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Planetary scientists are using the Hubble Space Telescope to scout out sites
for potential human bases on the Moon. Previous missions have observed the Moon at a range of wavelengths. But none have boasted Hubble's sharp resolution at ultraviolet wavelengths - it can identify spectral features just 50 metres across over swathes of lunar terrain. Much more at http://www.newscientistspace.com/article/dn7880 |
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![]() "Nick" wrote in message ... Planetary scientists are using the Hubble Space Telescope to scout out sites for potential human bases on the Moon. Previous missions have observed the Moon at a range of wavelengths. But none have boasted Hubble's sharp resolution at ultraviolet wavelengths - it can identify spectral features just 50 metres across over swathes of lunar terrain. Much more at http://www.newscientistspace.com/article/dn7880 I always thought that objects like the moon were far too bright for hubble ???? |
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In message , Mark J
Underwood writes "Nick" wrote in message .. . Planetary scientists are using the Hubble Space Telescope to scout out sites for potential human bases on the Moon. Previous missions have observed the Moon at a range of wavelengths. But none have boasted Hubble's sharp resolution at ultraviolet wavelengths - it can identify spectral features just 50 metres across over swathes of lunar terrain. Much more at http://www.newscientistspace.com/article/dn7880 I always thought that objects like the moon were far too bright for hubble ???? It's a myth - be interesting to know how it started. Hubble imaged Copernicus some years ago http://hubblesite.org/newscenter/newsdesk/archive/releases/1999/14/ Apparently tracking the Moon is tricky, though. It's imaged Venus, which has a _much_ higher surface brightness. And I've read it uses the Earth to produce a flat field, which again is much brighter and fills the whole field. -- Remove spam and invalid from address to reply. |
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![]() "Jonathan Silverlight" wrote: In message , Mark J Underwood writes I always thought that objects like the moon were far too bright for hubble ???? It's a myth - be interesting to know how it started. I think it dates back to Hubble's early days, when instruments such as ESA's Faint Object Camera had very strict brightness limits, and would certainly have been destroyed by observing the Moon. Newer fangled solid state imaging sensors such as CCDs have no such safety limits, and in fact Hubble used to "observe" the Sun in order to flood WF/PC-1 with UV to mitigate its QE hysteresis problem. |
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