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http://www.jaxa.jp/press/2007/11/200...a_movie_e.html
Japanese HDTV camera on board a moon-orbitiing probe has sent video material back to Earth. HDTV camera's should be standard issue on all spacecraft!! These pictures are simply gorgeous and we're not even seeing it in true HDTV. I can't wait until HDTV video pictures of Mars are sent back to Earth or when astronauts land on the Moon in 2018. Should be breathtaking compared to the grainy pictures of Apollo, almost like being there yourself. -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
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..
not the same quality (I've not the JAXA funds...) but look at this small SCI-FI clip about the Moon: http://youtube.com/watch?v=L8UcgSOo-HY .. |
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In article ,
"Jim Relsh" wrote: http://www.jaxa.jp/press/2007/11/200...a_movie_e.html Japanese HDTV camera on board a moon-orbitiing probe has sent video material back to Earth. HDTV camera's should be standard issue on all spacecraft!! These pictures are simply gorgeous and we're not even seeing it in true HDTV. I can't wait until HDTV video pictures of Mars are sent back to Earth or when astronauts land on the Moon in 2018. Should be breathtaking compared to the grainy pictures of Apollo, almost like being there yourself. I agree, though I don't think you need to wait for Apollo 2.0 -- the Google Lunar X-Prize should get us some on-the-ground HDTV footage within the next five years. See http://www.googlelunarxprize.com/ for more info. Best, - Joe -- "Polywell" fusion -- an approach to nuclear fusion that might actually work. Learn more and discuss via: http://www.strout.net/info/science/polywell/ |
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On Nov 7, 12:14 pm, "Jim Relsh" wrote:
http://www.jaxa.jp/press/2007/11/200...a_movie_e.html Japanese HDTV camera on board a moon-orbitiing probe has sent video material back to Earth. HDTV camera's should be standard issue on all spacecraft!! These pictures are simply gorgeous and we're not even seeing it in true HDTV. I can't wait until HDTV video pictures of Mars are sent back to Earth or when astronauts land on the Moon in 2018. Should be breathtaking compared to the grainy pictures of Apollo, almost like being there yourself. Why did they turn off the color? (just because of the terrific UV and violet saturation?) -- Brad Guth |
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"Jim Relsh" wrote in message
.. . http://www.jaxa.jp/press/2007/11/200...a_movie_e.html Japanese HDTV camera on board a moon-orbitiing probe has sent video material back to Earth. HDTV camera's should be standard issue on all spacecraft!! Sure, you tell the scientists they have to give up mass for that, or more importantly power and bandwidth. Pretty pictures are nice, but most probes want more than just pictures. These pictures are simply gorgeous and we're not even seeing it in true HDTV. I can't wait until HDTV video pictures of Mars are sent back to Earth or when astronauts land on the Moon in 2018. Should be breathtaking compared to the grainy pictures of Apollo, almost like being there yourself. -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com -- Greg Moore SQL Server DBA Consulting Remote and Onsite available! Email: sql (at) greenms.com http://www.greenms.com/sqlserver.html |
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On Nov 8, 12:39 pm, "Greg D. Moore \(Strider\)"
wrote: "Jim Relsh" wrote in message .. . http://www.jaxa.jp/press/2007/11/200...a_movie_e.html Japanese HDTV camera on board a moon-orbitiing probe has sent video material back to Earth. HDTV camera's should be standard issue on all spacecraft!! Sure, you tell the scientists they have to give up mass for that, or more importantly power and bandwidth. Pretty pictures are nice, but most probes want more than just pictures. These pictures are simply gorgeous and we're not even seeing it in true HDTV. I can't wait until HDTV video pictures of Mars are sent back to Earth or when astronauts land on the Moon in 2018. Should be breathtaking compared to the grainy pictures of Apollo, almost like being there yourself. -- Posted via a free Usenet account fromhttp://www.teranews.com -- Greg Moore SQL Server DBA Consulting Remote and Onsite available! Email: sql (at) greenms.com http://www.greenms.com/sqlserver.html I can buy an HDTV camera that fits in a chewing gum package and a 200 GB memory stick to match it. If you're sending people, each person could have multiple HDTV cameras and the memory built in to transmit at your leisure - and power - and it would fall in the noise of the budget, the power and the mass of other systems. |
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On Nov 10, 3:35 pm, wrote:
I can buy an HDTV camera that fits in a chewing gum package and a 200 GB memory stick to match it. If you're sending people, each person could have multiple HDTV cameras and the memory built in to transmit at your leisure - and power - and it would fall in the noise of the budget, the power and the mass of other systems. Your little and energy efficient HDTV cameras of a terrestrial application will also need to incorporate one hell of a good and narrow spectrum bandpass filter, so that images of our naked moon that's so freaking damn hot by day, so terribly cold by night and otherwise saturated in gamma, X-rays and loads of raw solar UV will not CCD record those images as looking so unusually bluish and otherwise violet color skewed. (imagine how terribly color skewed those unfiltered Kodak moments should have been for our Apollo missions that supposedly took those EVAs upon our moon) -- Brad Guth |
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