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Originally posted by ArMaP
What's wrong with this thread?
I think a thread for the images from the "Chang'e I" is enough.
Originally posted by sherpa
I know it was weirder than a very weird thing to me as well.
Who knows the arcane mysteries of they see ALL.
Any one of them, as I said, I think that one is enough, just that.
Originally posted by they see ALL
What does your second sentence mean? Is it referring to this thread or mine?
Originally posted by NGC2736
So does that mean that it will have to remain on station for 20 years to send back the one years worth of mapping data that it is scheduled to do?
China's space experts have predicted that the country will publish the whole lunar 3D image in January next year.
On Monday, China published its first moon image sent back by its lunar probe Chang'e-1, named after a mythical Chinese goddess who flew to the moon.
The picture was pieced together from 19 images, each covering a width of 60 kilometers of the moon's surface. The area covered by the picture, about 460 kilometers in length and 280 kilometers in width, is located within a 54 to 70 degrees south latitude and 57 to 83 degrees east longitude on the moon, according to sources with Beijing Aerospace Control Center (BACC).
Wu Ji, director of the Center of Space Science and Applied Research under CAS, the China Academy of Sciences, explained that the released image is a 2D picture, and researchers are working on the data sent back to formulate a 3D image, hoping to publish the picture as soon as possible.
The camera aboard China's lunar probe Chang'e-1 is a high performance CCD (Charge Coupled Device) stereo camera, which has three lenses to take photos of the lunar surface from three different angles to build up a 3D image.
Hao Xifan, deputy director of the Lunar Exploration Center of China's Commission of Science Technology and Industry for National Defense, said that the 3D image will possibly be published in January next year.
Chang'e-1 is expected to photograph the whole lunar surface in a month, as the moon's rotation period is one month.
After Chang'e-1 sends back the data, researchers have to spend months piecing together the data and complete the entire lunar surface image.
Jiang Jingshan, designer with the Chinese Lunar Orbiting Exploration program, said he was nervous when the camera first sent back a black image. But after a few seconds, clear images of the moon craters appeared, bringing much excitement to the space center.
Beijing Times reported that the Chief scientist Ouyang Ziyuan appraised the first image as very good. He said the image was only the start of Chang'e-1's exploration of the moon, and other pieces of equipment aboard the probe were still under testing.
Originally posted by johnb
Its interesting to watch the slow shift of power away from us in the west. We here in Europe lost our power base in the early to mid 20th century when it changed to the US and USSR and now the pendulum is swinging again this time towards China and India.
China denies plans for manned Moon mission
The head of China's space agency has confirmed that his country has no plans to put a man on the Moon.
Sun Laiyan, chief of the China National Space Administration, said that the hurdles to manned space exploration are too great for the time being, and that his agency will concentrate on mechanical exploration.
"I have read reports by foreign media saying that China would carry a manned Moon landing in 2020, but I do not think there has been such a plan," Sun told the state run Xinhua News Agency at a press conference in Beijing.
Originally posted by they see ALLThis is why I placed it in his, John's, forum.
Originally posted by sherpa
Latest update:
...
Pang said the images taken by Chang'e I will be wider than those snapped by Japan's lunar probe.
...
Source
Data from lunar orbiter available to all
Scientists and astronomy enthusiasts all over the country all have access to data sent back from China's first lunar orbiter Chang'e-I, a leading scientist in the program said on Sunday.
Ouyang Ziyuan, an academician of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) and chief scientist of the lunar exploration program, said at present that the scientific instruments on board the Chang'e-1 have all gone into operation and the satellite is sending back 3 trillion bits of data per second. The total data volume will reach 28 T (1 T is equivalent to 1,000 G) next year.
"The money used for the Chang'e project comes from the taxpayers and, therefore, the data should also be made public. Any scientist or astronomy enthusiast can apply to the state in accordance with state procedures to obtain data he needs," Ouyang said.
Source
China says moon pictures not faked from NASA
BEIJING (Reuters) - China has dismissed Internet gossip that its first photo of the moon taken from a lunar orbiter might have been plagiarized from NASA, local media said on Monday.
The country launched its first lunar probe, the Chang'e 1, in October and released a photo featuring a patch of grey moon surface splotched with craters last week, hailing the mission as a "complete success."
But some Chinese Internet users have questioned its originality after comparing it with an almost identical lunar image from the U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Administration in 2005.
On a different note, some people think that the first photo from Chang'e-1 is strangely familiar...
"But in a response to public scepticism unusual for such a token of national pride, internet bulletin boards began pointing out the similarity of the photograph to one published by NASA, the American space agency, two years ago."
"Although almost all the features of the two images match, the Chinese image does shows an additional small crater overlapping a larger one near the middle of the photo."
Such an addition could have been Photoshopped in...."
"But there does seem to be an extra hole in the Chinese version, which Mr Ouyang attributed to the possibility that the surface had been struck by a meteorite or other celestial body in the last two years.
Or, he added, the Chinese photograph might just be of better quality than the American."
In the week since the picture was released amid much fanfare in Beijing, there have been widespread rumors that the photo was a fake, copied from an old picture collected by a U.S. space probe.
The good news for the Chinese is that Planetary Society blogger Emily Lakdawalla's clears them of outright fakery. The bad news is, she found evidence that the photo was badly retouched for public release.
The photo from China's Chang'e 1 orbiter is clearly a higher-resolution view, with sunlight streaming from the northwest rather than the north.
"You know that there should have been seams in that image, and I just did not look for them carefully at the time," Lakdawalla told me today.
She said the Chinese must have blended together the seams between the strips - misplacing the crater. The picture may be pretty, but it's pretty much useless as a scientific product, Lakdawalla said.
The detective work came in for kudos from other space mythbusters. "Go check out her really amazing sleuthing," said Bad Astronomy blogger Phil Plait. "This is how it's done, folks. Case closed!"
NBC News space analyst James Oberg, who has had his own experience with moon-hoax controversies, also saluted Lakdawalla's efforts. Even though the Chinese insist that the first picture from Chang'e is scientifically accurate, Oberg said he expected the Chinese to "be forced to backtrack a bit" once they see the full evidence.
You know if space agencies are stupid enough not to learn from other mistakes they should stay on the ground. all it takes is one stupid blunder like this to throw all the respect for the program into the garbage, if you make a mistake fix it and don't try to hide it - Chris, Vernon, B.C.