ALPO/BAA/UNIVERSITY OF ABERYSTWYTH
PROJECT FOR THE
VERIFICATION/ELIMINATION OF PAST
TRANSIENT LUNAR PHENOMENA REPORTS
SUMMARY
There exist nearly three thousand observational
Earth-based reports, made by amateur and professional astronomers,
that suggest that the Moon is slightly geologically active. This is at
odds with scientific evidence in the rocks brought back from the Moon and from
the lunar atmosphere sampling instruments left behind by the Apollo astronauts.
We do however now know that a few of the Transient Lunar Phenomena (TLP) seen
may have been real effects for example some of the brief flashes of light seen
might have been impact flashes. However brightening, obscurations of underlying
detail and colours seen are more enigmatic. Nevertheless some theories have
been suggested which might explain some of these e.g. electrostatic dust
levitation and outgassing. Unfortunately a lot of the
past TLP reports are simple misinterpretations of the lunar surface by
observers unsure what the normal appearance looks like at a given lunar phase
or libration. Sometimes terrestrial atmospheric effects have blurred and
distorted views of the surface of the Moon again giving the false impression
that a TLP was occurring. In order to establish which of these two thousand
past reports may have been genuine, and which could have been
misinterpretations, we are encouraging amateur astronomers to re observe the
Moon at the same illumination, and if possible libration, to match those for
these past TLP observations so that we can establish what the normal appearance
should have been like. High resolution CCD images (monochrome or colour) are exceedingly helpful because we can use these to
simulate poor seeing, atmospheric scattering and spectral dispersion. However
quality sketches and even visual descriptions of what observers see are also
very helpful. Observations can be forwarded to me at the email address below.
As time goes by we will gradually remove the less
reliable TLP reports from our list and re-adjust the observational weights of
some of the others. It is planned to publish reports on those past TLPs that we
have managed to eliminate and acknowledge observers who have contributed to the
de-selection process. Your contribution is therefore very valuable to this
scientific process. In order to help observers plan when to look at the Moon,
below are details of possible observing times for various locations in the
world where there may be active amateur astronomers if you are not on this
list and wish to participate then please let me know.
In addition, if you are interested in contributing
scientifically useful observations to this project, during live TLP events, a
twitter service is available on: http://twitter.com/lunarnaut that will
hopefully alert you shortly after I learn about a TLP being observed. Note that
this is a restricted service intended for use by skilled amateur astronomers
and you will need a Twitter account to be able to request receiving these
Tweets.
REPEAT ILLUMINATION ONLY OR
ILLUMINATION/LIBRATION
The following are a set of dates and
UT times under which you will have the chance to observe various lunar craters
under identical illumination (to within +/-0.5 deg), or identical illumination
& libration (to within +/- 1 deg), conditions to what they appeared as
during past TLP (Transient Lunar Phenomena) events. The objective of observing
such features at these dates and times is to gain a detailed set of
observations of the normal appearance of these features from which we may
judge critically past TLP reports. This will help greatly to eliminate many of
these TLPs from the 1978 NASA catalog for which simple tricks of lighting were
to blame. It will then allow us to identify a core set of reliable observations
whose origin may be due to transient, natural surface processes on the Moon,
for example meteorite impact flashes, outgassing of
radiogenic gases such as Radon or Argon, electrostatic levitated dust particle
clouds etc.
Suggested date/times for observing impact flashes on te Moon are included. For more information on observing impact flashes on the Moon see .http://alpo-astronomy.org/lunar/lunimpacts.html
Sometimes weights are incorporated into the descriptions of the TLPs. Two systems are used, the one from the 1978 Cameron catalog of TLP (and the 2006 extension catalog), and a revised set of weights from the ALPO/BAA catalog of TLP. The latter is constantly being revised as observations are received. In some descriptions the Cameron 1978 catalog is referred to as the NASA Catalog.
Cameron
TLP Scale:
------------------
0 =
non-TLP or inexperienced observer
1 =
some merit
2 =
poor information or non-independent observation
3 =
good observer
4 =
very experienced observer
5 =
confirmed or recorded TLP
ALPO/BAA
scale:
---------------
0 =
a non TLP i.e. proven that this is a normal appearance
1 =
probably a non-TLP - but cannot be ruled out often an observation will be
assigned a provisional weight of 1 until proven otherwise
2 =
good from an in-experienced observer - so might be real
3 =
observation from an experienced observer - so probably real
4 =
confirmed report by more than 1 observer (at least one experienced)
5 = definitive unambiguous
documented evidence
Dr Tony Cook
The
information provided on this and other pages by me, Tony Cook (a t
c @ a b e r . a c . u k), is under my own
personal responsibility and not that of Aberystwyth
University. Similarly, any opinions expressed are my own and are in no way to
be taken as those of A.U.
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