Astrophotography by Anthony Ayiomamitis

Lunar Image Gallery - Lunar Cycle

The French expression that "the more things change, the more they stay the same" is perhaps best applicable for the moon. The observation of the moon on a daily basis will readily identify its constantly changing behaviour as it evolves from a very thin crescent at the start of a new lunation to a noticeable crescent, first quarter and eventually a full moon as part of its waxing repertoire. This scenario will then continue but in reverse order, for the waning moon will now proceed in an orderly manner from full to a very thin crescent in a similar gradual but organized manner. Of course, this changing behaviour will repeat itself incessantly in precisely the same sequence and rate ad infinitum approximately every 29 days.


Image Details
Lunar Cycle - Day 12
Imaging Details
Body:
Moon

Mass:
0.0123 x Earth

Mean Eq Diameter:
0.2719 x Earth

Distance:
405,074 km

Sidereal Rev:
27d 07h 43m 11s

Age:
11d 23h 41m

Phase:
91.3°

Diameter:
29.77'

Magnitude:
-11.8

Light Time:
0h 0m 1.3s

Rukl:
N/A
Date:
Dec 05, 2003
19:18:34 UT+2


Location:
Athens, Greece

Equipment:
TeleVue Pronto
Celestron CG-3 GEM
ScopeTronix STWA14 Adapter
Nikon Coolpix 995


Exposures:
1 x 1/73 sec @ f3.8
ISO Auto
JPG RGB Fine image format
2048x1536 image size
Autodark subtraction


Software:
Photoshop V6

Processing:
Grayscale
Cropping
Unsharp Masking
Resampling (39%)
JPG Compression


Copyright © 2001-2005, Anthony Ayiomamitis. All rights reserved.