Hi, Rob,

   Gee, Rob, now I know why you find things!
The 11th frame has the impact. The 12th frame
has a brightened patch two pixels wide and five
pixels high. The 13th frame has a less bright but
still over-brightened patch two pixels wide and two pixels high, which are in the same position as the upper 4 pixels of the 12th frame patch. In the 14th frame and the 11th frame, this same area is completely "cool," much grayer.

   So, the heating effect persisted for more than
30 seconds (the frame rate was 15 seconds exposure per frame, and you have to read out the chip between frames).

If anyone else wants to see the effect, load the animated gif file into Photoshop which will separate the frames as layers. I enlarged the impact point to a 2000% view in a window framed
around the edges of the flash in frame 11, then
switched from layer to layer to layer.

   Rob, if you found this with your bare eyeballs,
from just watching the gif, I congratulate you. It's invisible to me at that size!

A little poking around in the ESA website reveals that SMART-1 came in from the north in a polar orbit, so I will hypothesize that the top four pixels where the heat persists through two frames is the impact point itself and the six pixels "below" it are the "splash" of the low inclination impact,
hot debris and ejecta being thrown out in a blanket
that extends mostly to the south of the crater.

   You know how I like to hypothesize...

   As to pixel size translation to actual ground
size, we can forget it -- not enough data. Instead of the "megacam" they talk about on the CFHT website, they used their new "WIRcam," a wide
angle IR sensor, so no idea of pixel-ground size.
However, Lehmann C crater is 16 kilometers in
diameter and is eight pixels wide in the image, so
-- just a wild guess -- 2 kilometers to the pixel?

   Just in case anyone has a telescope big enough
to search for a 10-meter crater (like a 10-meter scope in orbit, say), the ESA website has a very detailed Observing Guide to the impact site:
http://sci.esa.int/science-e/www/object/index.cfm?fobjectid=39863

   The reason Rob finds things? He looks for them!


Sterling K. Webb
--------------------------------------------------------------
----- Original Message ----- From: "Matson, Robert" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; <meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com>
Sent: Monday, September 04, 2006 8:19 PM
Subject: [meteorite-list] SMART-1 impact


Hi Doug and List,

I don't know if I'm the first to notice this but the effect of
the lunar impact is still visible in the Canada-France-Hawaii
telescope image 15 seconds after impact.  Check the frame
immediately after the bright impact frame in the movie below,
and you'll see a small lingering white spot centered exactly
on where the impact flash was in the prior frame:

http://www.cfht.hawaii.edu/News/Smart1/anim2.gif
<http://www.cfht.hawaii.edu/News/Smart1/anim2.gif>
--Rob




______________________________________________
Meteorite-list mailing list
Meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list

Reply via email to