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Op 12/09/2021 om 22:22 schreef Samuel B.:
> Thomas de Groot <tho### [at] degrootorg> wrote:
>> schreef Samuel B.:
>>>
>>> What's IC, btw? Did you mean IV aka IrfanView? I use that for many things, but
>>> in this case it didn't help the situation whatsoever. Maybe I'm using it wrong.
>>> Instead I used GIMP and exported the image to a png file with some options
>>> enabled.
>>>
>> That is Ive's small (but not little) application:
>> https://www.lilysoft.org/IC/ic_index.htm
>
> Thank you, that looks like just the ticket since it supports higher bit depths.
> (For some reason Firefox flagged the site as potentially malicious. But I
> downloaded the file, scanned it with Defender and then VirusTotal, and it turned
> up clean.)
>
Firefox does not react to IC here (reports it is clean) but it is never
wrong to scan web stuff. It is my standard procedure for everything
coming from outside.
I think you will like IC.
--
Thomas
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Op 13/09/2021 om 01:14 schreef Samuel B.:
> "Samuel B." <stb### [at] hotmailcom> wrote:
>> Just testing out some moon maps.
>
> Final render in this series. Zoom in to see all the details.
>
> This version uses the medium-resolution color map 'lroc_color_poles_4k.tif', and
> the highest resolution displacement map available: 'ldem_64_uint'. As a tiff.
> that sucker is over 500mb in size, but only about 350mb as a png. It takes
> several seconds for POV-Ray to parse it, but that's not so bad. (I converted the
> map from tiff to png using Ive's nifty image program called IC. Thank you Ive
> for the program, and thank you Thomas for the recommendation :))
>
> The scene still uses radiosity and a reflecting plane, but I added ground fog
> this time around. The sun's position is not realistic.
>
Nice image! The details are very clear.
> Sam
>
> P.S. If you look closely, you'll find some interesting things... You can see
> what appears to be scratches in the moon's surface. Were these caused by
> asteroids that hit the moon at a glancing angle? You'll also see what appears to
> be drifts of dust forming sinuous ridges. Were the asteroid impacts powerful
> enough to vaporize minerals and cause temporary gaseous wind? Were these ridges
> perhaps formed in part by electrostatic forces? Or were they simply the result
> of traveling dust that happened to settle just right? I'd be interested in your
> thoughts!
>
The short answer, for both features: Lunar Rills --> either collapsed or
not, lava tunnels.
--
Thomas
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"Samuel B." <stb### [at] hotmailcom> wrote:
> "Samuel B." <stb### [at] hotmailcom> wrote:
> > Just testing out some moon maps.
>
> Final render in this series. Zoom in to see all the details.
>
Superb. With a jet and its contrail superimposed (just for scale) we would be
hard-pressed to discern a difference from a real late-afternoon photo, made with
a telescopic lens.
> P.S. If you look closely, you'll find some interesting things...
> > [Thomas]
> > The short answer, for both features: Lunar Rills --> either collapsed or
> > not, lava tunnels.
On the infallible internet, I've read that such features are caused by roving
herds of Moon Calves munching on moon dust-- with the resulting 'production' of
methane clouds. Stinky methane wind, a little-known secret of the Moon...
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Op 13-9-2021 om 16:39 schreef Kenneth:
> "Samuel B." <stb### [at] hotmailcom> wrote:
>> "Samuel B." <stb### [at] hotmailcom> wrote:
>>> Just testing out some moon maps.
>>
>> Final render in this series. Zoom in to see all the details.
>>
> Superb. With a jet and its contrail superimposed (just for scale) we would be
> hard-pressed to discern a difference from a real late-afternoon photo, made with
> a telescopic lens.
>
>> P.S. If you look closely, you'll find some interesting things...
>
>>> [Thomas]
>>> The short answer, for both features: Lunar Rills --> either collapsed or
>>> not, lava tunnels.
>
> On the infallible internet, I've read that such features are caused by roving
> herds of Moon Calves munching on moon dust-- with the resulting 'production' of
> methane clouds. Stinky methane wind, a little-known secret of the Moon...
>
Of course. One of those facts which are hidden from us by those who know
better and live for the sole reason of keeping us in utter ignorance. I
hail your courage in speaking out.
--
Thomas
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Thomas de Groot <tho### [at] degrootorg> wrote:
> Op 12/09/2021 om 22:22 schreef Samuel B.:
> > Thomas de Groot <tho### [at] degrootorg> wrote:
> >> That is Ive's small (but not little) application:
> >> https://www.lilysoft.org/IC/ic_index.htm
> >
> > Thank you, that looks like just the ticket since it supports higher bit depths.
> > (For some reason Firefox flagged the site as potentially malicious. But I
> > downloaded the file, scanned it with Defender and then VirusTotal, and it turned
> > up clean.)
> >
>
> Firefox does not react to IC here (reports it is clean) but it is never
> wrong to scan web stuff. It is my standard procedure for everything
> coming from outside.
Yep, gotta scan everything. Even known sources of software and media, because
you never know if a site has been temporarily compromised. (But when it comes to
/truly/ devious malware there's nothing we can do until all the scanners are
brought up-to-date. Even now, something malicious could be lurking in a corner
of the system...)
> I think you will like IC.
I already do. There was no fuss whatsoever when saving the png file. It did take
longer than expected, but then again it was an awfully large file.
