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#1
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Who's going to be the first to correctly identify the landscape below
the astrounauts in http://spaceflight.nasa.gov/gallery/images/shuttle/sts-115/html/s115e05801.html ??? /dps |
#2
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snidely wrote:
Who's going to be the first to correctly identify the landscape below the astrounauts in http://spaceflight.nasa.gov/gallery/images/shuttle/sts-115/html/s115e05801.html ??? /dps I guess Australia |
#3
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JohnSmith wrote:
http://spaceflight.nasa.gov/gallery/images/shuttle/sts-115/html/s115e05801.html I guess Australia Shuttle does spend a lot of time over Australia. However, at the times of EVAs, was australia in daylight ? Also, looking at the coast line, I can't seem to identify where it might be. The big island isn't big enough, nor the right shape to be Tasmania. Also, there are a couple of large lakes with water in them. This is rare in Australia (although being the end of winter, perhaps it is normal for them to be filled with water). Not sure if at this resolution roads should be discernable. None are. If this were the eastern section of Australia, you should be able to see some major roads. |
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John Doe wrote:
JohnSmith wrote: http://spaceflight.nasa.gov/gallery/images/shuttle/sts-115/html/s115e05801.html I guess Australia Shuttle does spend a lot of time over Australia. However, at the times of EVAs, was australia in daylight ? I know the puzzle has already been solved, but I'll answer JD's questions anyway. The EVAs started at around 7pm Australian Eastern Standard Time, about an hour after sunset where I am. So the east coast was dark, but the western part of the country would still have been in daylight early in the EVAs. Also, looking at the coast line, I can't seem to identify where it might be. The big island isn't big enough, nor the right shape to be Tasmania. Yes, it wasn't even close to looking like Tasmania. Also, there are a couple of large lakes with water in them. This is rare in Australia (although being the end of winter, perhaps it is normal for them to be filled with water). Australian winters are usually pretty dry, and this one has been no exception. --Chris |
#5
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snidely wrote:
Who's going to be the first to correctly identify the landscape below the astrounauts in http://spaceflight.nasa.gov/gallery/images/shuttle/sts-115/html/s115e05801.html Roughly: 350km above 38°14'N 29°38'E, looking SSE. Aka, SW Turkey looking over the Med toward Crete on the horizon. |
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Joe Smith wrote:
Roughly: 350km above 38°14'N 29°38'E, looking SSE. Aka, SW Turkey looking over the Med toward Crete on the horizon. OK, would you care to describe how you got that information ? Is it some conversion in a database between photo number and location ? Or did you recognize an exact feature on the ground which allowed you to provide lat/long of that feature? |
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On 2006-09-21 05:27:23 +0100, John Doe said:
OK, would you care to describe how you got that information ? Is it some conversion in a database between photo number and location ? Or did you recognize an exact feature on the ground which allowed you to provide lat/long of that feature? The large island above the 1st joint of the Canada Arm is Rhodes. -- Darren Griffin PocketGPSWorld - www.PocketGPSWorld.com The Premier GPS Resource for News, Reviews and Forums |
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John Doe wrote:
OK, would you care to describe how you got that information ? Is it some conversion in a database between photo number and location ? Or did you recognize an exact feature on the ground which allowed you to provide lat/long of that feature? What else--Google (Earth). I made a rough guess based on the topography visible in the photo. Google Earth makes it easy to browse around and the coastline in the view is quite distinctive, Rhodes especially, as Darren pointed out. I could reproduce the direction of the shot and get an estimate of the position from GE. I'm still trying to figure out how to get a link to the view (i.e. you click on the link and GE will pop up showing that exact view). I've seen them on websites, but I haven't yet figured out how to get from a particular view in GE to a link I can put in an email. |
#9
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On 21 Sep 2006 07:02:29 -0700, "Joe Smith" wrote:
John Doe wrote: OK, would you care to describe how you got that information ? Is it some conversion in a database between photo number and location ? Or did you recognize an exact feature on the ground which allowed you to provide lat/long of that feature? What else--Google (Earth). I made a rough guess based on the topography visible in the photo. Google Earth makes it easy to browse around and the coastline in the view is quite distinctive, Rhodes especially, as Darren pointed out. I could reproduce the direction of the shot and get an estimate of the position from GE. I'm still trying to figure out how to get a link to the view (i.e. you click on the link and GE will pop up showing that exact view). I've seen them on websites, but I haven't yet figured out how to get from a particular view in GE to a link I can put in an email. The location can be saved as a kml /kmz file. Pretty easy to do, but it will display at the default zoom level. cut and paste the following lines (excluding the === limiter) into a file named anything.kml and then file|open with google earth === ?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"? kml xmlns="http://earth.google.com/kml/2.0" Placemark name38°14'N 29°38'E/name open1/open styleUrlroot://styleMaps#default+nicon=0x304+hicon=0x314/styleUrl Point coordinates29.63333333333333,38.23333333333334,0 /coordinates /Point /Placemark /kml === -- |
#10
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Mike wrote in
: The location can be saved as a kml /kmz file. Pretty easy to do, but it will display at the default zoom level. For those more inclined to use NASA's World Wind program, the coordinates in that format a worldwind://goto/world=Earth&lat=37.17467&lon=28.86214&alt=278148&d ir=175.7 &tilt=49.8 http://worldwind.arc.nasa.gov/ |
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