It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
Originally posted by Solarskye
... and this forum is an awesome place to learn.
Originally posted by cdrn
Originally posted by Solarskye
... and this forum is an awesome place to learn.
No, it's not. Pick up a book, such as one by Carl Sagan. Watch a well-made documentary. Google up "Astronomy Picture of the Day". Learning by reading the stuff here will give you a ridiculously distorted view of everything.
Originally posted by cdrn
I agree fully that there are some members who know what they are saying. The problem, however, is this: how do you know how to discriminate between useful and useless (or flat out incorrect) information if you don't know much about the material in the first place?
To put it in another way: who is more likely to believe John Lear, a planetary scientist or someone without a good science background?
I know.
Originally posted by imd12c4funn
The original was a high res still shot (link is first on my reply)
Yes, and that is why I asked if you knew about that being video grab, because video is not meant to be seen in separate frames, it is meant to be seen in sequence, so individual frames have a lower quality than photos of the same resolution.
Video frame or not, the image was a still at JAXA
I did not said that there are more anomalies, I just said that the other area looks the same. I do not consider those things anomalies.
I agree there are more anomalies bordering the focused area.
I understand what you say, but I do not see it that way, I just see it as the shadows of the hills.
My point is it seems that due to shadowing, these artifacts are not resting on the surface, but rather floating just above it.