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Messages - jules

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1
Cafe Copernicus / Re: CHAT
« on: Today at 04:52:31 pm »
So - did anybody make it through the change over...?

2
Moon Zoo News / Update from Map the Planets Project
« on: May 20, 2013, 04:28:58 pm »
Map the Planets Project is the Manchester based group who are working on automated crater recognition software. This is a blog they have written for Earth & Solar System giving an update. Thank Zoo for the data

This is the blog they did for Moon Zoo last year.

3
Cafe Copernicus / Re: CHAT
« on: May 20, 2013, 11:16:30 am »
Like it says - back end security fixes are needed. We were told this would happen this morning but nothing seems to have happened yet.

4
Technical Questions and Support / Re: red triangle
« on: May 20, 2013, 10:45:44 am »
Thanks for posting this Ian - I recognise it as something I have had too but only once or twice. I remember refreshing the page to load another image. It shouldn't be happening frequently though. I suspect Geoff may be right but now that we have a picture I'll ask someone to take a look.

5
Cafe Copernicus / Re: CHAT
« on: May 19, 2013, 01:42:27 pm »
Don't forget you'll have to change your forum password tomorrow.

6
Technical Questions and Support / NEW PASSWORD 20 MAY 2013
« on: May 18, 2013, 07:11:52 pm »
The Zooniverse team are sorting out some back end security fixes to the forum which means that you will need to change your password to access the forum from Monday 20 May 2013. Follow the link on the forum on Monday to change it. Everything else remains the same. :)

You will need to do this to access all the "standard type" fora: Moon Zoo, Galaxy Zoo, Solar Stormwatch and Old Weather.

7
Moon Zoo Object Collections / Re: Spacecraft or Space Debris
« on: May 16, 2013, 03:35:25 pm »
They are so cool! 8) JFincannon linked to them somewhere but I think there are far more now than there were then. I'm off back for another look...

8
Moon Zoo Object Collections / Re: Spacecraft or Space Debris
« on: May 15, 2013, 04:40:23 pm »
Here's an attachment of the Apollo12 / Surveyor 3 site from the NAC. Apollo 12 is 200m from Surveyor 3. Busy area!



9
Cafe Copernicus / Re: CHAT
« on: May 13, 2013, 08:25:04 pm »
He's a legend. 8) 8)

There's his interactive photo map too.

10
Yes - some images are up and more will follow.

11
Roberto Bugiolacchi, Moon Zoo science lead introduces the latest Moon Zoo challenge:

Dear MoonZoo aficionados,

Our next surveying exercise will be centred on the Apollo 12 landing site. 


Nasa

Your previous and successful endeavour saw hundreds of thousands of craters and interesting features noted in the region of the Apollo 17 landing site in the Taurus-Littrow valley. Here we witnessed a chaotic and highly scarred terrain, squeezed between tall mountains and crossed by a deep fault (the Lee-Lincoln Scarp): a rather complex geological setting. Indeed, the landing site was selected based on its geological diversity, with the aim of collecting pre-Imbrian age highland material, mare basalts, and igneous products from potential volcanic edifices.


Apollo 12 – Commander Pete Conrad is working at the equipment bay of Lunar Module ‘Intrepid’ on the Ocean of Storms (©NASA)

Now we are turning our attention to the Apollo 12 landing site, and from 9 May all the Moon Zoo images relate to this site. In November 1969 Apollo 12 landed within a vast lunar mare (lava plains) region called Oceanus Procellarum (Ocean of Storms), and in particular an area baptised as Mare Cognitum (Known Sea), so called given that it had already been visited by three unmanned lunar missions (Luna 5, USSR, Surveyor 3 and Ranger 7, US). The landing region was estimated to be younger than the Apollo 11 site based on kilometre-size craters census (2.37 times fewer craters). In the following years, returned sample analyses (i.e. Stöffler and Ryder, 2001; Barra et al., 2006) estimated ages of 3.58 ± 0.01 and 3.80 ± 0.02 Gyr (both Late Imbrian Epoch), for Apollo 11, against 3.15 ± 0.04 Gyr for Apollo 12, (Eratosthenian Period). It will be very interesting to compare these direct age estimates with your high resolution/volume crater count survey, AND also compare them with the results from the Apollo 17 blitz (samples’ age: 3.75 ± 0.01 Gyr). 

Obviously, as before we are also going to harvest data generated by the Moon Zoo users regarding bouldernyness and shape of the noted craters in order to build a fuller picture of the impact record in the region. As it happens, the lunar science team based at Birkbeck/UCL, UK, has been looking at the Apollo 12 region for quite sometime, both in terms of geological mapping and analysis of returned samples. We are particularly interested in the different lava flows found in the region and the mapping of small craters; the associated boulder distribution will be employed to estimate the different ages and thickness of these lava flows. Your Moon Zoo measurements of the Apollo 12 site will therefore be greatly appreciated, and they will potentially be incorporated in future scientific publications.

So, let’s start this new and exciting journey together: I will keep you posted on both results from previous efforts (A17, etc.) and the ongoing ones. Go and explore!



Barra F., et al., 2006. 40Ar/39Ar dating of Apollo 12 regolith: Implications for the age of Copernicus and the source of nonmare materials, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 70, 6016-6031.

Stöffler D. and Ryder G. 2001. Stratigraphy and isotope ages of lunar geologic units: chronological standard for the inner solar system. Space Science Reviews 96: 9-54.

12
Cafe Copernicus / Re: Moonsweeping
« on: May 12, 2013, 02:46:13 pm »
 :D

13
Moon Zoo Object Collections / Re: Crater Questions
« on: May 12, 2013, 02:37:47 pm »

ID: AMZ1003w0a
Latitude: -2.2493 Degrees
Longitude: 336.576 Degrees
Sun Angle: -73.43 Degrees
Scale: 0.54 Meters / Pixel
Zoom Level: 3 ( Out / In )
  Is the Black spot Lower center right just a crater shadow , there is very little shadow on the rest of the craters in the image ,  so it made me wonder . Also it looks  like it has rays  to me  . Ian shocko61
My guess would be a small (fresh) dark haloed crater.

14
Moon Zoo Object Collections / Re: Crater Questions
« on: May 12, 2013, 02:35:19 pm »

ID: AMZ1003zel
Latitude: -3.2493 Degrees
Longitude: 336.674 Degrees
Sun Angle: -85.03
Scale: 1.11 Meters / Pixel
Zoom Level: 3 ( Out / In )
 Is this just another crater or is the sun angle low enough to make it look round or is the  nearly round shadow important . Ian shocko61
just another crater. The image may have been stretched (to lighten an otherwise dark image) making it appear a little odd.

15
Moon Zoo Object Collections / Re: Interesting terrain
« on: May 10, 2013, 02:29:30 pm »
I see what you mean. Could be a crater on some high terrain. A closer ACT-REACT look is needed! There are some Cavalerius Hills but I think these are on the floor of the main Cavalerius  crater. (I should probably check my facts before I start typing... ::) )

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