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#1
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I know what happened to the tapes, they were found by one of the
Moon-landing deniers/conspiracy guys who had to destroy them because they were proof that we had actually landed on the moon! |
#2
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The landing was broadcast live around the world. My question is,
aren't there many "original" tapes that various news and other organizations would have in their possesion that would make this point moot. Is is just a question of "NASA's" copy gone south? Does it make a difference?..........Doc wrote: I know what happened to the tapes, they were found by one of the Moon-landing deniers/conspiracy guys who had to destroy them because they were proof that we had actually landed on the moon! |
#3
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On Tue, 15 Aug 2006 07:38:37 -0700, molczan wrote:
Jorge R. Frank wrote: wrote in news:1155650001.761196.58410 @h48g2000cwc.googlegroups.com: The landing was broadcast live around the world. My question is, aren't there many "original" tapes that various news and other organizations would have in their possesion that would make this point moot. Is is just a question of "NASA's" copy gone south? Does it make a difference?..........Doc It makes a lot of difference. NASA's originals are much higher quality than what was broadcast live, due to the low-tech NTSC conversion method used (literally, point a TV camera at a monitor playing the original). The following pages, from Australian radio telescopes involved in tracking Apollo, provide an indication of the considerable degradation that resulted from the scan conversion process: http://www.parkes.atnf.csiro.au/apol...V_quality.html http://www.honeysucklecreek.net/Apollo_11/ Hopefully, the raw data tapes will be found - in readable condition. Yeah, it's a race with time. They're already pretty old. I can imagine there is a rather large number of old not so well documented data tapes hanging around NASA. I wonder if there is anyone still working at NASA who would even know what is written on the label of the tape. Or, if the label is even attached. This is probably one of the most valuable tapes. Imagine all the other slightly less valuable tapes waisting away, waiting for their data to be copied to a hard drive. Ideally, they could start coping data from all the tapes, then hopefully they would run across the tape in question. The second worst case would be if they find it right away and let all the other tapes waist away. The worst being they never find it. -- Craig Fink Courtesy E-Mail Welcome @ |
#6
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I'd like to find these tapes, too, but recall that
the even-sharper images from another angle were taken from the LM window on 16-mm motion picture film -- but didn't show Neil's full body as he made his 'small step'. Can't some grad student run an inverse fourier transform on the digitized views we have, and 'un-defocus' them a bit? "Jorge R. Frank" wrote It makes a lot of difference. NASA's originals are much higher quality than what was broadcast live, due to the low-tech NTSC conversion method used (literally, point a TV camera at a monitor playing the original). |
#7
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![]() It makes a lot of difference. NASA's originals are much higher quality than what was broadcast live, due to the low-tech NTSC conversion method used (literally, point a TV camera at a monitor playing the original). And the whole world was fed via that converter. So the higher quality signal only existed at the receive point (Parks dish antenna?) and nobody else got to see anything other than the converted signal. |
#8
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![]() Can't some grad student run an inverse fourier transform on the digitized views we have, and 'un-defocus' them a bit? I doubt that would work. signal to noise issues for one thing. Also, with video any signal that became "blacker than black" is effectively clipped off as is thus lost. In crude mathematical terms, you could multiply something by zero, then you have zero, but after that you can't ever get back to what you first had. Similar problem for anything that got saturated (whiter than white). |
#9
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#10
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Craig Fink writes:
On Tue, 15 Aug 2006 07:38:37 -0700, molczan wrote: Hopefully, the raw data tapes will be found - in readable condition. Yeah, it's a race with time. They're already pretty old. And in October, the DIL lab is gone, so that removes the last place that can read them. How about all of you ringing/writing to you congress critter now. It being one of `those' years, some may even listen!. You could also ask why they where remover *from the national archive* for perminant retention. This just sends my bogometer off scale! -- Paul Repacholi 1 Crescent Rd., +61 (08) 9257-1001 Kalamunda. West Australia 6076 comp.os.vms,- The Older, Grumpier Slashdot Raw, Cooked or Well-done, it's all half baked. EPIC, The Architecture of the future, always has been, always will be. |
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