Herodotus 1950 Mar 30 UT 19:00? Observed by Wilkins (Kent,
UK, 15" reflector) "Transient c.p. (similar phen. to
Bartlett's in later yrs.? see #532). NASA catalog weight=4
(good). NASA catalog ID #523. ALPO/BAA weight=3.
Herodotus 1956 Nov 15 UT 01:05-01:30 Observed by Bartlett
(Baltimore, MD, USA, 3.5" reflector x100) "Pseudo c.p. clearly
seen est. I=5.5, wratten filters showed it neutral to green,
red, & yellow, but duller in blue. Floor est. 2deg, distinctly
olive-green. Precise time at 0117 at col. 55.27deg" NASA catalog
weight=4. NASA catalog ID #655. ALPO/BAA weight=3.
Herodotus 2022 Nov 06 UT 00:05-00:38 A. Anunziato (Parna,
Argentina - 105mm Meade EX 105, x154). Glimpsed an elongated
light patch on the floor, slightly east of the centre of the
floor. Observer was a bit uncertain if this was a genuine
observation, or a biased observation – based upon the written
account in the repeat illumination predictions. Detailed
sketch made. Anyway, seeing detail on the floor of Herodotus
was at the limit of his telescope. We shall therefore assign
an ALPO/BAA weight of 1.
Aristarchus area 1967 Apr 21 UT 19:00-21:20 Observed by
Darnella (Copenhagen, Denmark, 3.5" refractor, S=1-2),
Farrant (Cambridge, England, 8" reflector, x160), Corralitos
Observatory (Organ Pass, NM, USA, 24" reflector with
Moonblink) "On exterior wall of Aris., 3 pts. in Cobra Head &
banks of valley were star-like & glowing; & Herod. were red.
Farrant could not bring hill N. of Herod. into focus. He says
color was deep red-orange & steady for 3 min. Started at
1915h (1916-1925h seeing was too bad) (indep. confirm.).
Suspected next nite but bad seeing. Not confirmed by
Corralitos MB." NASA catalog weight=5. NASA catalog ID #1030.
ALPO/BAA weight=4.
Herodotus 1966 Nov 24 UT 21:50 H.Hill (UK, 7.25" reflector,
x240), seeing 4-6/10, transparancy 4/5) sketched a central white
diffuse patch inside the floor of the crater, with a size of
about 1/7th the diameter of the crater. The eastern edge of the
white patch was encroached by the shadow of the eastern rim.
ALPO/BAA weight=3.
On 1993 Jun 02 at Ut 04:30-05:45 S. Beaumont (Cambridge, UK) saw that
the shadow of the Cobra's Head in Schroter's Valley was lighter and
more diffuse seen at user defined locations of C or B rim (these were
black versus medium gray for Cobra's Head). The TLP had vanished by
05:45UT. The Cameron 2006 catalog ID=462 and weight=3. The ALPO/BAA
weight=1 because the date or time is wrong.
On 1984 Nov 05 at UT18:00 Marshall (England) noted that there was no
normal brightening on the floor just next to the southern most
craterlet. The Cameron 2006 catalog ID=251 and the weight=2. The
ALPO/BAA weight=1.
Aristarchus and Cobra Head 1966 Oct 27 UTC 02:30-03:00 Observed by
Delano (New Bedford, Massachusetts, USA, 12.5" reflector, x360) and
Corralitos Observatory (Organ Pass, NM, USA, 24" reflector, Moonblink).
"C.p. of Aris. noticeably less bright thro blue filter but very bright
thru red & no filter. Shadow of c.p. faint & grayish whereas wall shad.
were normal black. (confirm. of Gordon, even tho 2h later?). Sketch.
C.p. rated 10deg in red & no filter, & 8deg in blue. Other features
rated same in all 3. Cobra Head had 2 red patches. Sketches. Not
confirmed by Corralitos MB." NASA catalog weight=5. NASA catalog ID
989.
On 1985 May 02 at UT 20:20-20:38 J.D. Cook (Frimley, UK) noted at 20:20
found the south rim (and just outside) to be blurred in appearence and
there was also a hazy shadow inside the crater. M.C. Cook found a
"break in clarity in break on S wall". Miles (UK) also found the south
wall blurred in appearance and Foley (Kent, UK) noted that the area was
featureless and the 2 craters positions at 1 o'clock high up on the
inner wall were obscured", although just north of these was sharp
detail. Foley also recorded that the shadow on the east wall was
opaque"and that thye inside of Aristarchus was slate/blue in colour and
dull, however by 20:28 the crater had brightened by 0.4 steps on
Foley's CED device and the missing craterlets were visible again. Jean
(Canada, 4" refractor) observed a rose colour intermittently (UT 1948-
20:58) - however Cameron suspects that this is chromatic aberation.
