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dunno- but if they took perfect pictures of all the Apollo parts on the moon, all the people who believe the landings werefaked would also think the pics were faked, as well- and they'd find some clever ways to "prove it".
altho i think a few pics of the landers and rovers and what not would be kind of neat to have. |
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27 m x 20/300 = 1.8 m The base of the LM's decent stage is 4.2 m across, so a 1.8 m resolution should be able to see it. However, this is a moot point because the spacecraft's final orbit is to be 300 km X 3,000 km with perilune over the South Pole and apolune over the North Pole. I'm reasonably confident that there is not enough propellant onboard to make such dramatic change in orbit as would be necessary to image the Apollo landing sites. Besides, it would be a great waste of resources to do so just to obtain photos that the conspiracy theorists would only dismiss as fabricated evidence. |
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In addition I don't think that the 1.8 m GSD would be sufficient to resolve the lander base into anything very meaningful. You can use the Johnson criteria to guestimate how many pixels that would be needed across the lander to for a human to perform different tasks. To detect the lander you'd need something like 2 pixels across, so we'd be in with a chance of detecting that there was something there, though that probably wouldn't be sufficient for the HBs. To be in with a chance of performing the recognition task, we'd need to have of the order of 8 or more pixels across it, so that means that we'd need to image it with a GSD better than 0.5 m.
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If you were using the same camera on Smart-1, you would also have to worry about problems with along-track blurring. (If you measure the along track velocity in terms of pixels per second, then your pixel based velocity has increased by a factor of nearly 60.) There are ways to deal with this, but I don't know enough about the imaging mode of the camera on Smart-1 to say one way or the other. |
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And the photos would be good for publicity even outside conspiracy theory circles. |
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If they want to shift the location of the perilune towards the equator, they would have to use even more propellant, that is not available. Plus, in order to shift the perilune, the orientation of Smart-1 would have to change (the thrust vector would have to be prependicular towards the velocity vector). Since Smart-1 uses electric propuslion, this attitude should be kept for a long time, meaning: mispointing of the scientific instruments, the communications antenna and maybe wrong geometry for the solar panels... So, I don't actually see that "quoted" scenario taking place. |