getting all these observatories on Earth to 'watch for the plume' was that it would be BIG and visible from earth. They had no idea that their rocket crashing into the Moon would go straight through the surface layer and so no plume would be visible.

Thats my wild speculative theory anyway.

Do we have a before-image showing no large hole and an after-image like the one above, showing a large hole in the surface?

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confuse What's in the pithole at Cabeus?

Anomalies 1.jpg








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Anomalies 1.jpg



A near-infrared image of Cabeus crater, taken from Palomar Observatory after the LCROSS impact. (Blacked out areas exposed) No ejecta are visible from the image, but further analysis may reveal subtle indications of the crash. (Credit: Palomar Observatory/Caltech) Source by Richard A. Kerr


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i read somewhere, that i didn't chronicle, that they found rust on the moonrocks they brought back.

that says, O2 or water?

or either? 1 leads to another, right?

it didn't happen as they hoped.




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more info on this and water at 4% (1-2% is 'a lifeline' apparently)

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Im usually pretty good for a few one liners......but sometimes......just sometimes...i put a little work into it....lolidea.gif

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Lol! Ijust read your article, and it's very informative, you know in these types of issues people usually shy away  confuse

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O ya...2 answer the thread....

Yes I think it was a failure....crash.gif

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Man...I got a lot to say on this one...
First, man....the public is so stupid. All that hype and look at the results....

Lets look at what the projected results were going to be(Pre-impact)
Source


Capture.PNG
Capture2.PNG
Capture3.PNG

And this one is my favorite....

Capture4.PNG

Did any of these projections become true as far as the impact site..?.......Hell no.

However....to nasa's defese...sifting through all the crap...the very first sentace of this page might have made it all worth while....of course...not for us...but for braking in the publlic at a slow and steady pace....And for Nasa to say this....IMHO...is atleast something

The argument that the moon is a dry, desolate place no longer holds water.


So, now, you can go through all the data(wether you think its genuine or not) And make yer own opinion.
Here
Here
Here

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In conclusion

I consider 2 things.

1)There is not life and never was....And Nasa knows about it.
2)There is life or was life on the moon...And Nasa knows about it.
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I tend to believe the later.


So, of course the conclusion is just my opinion, but I think, if there is life up there(and nasa knows it) then this was to be considered to be some sort of aggressive act towards whatever is up there...If they know something is up there then "bombing" the moon is not a good idea no matter what scientific garbage you may want to throw on top of it.  What I mean is, if they know life is up there, then this totally goes against any kind of knowledge you may get from it.

Of course, knowledge may have just been the cover story the whole time....

Just my 2 cents.





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Chrispin wrote:

Does anyone have an official explanation for this? It's pretty obvious that the mission was a failure, but they say otherwise? For example, did they say whether or not they detected water-ice on the moon? I sure didn't hear any news on that..




I've heard they detected water. But that could have been done years ago, with the satellites already orbiting the moon and their infrared mapping , radars, spectrographs  and whatnots type of electronics they carry. So this Lcross fiasco is still a mystery for all of us.



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Does anyone have an official explanation for this? It's pretty obvious that the mission was a failure, but they say otherwise? For example, did they say whether or not they detected water-ice on the moon? I sure didn't hear any news on that..

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LCROSS Finale: NASA Plays Down Lack of Fireworks

October 9, 2009

NASA officials and scientists spent the better part of an hour in this morning's press conference patting themselves on the back.

The LCROSS mission in search of lunar water was a great success, they said, all the while ignoring a very large elephant in the room: No one among the millions watching as a 2-ton hunk of metal slammed into the moon could see the much-ballyhooed spray of dust and debris that they had been told to look for.

 

lcross_impact.jpg

A near-infrared image of Cabeus crater, taken from Palomar Observatory after the LCROSS impact today. No ejecta are visible from the image, but further analysis may reveal subtle indications of the crash. (Credit: Palomar Observatory/Caltech) Source by Richard A. Kerr

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