The Cameron 2006 catalog ID=269 and the weight=5. The ALPO/BAA
weight=3.
On 1995 Oct 06/07 at UT 22:45-00:00 P. Mirteto (a UAI
observer, RI, Italy, 20cm reflector) observed some brightness
changes in Herodotus. Please note that this description is a
summary of the material on the UAI web site. The ALPO/BAA
weight=2.
On 1995 Oct 06/07 at UT 23:05-00:00 P. Mirteto (a UAI observer, RI,
Italy, 20cm reflector) observed some brightness changes in Prinz.
Please note that this description is a summary of the material on the
UAI web site. The ALPO/BAA weight=2.
Aristarchus, Herodotus 1963 Dec 28 UTC 15:55-16:26 Observered by Yamada
et al, (Hiroshima, Japan, 10" reflector, x278) "Red area, spreading to
Herod., a perculiar obscuring gray area on N. edge of glow. Drawing.
(confirm. of Olivarez? with activit > 1/2 day?)."NASA catalog weight=5
(very high). NASA catalog ID #789.
Aristarchus, Herodotus 1963 Dec 28 UTC 15:55-16:26 Observered by Yamada
et al, (Hiroshima, Japan, 10" reflector, x278) "Red area, spreading to
Herod., a perculiar obscuring gray area on N. edge of glow. Drawing.
(confirm. of Olivarez? with activit > 1/2 day?)."NASA catalog weight=5
(very high). NASA catalog ID #789. ALPO/BAA weight=4.
Aristarchus, Cobras Head 1966 Oct 27 UTC 02:30-03:00 Observed by Delano
(new Bedford, Massachusetts, USA, 12.5" reflector x360) and Corralitos
Observatory (Organ Pass, NM, USA, 24" reflector & Moonblink) "C.p. of
Aris. noticeably less bright thro blue filter but very bright thru red
& no filter. Shadow of C.p. faint & grayish whereas wall shad. were
normal black, (confirm. of Gordon, even tho 2h later?). Sketch of C.p.
rated at 10deg in red & no filter, & 8deg in blue. Other features rated
same in all 3. Cobra Head had 2 red patches. Sketches. Not confirm. by
Corralitos MB". NASA catalog weight=5 (very high). NASA catalog ID 989.
On 1983 Dec 17 at UT 17:25-19:20 Moseley (Covington, England, UK, x120
and x240, seeing=III and spurious colour present) found that the inside
of Aristarchus crater was dull and slightly blue. Suspected the colour
to be spurious: at 19:20 at x240 the colour was pink but at x120 there
was no colour. Cameron 2006 catalof ID=234 and weight=3. ALPO/BAA
weight=2.
On 1977 Apr 01 at UT 20:40-21:10 D.Sims (Devon Valley, Dawlish, Devon,
UK, 25.4cm reflector, Wratten 25 and 44a filters, x300, seeing II)
found Schroter's valley clearer in red than in blue. No colour filter
reactions seen on other features. This is a BAA Lunar Section
observation. ALPO/BAA weight=2.
On 1915 Jul 24 at UT 22:00? Barabashovihi (Russia) observed a TLP on
the west limb: "When phi Strettsa (?) approached the edge but still
separated, the star began to stretch in a belt 3X its own length & then
instantly disappeared. Probably no significant atm. or vapors. (similar
to other reports of fading occult. Gives limb as E. but that is in ast.
convention)". The 1978 Cameon catalog ID= 357 and weight=2. The
ALPO/BAA weight=1.
Oenopides-Selecucus 1951 Aug 15 UT 13:11 T,Osawa (Japan)
observed a brownish tinge to the terminator region in the
vicinity of these two craters. ALPO/BAA weight=1,
On 1960 Sep 04 at UT00:00? Miranova (Russia or Israel) observed a TLP
at an unnamed lunar feature: "Spectral photom. of some lunar obj. in
4250, > 5000A bands. Spectral plates". Cameron suspects luminescence?
