Our closest celestial neighbour has kept us company for at least four billion years and has entertained our imagination in a variety of
ways. It certainly has been involved in our maturation as a species with man's first step on a body beyond our planet during the latter
part of the twentienth century and will, inevitably, be our first stop prior to any sort of manned travel to a further celestial body
such as Mars. The moon has been a great source of education about our own planet's evolutionary history; it has entertained many
inquisitive minds from earlier cultures and generations about the universe in general and man's role in particular; it has enriched the
minds of young children taking their first look through a telescope and continues to impact our lives in ways we may or may not readily
recognize including tidal forces and various natural rhythms and cycles.
Note: The image below is a follow-up to the fifteen-month exercise during 2004 and 2005 to catch the rising
full moon against the Temple of Poseidon in southern Greece and which was finally realized with the May/2005 full moon. The primary task
was to identify the optimal time after sunset which would yield a perfect (!) balance between the (bright) moon and the natural lighting
of the Temple of Poseidon. This was determined to be approximately 22 minutes after sunset. The months that ensued were then used to reverse
engineer the perspective of the temple with respect to its physical azimuth and altitude. The final exercise involved the identification
of the "proper" full moon during the calendar year which would simultaneously meet the above criteria with respect to lighting balance
(full moon and archaelogical grounds) as well as azimuth and altitude.
Note: For additional photos of the rising full moon from both the 2005 and 2008 sessions, please click
here.
Note: For additional photos of the sun and/or full moon against other well-known Greek archaeological grounds and
sites, please click here.
Body: Moon Mass: 0.0123 x Earth Mean Eq Diameter: 0.2719 x Earth Distance: 404,756 km Sidereal Rev: 27d 07h 43m 11s Age: 14d 19h 12m Phase: 100.0° Diameter: 29.55' Magnitude: -12.6 Rukl: N/A |
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Date: June 18, 2008 21:27:46 UT+3 Location: Sounion, Greece (37.6570° N, 24.0145° E) Equipment: Takahashi FSQ 106/f5 Canon EOS 300D Baader UV/IR-Cut Filter Exposure: 1 x 1/15 sec ISO 400 RAW Image Format 3072x2048 image size Auto Mode Software: Digital Photo Pro V1.6.1.0 Photoshop CS2 Processing: Resampling (25%) JPG Compression |