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Old November 16th 07, 07:13 PM posted to sci.space.policy, sci.space.history, sci.space.shuttle,sci.space.station
BradGuth
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Posts: 21,544
Default Japan First Back To The Moon!

On Nov 16, 9:49 am, Michael Gallagher wrote:

That looks so eerily like the background from the SPACE 1999 Premiere,
"Breakaway," it wasn't funny.


That's true, however China and Japan are clearly not taking another
NASA no for an answer, and that's why this kind of fresh and honestly
revealing look-see with further science and planetology measurements
other than pictures are being accomplished by other than our crack
NASA wizards that have to concentrate upon their keeping those semitic
butt-cracks as tight and straight as possible.

Quite oddly there's hardly an honest Usenet word on behalf of the
Chinese moon exploration mission that's closing in on what Japan has
as an ongoing 3-satellite observation and science gathering process,
that'll each pick up the slack where the previous US and Russian
missions of mostly hocus pocus disinformation and/or evidence
exclusion left off.

However, once again and again, it's perfectly clear that our NASA/
Apollo brown-nosed clowns are running their very own Usenet of damage-
control infomercials fully amock, all because of those original NASA/
Apollo lies and subsequent denials of their being in denial, is simply
all too Hitler and/or GW Bush like.

And only because I'm still such a nice guy is why we even have this
following insignificant contribution by our very own "kT". But we
should take a little further notice as to how all the usenet lights
tend to go out whenever there's another not so insignificant speck of
truth about our moon to behold, especially when such doesn't in any
way support as to what those as "having the right stuff" were tilling
us to believe.

"Japan First Back To The Moon!" / kT
http://groups.google.com/group/sci.s...8a85929879b6a0
"Heh heh heh ... Go JAXA! Go Japan!"

I believe that basic though unusually simple topic entro by kT is
absolutely right on the money, at least Japan being of the first other
than Russian or those of our various lunar orbital missions, however
China is not exactly sitting on their extremely wise old butts, are
they.

Here's the latest HDTV images, except for having those moon surface
saturations of somewhat badly skewed color fully removed. In other
words, our moon is getting HDTV depicted as entirely color blind, as
limited to gray-sacle, and only Earth is getting artificially
accommodated in full living color.
http://www.jaxa.jp/press/2007/11/20071113_kaguya_e.html
http://www.jaxa.jp/press/2007/11/img...kaguya_01l.jpg
http://www.jaxa.jp/press/2007/11/img...kaguya_02l.jpg

Here's those previously unfiltered original images of the off-color
saturation imposed tint, via all of that pesky secondary or recoil
worth of such a bluish/violet hue look-see at our naked and thus
unavoidably reactive moon (images 01 ~ 13):
http://www.jaxa.jp/press/2007/10/20071021_kaguya_e.pdf
http://www.jaxa.jp/press/2007/10/img..._kaguya_01.jpg
http://www.jaxa.jp/press/2007/10/img..._kaguya_03.jpg
http://www.jaxa.jp/press/2007/10/img..._kaguya_05.jpg
http://www.jaxa.jp/press/2007/10/img..._kaguya_10.jpg
http://www.jaxa.jp/press/2007/10/img..._kaguya_11.jpg

Besides the matter of JAXA/NHK having only turned on their HDTV color
pixels as for accommodating those selected pixels of Earth (adjusting
gamma to 4x alone gives us that sort of proof, or otherwise by simply
replacing their image black with most any other color), though it's
still every bit worth an as-is look-see for taking notice as to how
extremely dark and otherwise somewhat of an average coal like 0.11
albedo or actually of a slightly sooty darker kind of dusty deep soft
lunar terrain of such minimal albedo, meaning that it's very poorly
reflective of the visible spectrum, as otherwise correctly
representing that which our extremely cosmic dusty and electrostatic
charged moon really is, as well as for having been so clearly HVTV
imaged w/o those pesky color saturations except for their
accommodating within the very same HDTV FOV as hosting a very colorful
Earth, as having been illuminated by the very same raw solar spectrum
that has unavoidably skewed the moon itself by the unfiltered and
subsequent excess amounts of those violet and UV photons, of which
CCDs are by rights extremely sensitive to.

Now then, and I'm being quite honestly serious about this next part;
do we see anything of that naked lunar terrain that's looking as
though being the least bit NASA/Apollo (65%~75% reflective) 0.65~0.075
albedo worthy, as though looking much like a certain guano island as
having been xenon arc lamp spectrum illuminated and otherwise
physically modified in order to suit their supposed moon look, on
behalf of those hocus-pocus Apollo landings? (silly question, as I
didn't think so)

Now try to further imagine how much brighter than Earth those little
violet color skewed pixels worth of Venus are going to look.
Actually, with the HDTV's far better than Kodak film DR(dynamic range)
is why the likes of Mars, Jupiter and Saturn should also become part
of those future JAXA/KAGUYA(SELENE) obtained images, along with a few
of those most bright of background stars unless having been
intentionally spectrum filtered out or subsequently PhotoShop
removed. With a proper optical spectrum filter (of which KAGUYA may
not have to work with) is where we'll get to see the true deep golden
brownish color of our moon, along with certain other raw secondary/
recoil photons of those cosmic and local deposited mineral elements
which should become downright interesting, even though color skewed
unless via earthshine because, there's such a great deal of secondary/
recoil UV that'll always tend to saturate most everything into giving
us that somewhat purple/bluish or violet hue or weird tint.

And to think that there's going to be so much more of the truth to
come via JAXA/KAGUYA(SELENE), such as once those full color spectrum
images of the moon are properly adjusted for their more natural to the
human eye's limited hue detection worth of color saturations, plus
those other nifty instruments start reporting their science data, as
well as from whatever China can uncover and share is just around the
very next corner.
--
Brad Guth