The Cameron 1978 catalog ID=730 and weight=5. The ALPO/BAA weight=1.
Aristarchus 1975 May 23 P.W. Foley (Wilmington, UK, 12"
reflector, x200, x360, x624, atmospheric clarity good, seeing
III from 20:15-22:30, but the clouded out at 22:30, and from
23:15-01:15 seeing was IV-V with poor transparency) observed
(22:20-20:45 UT) variation in the SE corner of the
Aristarchus, namely the usual dark bands were alternating
light to dark, not in keeping with otyher crater features.
This effect was not linked to atmospheric turbulence. Also
projected image of bands beyond the crater W. wall were
repeatedly noted. The observer broke away from observing at
20:45UT to make a telephonealert call. At 20:55UT they noted
that the area between Vallis Schroteri and Herodotus seemed
very light/bright, also the E. exterior of the crater wall of
Herodotus. From 21:01-21:11 A slight blueness was seen to
extend from the NE corner of Aristarchus, along the exterior
rim, acrossand beyond Herodotus to the SW. A tgorough search
was made of many bright areas, both near the terminator and to
the E., but no blueness could be detected elsewhere. A slight
orange hue was noted along the E. limb of theMoon (Spurious
colour). From 21:18;22:30 Aristarchus seemed normal again, and
likewise the head of Vallis Schoteri too. The observer was
clouded out from 22:30-23:15and from 23:15-01:30 the seeing
was so appaling that no colour or projection of the bands
could be seen. A Moon Blink was used during the session, but
no colour was detected in this? Another observer, R.W. Rose
(Devon, UK) observed 21:20-21:30 but had IV seeing, and saw
nothing unusual, but commented that if TLP wactivity had been
taking place, then they would probably not have seen it. The
ALPO/BAA weight=1.
Aristarchus-herodotus 1967 Apr 22 UT 20:20 Observed by Schobel
(Hirschfelde, Germany, 5"? refractor) "Interference filter.
(indep. confirm. of Darnella?)" NASA catalog weight=5. NASA
catalog ID #1032. ALPO/BAA weight=2.
Aristarchus 1967 Apr 22 UT 21:00? Observed by Classen
(Pulsnitz Obs., E. Germany) & by Corralitos Observatory (Organ
Pass, New Mexicoo, 24" reflector+Moonblink). "Crater was so
bright it could be seen with the naked eye (indep. confirm. of
Darnella & Schobel of activity here?). Corralitos M.B. did not
confirm." NASA catalog weight=3. NASA catalog ID #1034.
ALPO/BAA weight=3.
On 1964 Jun 23 at UT 04:45-05:05 Bartlett (Baltimore, MD, USA, 5"
reflector, x180, S=4-1 and T=3) observed a blue-violet glare on the
north east rim and a strong violet tinge in the nimbus. The effect was
absent 1 hour earlier. The Cameron 1978 catalog ID=821 and weight=4.
The ALPO/BAA weight=2.
Aristarchus, Schroter's Valley, Herodotus 1967 Apr 22 UT
21:45 Observed by Darnella (Copenhagen, Danemark, 3.5"
refractor) & Coralitos Observatory (Organ Pass, New Mexico,
USA (24" reflector + Moonblink). "Red pts. suspected in same
areas as in #1030, but seeing was bad. (confirm by Schobel?).
Corralitos MB did not confirm" NASA catalog weight=5. NASA
catalog ID #1033. ALPO/BAA weight=2.
Colour seen between Aristarchus and Herodotus by P. Moore
and G. North. ALPO/BAA weight=3.
Aristarchus 1968 Apr 11 UTC 22:00? Observed by Farrant (Cambridge,
England, 8" reflector, Seeing Antonidi I (very good)) "Crater had on NE
(ast. ?) wall a very pale blue color & opposite wall a pale red. No
other crater showed color. (similar to #1056)." NASA catalog weight=3
(average). NASA catalog ID #1067.
Gassendi 1973 Dec 08 UT 20:20-20:22 observed by J-H Robinson
(Devon, UK, seeing dair to poor). Suspected blink detected -
might have been due to atmospheric condtions?. ALPO/BAA weight=1.
On 1985 May 03 at UT 1959-2330 M.C. Cook (Frimley, UK) and M. Mobberley
(Suffolk, UK) both detected a large very bright region on the eastern
exterior. The Cameron 2006 catalog ID=269 and he weight=5. The ALPO/BAA
weight=1.
