News Release

Magnificent views of the lunar surface

The Kaguya Lunar Atlas just published

Book Announcement

Springer

The Kaguya Lunar Atlas: The Moon in High Resolution

image: This is the cover of "The Kaguya Lunar Atlas: The Moon in High Resolution." view more 

Credit: Springer

In late 2007 the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency placed the Kaguya/Selene spacecraft in orbit around the Moon. Like previous lunar orbiters, Kaguya carried scientific instruments to probe the Moon's surface and interior. But it also had the first high-definition television camera (HDTV) sent to the Moon. A new book The Kaguya Lunar Atlas presents lunar landscapes taken by this high-definition television camera.

Sponsored by the Japanese NHK TV network, the HDTV has amazed both scientists and the public with its magnificent views of the lunar surface. What makes the images much more engaging than standard vertical-view lunar photographs is that they were taken looking obliquely along the flight path. Thus, they show the Moon as it would be seen by an astronaut looking through a porthole window while orbiting only 100 km above the lunar surface. This is the view we all would wish to have, but are never likely to, except vicariously through the awe-inspiring Kaguya HDTV images.

The remarkable Kaguya/Selene HDTV images are used in this collection to create a new type of lunar atlas. Because of the unique perspective of the images, each plate shows the surface in a manner that makes it visually appealing and scientifically understandable.

Motomaro Shirao was a member of the Kaguya HDTV team and selected the targets for imaging. Charles Wood, an expert on lunar science and history, describes the pictures with text as informative as the images are beautiful.

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M. Shirao, Tokyo, Japan; C.A. Wood, Wheeling Jesuit University, Wheeling, WV, USA
The Kaguya Lunar Atlas
The Moon in High Resolution
2011. X, 174 p. 133 illus., 7 in color. Hardcover
€39,95, $39.95, £35.99
ISBN 978-1-4419-7284-2


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