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yes that is a good idea, maybe it would be possible to use
that image analysis software thats used to look for tiny variations in a stars intensity as a planet passes in front of it, to look for the reflection. ive just realised I forgot to mention that the russians also landed an unmanned soil gathering lander and something else as well i believe. "Father Haskell" wrote in message oups.com... Mike Williams wrote: Wasn't it Father Haskell who wrote: Try to capture a glint of light from the gold-colored foil covering the landers at local sunset. This only requires light-capturing ability, not resolution. That's a good idea. The glint should vary in brightness as the lighting angle changes in a way that's different to what you see from rocks. Take a stack of images and process them to emphasise the differences instead of averaging the frames. Compare to a model of a site in question, at given sun inclination -- does the glint brighten and dim at close to the rate seen with the model? No hard calculations, just photograph while moving a flashlight over a plastic model. That makes it better than looking for the shadow, because the shadow of a lander would look much the same as the shadow of a similarly sized rock. Easier to discriminate color than texture with less than optimum optics. |
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