Plato 1788 Dec 11 UT 22:00. Bright point seen on the dark part
by observers in Mannheim. Cameron 1978 catalog ID is 38 and
the weight assigned is 5. ALPO/BAA weight=1.
On 1988 Apr 01 atUT01:15-03:20 H.Hill (Lancaster, UK, 10" reflector,
x286) observed that east of Lichtenberg were ëxtensive rosy areas"
around the northern edge of the lava sheet. Hill believes that it may
have been the same effect as seen by Madler (Germany), Barcroft (USA)
and Baum's (UK) 1951 observation. The colour was "ünmistakable" and
nothing to do with the atmospheric spurious colour. Other features were
checked. the cameron 2006 catalog ID=322 and the weight=3. THe ALPO/BAA
weight=2.
On 1977 Apr 02 at UT22:00-00:00 L. Fitton (Shaw, Lancashire, UK, 8.5"
reflector, x200, Wratten 25 and 44A filters, seeing II-III,
transparency, good) noticed in Aristarchus, blue to the north west
(IAU?) internal wall, also blue observed in other small bright objects
against dark backgrounds. Lunar rotational axis and optical normal
related such that the normal runs NW-SE (IAU?) through these features.
Observer deduced that the coliur was obviously spurious and no blink
was seen in any feature. The blue disappeared as the lunar altitude
increased and no blue seen by 00:00UT. This is a BAA lunar section
observation. The ALPO/BAA weight=1.
Moretus? 1871 Dec 25 UTC 22:00? Observed by Webb? (England?, 9"
reflector?) "Internal twilight in crater #132- a large circular crater
nr. S.pole (crater #132 on Goodacre's map is Plato. Webb's map?)" NASA
catalog weight=3 (average). NASA catalog ID #173.
On 1892 May 10th at 19:00UT? Pickering, based at Arequipa. Peru, using
a 12" reflector, saw varitions in vapor col. Drawings were made. Time
calculated from the given colongitude. Cameron 1978 catalog ID= and
weight=3. ALPO/BAA weight=2.
On 1992 Jan 18 at UT 22:34-23:48 A.C. Cook (Frimley, UK, 8" reflector,
seeing=III) was able to see 4 craterlets and two rays on the floor of
Plato. This was suprising because Moore, using a larger telescope and
magnification, was unable to see any detail here on 1991 Dec 12th at
02:10 - according to Cameron. The Cameron 2006 catalog ID=438 and the
weight=2. The ALPO/BAA weight=1.
On 1960 Sep 04 at UT00:00? Miranova (Russia or Israel) observed a TLP
at an unnamed lunar feature: "Spectral photom. of some lunar obj. in
4250, > 5000A bands. Spectral plates". Cameron suspects luminescence?
The Cameron 1978 catalog ID=730 and weight=5. The ALPO/BAA weight=1.
Riccioli 1974 Jan 07 UT 16:30-17:00 Observed by McKay (South Downs,
England, 3" refractor, x135, S=IV boiling) "Bright spot and dark patch
changing in size (atmos. aberr. ?)" NASA catalog weight=1 (very low).
NASA catalog ID #1385.
During an eclipse of the Moon the crater appeared normal until it
emerged from the shadow. In the north east the dark floor was
not its normal hue and two light areas appeared to join. The
emerging patches became less and less bright, finally disappearing
at 0345 UT when the crater returned to normal. Cameron 2006 catalog
extension ID=10 and weight=2. ALPO/BAA weight=2.
1969 Aug 26 UT 22:15-23:30 Observer: Whippey (Middlesex, UK,
6" reflector x177) "Small dark spot in oval whitish patch
typoical under high sun for it." NASA catalog weight=2. NASA
catalog ID #1200. ALPO/BAA weight=1.
Plato 1969 Aug 26 UTC 22:15-23:30 Observed by Whippey "Plato's
defuse white patch in center flanked by two radial diffused
bands diverging to S. wall. Later E. band disappeared under
better seeing. NASA catalog weight=2. ALPO/BAA weight=1."