Sam
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Thomas de Groot <tho### [at] degrootorg> wrote:
> Op 13/09/2021 om 01:14 schreef Samuel B.:
> > P.S. If you look closely, you'll find some interesting things... You can see
> > what appears to be scratches in the moon's surface.(...) You'll also see what
appears to
> > be drifts of dust forming sinuous ridges.
>
> The short answer, for both features: Lunar Rills --> either collapsed or
> not, lava tunnels.
Thanks for the new term. I think you may be right... mostly.
However, I'm not convinced everything we are referring to are the same
structures. I looked up an atlas of known moon rilles, and the features I was
initially observing weren't highlighted on the map, nor were what I saw when I
made my first remarks things that resembled rilles in their entirety. But I'm
also not /un/convinced! Some of what I saw may have indeed been collapsed lava
tubes. But some were also on higher portions of low, sloping hills... the kind
of place you would expect a glancing asteroid to leave a mark. And the sinuous
ridges I also observed looked like dust that piled up by heavy winds. But since
I am fully willing to be wrong, I'll accept any and all corrections to my
misconceptions ;D
Sam
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"Kenneth" <kdw### [at] gmailcom> wrote:
> "Samuel B." <stb### [at] hotmailcom> wrote:
> > Final render in this series. Zoom in to see all the details.
> >
> Superb. With a jet and its contrail superimposed (just for scale) we would be
> hard-pressed to discern a difference from a real late-afternoon photo, made with
> a telescopic lens.
But it's not close enough, since a dedicated individual would eventually observe
how the craters don't cast proper shadows near the terminator :/
> > P.S. If you look closely, you'll find some interesting things...
>
> > > [Thomas]
> > > The short answer, for both features: Lunar Rills --> either collapsed or
> > > not, lava tunnels.
>
> On the infallible internet, I've read that such features are caused by roving
> herds of Moon Calves munching on moon dust-- with the resulting 'production' of
> methane clouds. Stinky methane wind, a little-known secret of the Moon...
Okay, I wasn't going to say anything for fear of being ridiculed. But this
proves correct my earlier hypothesis: cows are a native moon species. They eat
dust, not grass. This explains all the cheese you can find there. And they never
actually jumped over it, they jumped /off/ of it! Things will never be the same
after people hear about this...
Sam
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"Samuel B." <stb### [at] hotmailcom> wrote:
> Things will never be the same after people hear about this...
Everyone already knows the moon is flat...
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Op 14/09/2021 om 01:46 schreef Samuel B.:
> "Kenneth" <kdw### [at] gmailcom> wrote:
>> "Samuel B." <stb### [at] hotmailcom> wrote:
>>> Final render in this series. Zoom in to see all the details.
>>>
>> Superb. With a jet and its contrail superimposed (just for scale) we would be
>> hard-pressed to discern a difference from a real late-afternoon photo, made with
>> a telescopic lens.
>
> But it's not close enough, since a dedicated individual would eventually observe
> how the craters don't cast proper shadows near the terminator :/
>
>>> P.S. If you look closely, you'll find some interesting things...
>>
>>>> [Thomas]
>>>> The short answer, for both features: Lunar Rills --> either collapsed or
>>>> not, lava tunnels.
>>
>> On the infallible internet, I've read that such features are caused by roving
>> herds of Moon Calves munching on moon dust-- with the resulting 'production' of
>> methane clouds. Stinky methane wind, a little-known secret of the Moon...
>
> Okay, I wasn't going to say anything for fear of being ridiculed. But this
> proves correct my earlier hypothesis: cows are a native moon species. They eat
> dust, not grass. This explains all the cheese you can find there. And they never
> actually jumped over it, they jumped /off/ of it! Things will never be the same
> after people hear about this...
>
there is that fundamental paper:
Wallace & Gromit (2002): The British origin of the Moon: The WensleyDale
Hypothesis,- Annals of Lunar Research, vol.53(2), p.1015-1037.
--
Thomas
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Op 14-9-2021 om 01:35 schreef Samuel B.:
> Thomas de Groot <tho### [at] degrootorg> wrote:
>> Op 13/09/2021 om 01:14 schreef Samuel B.:
>>> P.S. If you look closely, you'll find some interesting things... You can see
>>> what appears to be scratches in the moon's surface.(...) You'll also see what
appears to
>>> be drifts of dust forming sinuous ridges.
>>
>> The short answer, for both features: Lunar Rills --> either collapsed or
>> not, lava tunnels.
>
> Thanks for the new term. I think you may be right... mostly.
>
> However, I'm not convinced everything we are referring to are the same
> structures. I looked up an atlas of known moon rilles, and the features I was
> initially observing weren't highlighted on the map, nor were what I saw when I
> made my first remarks things that resembled rilles in their entirety. But I'm
> also not /un/convinced! Some of what I saw may have indeed been collapsed lava
> tubes. But some were also on higher portions of low, sloping hills... the kind
> of place you would expect a glancing asteroid to leave a mark. And the sinuous
> ridges I also observed looked like dust that piled up by heavy winds. But since
> I am fully willing to be wrong, I'll accept any and all corrections to my
> misconceptions ;D
>
It /was/ the short answer ;-)
There probably is happening more than just rills indeed, but I don't
know what they could be. There are features that look like lava flows,
like in the upper part, against the terminator, and seemingly coming
from a (impact) crater. Could you point out those things you see? I am
unable to relate them to something I recognise.
Otherwise, what does NASA say about it all?
--
Thomas
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