Hi Fran,
I agree based on the lunaserv site (a
http://webmap.lroc.asu.edu)
that the images at that location have sun angles no lower than
about 47 degrees (image pair M159847595LC
M159847595RC) I do not select targets but the LROC team has
a mechanism for requesting images which you can do here
http://target.lroc.asu.edu/output/lroc/lroc_page.html.
LROC NAC imaging is somewhat opportunistic so when the
conditions are right the image is taken, providing that some
other target does not take precedence. Thanks for your interest!
So, on May 3, I emailed him again:
John,
Look's like the shadows are really OK on these images but nowhere
near the res of the of the LO in 1966. I assume that the ones on
the web are made that way on purpose for downloading. Is there any
way we can get a much higher res image on that area?
5.1N 15.5E
The next day, May 4, 2015, I received his speedy reply:
On 5/12/2015 10:28 AM, francis ridge wrote:
I wish NASA had something like this in the hopper.
and Keller replied:
Indeed. The DSCOVR mission should be something like that
looking back at the Earth.
Al Gore got that one thru and this spacecraft is located way out
in space, closer to the Sun and nowhere near the Moon. same type
of orbital plan, a Lagrange Point orbit. Mine was MUCH closer
and cheaper and could look at the Moon and the Earth at the same
time!!!
Then, a year later, along comes our discovery of the anomalies on
the back side of the Moon at Paracelsus C. We had been courteous
and reasonable and had let him alone for 13 months. The door was
now WIDE open.
Remember that Dr. Paul Davies, Arizona State University's
consultant who has the team to study all the hundreds of thousands
of hi-res image strips from the LRO, had been interviewed for an
article on the web about the need to look for extraterrestrial
artifacts on the Moon. He also had many papers, two in particular:
Footprints of alien technology (21 June 2011) and
Searching
for alien artifacts on the moon (7 October 2011). Talk
about the door being open! Stay with me........
Dr. Mark Carlotto, of Mars Project fame (and also a member as we
were of the Society for Planetary & SETI Research) had helped
me and The Lunascan Project on the Blair Cuspids and had written a
paper a few years ago, had since gone into retirement. Ananda
showed him our discovery report on the new find on the lunar Far
Side in July and he was overwhelmed. Long story short, he took our
data and drafted the analysis for Paracelsus C that July.
But I wanted NASA to see what we had found. I wanted to test the
waters, one more time before going to LRO & Dr Paul Davies.
David Williams had helped The Lunascan project in 1996 on the
Blair Cuspids. In fact he was the one from the NSSDC (NASA Space
& Science Data Center, Greenbelt, MD) who had located the
other LO image from the "footprint" (it is called) that showed the
Cuspids in an overlap of images from LO-II. I sent him the
discovery report for Paracelsus C.
David Williams:
"It certainly is an interesting looking feature. I would
guess that NASA is more focused on two types of areas for future
rover exploration. Those would be areas that show signs of
possible near-surface water ice, such as the deep craters near the
poles, and those that show evidence of deep penetration by
impacts, such as the South Pole Aitken Basin, where they would
want to study deep crustal and possibly mantle material. At
least that’s my best understanding of the types of things they are
concentrating on right now."
I don't know why I did it. I guess it was a bad decision on my
part, but I sent the discovery report I had drafted on
Paracelsus C that Ananda Serisena and I had
discovered in June of 2016, on to NASA's LRO Project Scientist,
John Keller, first. I wanted to wait and send the analysis that we
(and with a big thanks to our colleague, and Mark Carlotto) had
written in July and we couldn't get published. I couldn't do that
but the temptation was too great and I sent the next best
thing. I hit the send button, and waited. Always, there had
been a response within hours, no more than a day.
After a week passed, without so much as a "thank you, but we have
seen that one and we know what it is," NOTHING. Two weeks passed
and not a word.
The analysis was finally published in November in the Journal of
Space Exploration, after months of a runaround and an attempt to
bill us over $1100. Thank's to the effort of Carlotto it was
released for all of us through ResearchGate.
Nov. 11th
Tired of the red tape and months of waiting I pounded out an email
to Dr. Paul Davies at ASU. I told him about all the hassles
we had encountered and that all I/we wanted was for somebody who
would appreciate our find to just look at it. I didn't even
say what we had found, except to say we had looked at a lot of
things over the years and had found a lot of "iffy" objects that
got worse as you blew them up. This was different. In fact,
I told him the image all by itself was all it took to get my
attention. Ending the 5-paragraph email with a plea for him to
just look, I signed off and left contact information.
Three days later (Nov. 14) I received an email from Alexa Graves,
a student from ASU:
"Paul Davies is interested in seeing that image that you have, as
well as the paper that was published."
1) I had Mark Carlotto send the analysis to Dr. Davies.
2) I then emailed a copy of my discovery report and sent another
separate email with the image link.
On December 7, I sent the link to the analysis video which
had been released on YouTube.
This is December 12th.
Not one word has come from LRO's John Keller, nor Alexa Graves,
nor ASU's Dr. Paul Davies. Was what we found on the lunar Far Side
so silly that it didn't even garner a response of any kind?
I would not hesitate to say that what we found was so interesting
that it got the attention and comments of many of my colleagues
and managed to get Dr. Mark Carlotto out of retirement! And far
from being a conspiracy buff regarding NASA and many of the images
taken of the Moon by LO, Apollo and LRO, I am thoroughly baffled
and truly disappointed.