1963Dec29/30 UT 22:00-03:00. Doherty (Small Thorne, UK) 8.5"
reflector, x110, x200 & x274, S=8-8.5, T=8, Moon 57 deg in alt)
and 3 others, using the same instrument, saw a bright purple-
blue patch in Aristarchus. Other areas checked for colour and
none sen elsewhere. Attempts were made to contact observers
elsewhere but with no success. Sketch made and shows the patch
covering the floor area of Aristarchus and extending out beyond
the east rim. Patch was elliptical in shape and the semi-major
diameter was approximately 2/3rds of the diameter of
Aristarchus, or about 27 km. The event lasted 5 hours and
gradually faded. NASA catalog weight=5 (very high quality)".
ALPO/BAA weight=4.
Madler 2005 Oct 17 UT 04:14-05:28 Observed by Robin Gray (Winnemucca,
NV, USA, 152mm refractor, x228, x343, S=5-8 and T=5-6) "Very bright
pinpoint spot seen towards end of observing period on east crater wall,
lasting 1 min in duration. Brighter than other spots, possibly 8.5-9 on
the Elger scale. The spot was not seen earlier during the long
observing session." An ALPO report. The ALPO/BAA weight=3.
Aristarchus 1966 Jun 03 UT 01:00-01:45 Observed by Gordon (2), Delano
(Ackerman, PR?, 5" reflector / Massachussets, 3" (x92) & 10" reflector
T=4) "Deep blue color on N. wall. S.part of crater was brownish, (not
on alert). Delano saw E.wall bright spot unusually bright, confirm, ?"
NASA catalog weight=5. NASA catalog ID #947. ALPO/BAA weight=3.
On 1984 ??? ?? at UT11:00-12:00 Jean Nicolini (Campinas, Brazil)
saw a daylight TLP in Aristarchus crater. The ALPO/BAA weight=1.
Red streak seen on floor of Plato during an eclipse. The
Cameron 1978 catalog assigns a TLP ID of 14 and a weight of 1.
The ALPO/BAA catalog assigns a weight of 1 too.
Bright spot (4th magnitude) seen on eclipsed Moon
and glimmering specks. Seen by nephew and neice of Beccaria.
Cameron 1978 catalog weight=4. ALPO/BAA catalog weight=2.
On 1898 Jul 03 at UT 21:35 Moye (France) noted that 30 minutes after
mid eclpise, Proclus shone with a reddish light in shadow. The Cameron
1978 catalog ID=301 and the weight=2. The ALPO/BAA weight=2.
On 1910 Nov 16/17 UT 22:50-00:10 Albright (Edge(b?)aston, England, UK)
observed in Stofler crater "A luminous pt. on Moon dur. ecl. (mid-ecl
0025) Others saw a meteor on moon from widely seperated places". The
Cameron 1978 catalog ID=333 and the weight=3. The ALPO/BAA weight=3.
Pico B 1912 Sep 26 UT 03:00 Observed by Pickering (Mandeville,
Jamaca, 6.5" reflector) "Haze spreading from eastern end of
crater. (MBMW gives 9/25/12 but it is 26th UT.)" NASA
catalogue weight=2. NASA catalogue ID #341. ALPO/BAA weight=2.
Eratosthenes 1949 Oct 07 UT 04:14-05:22 W.Haas (USA) and O'Toole
(USA) observed some changes in intensity of features inside this
crater - after a lunar umbral passage. The effect lessened over
time. Comparisons had been made with measured intensities on the
previous and subsequent nights and on other months around the
time of Full Moon. The ALPO/BAA weight=1.
On 1970 Aug 17 at UT 02:40 Pedler (England) noted that the
shadow flowed around instead of over Plato. Wondered if shadow
matched the gray of the crater. Within minutes the shadow line
looked normal again. At 04:41UT Claudio Pamplona (Brazil) saw a
pulsation in Plato during a lunar eclipse. He thought that this
was due to falling temperatures. The Cameron 1978 catalog ID=
1274 and the weight=0. The ALPO/BAA weight=1.
On 1982 Dec 30 at UT10:09-10:58 D. Darling (Sun Praire, WI, USA, 12.5"
reflector, x342, S=9/10) found that when the umbra of the eclipse
shadow transitted across Aristrachus, the crater was a bright blue -
this effect lasted until 10:14UT. Flashes/flickers (~0.1 sec duration)
were seen at 10:15UT. He saw another flash at 10:24UT. Another
observer, Harris (Sun Praire, WI, USA, 6" reflector, S=9/10) saw
flashes at 10:18 (9 or 10 magnitude) - he saw another 2 flashes at
10:34 - though the Cameron catalog does not state where on the Moon -
Aristarchus??. The Cameron 2006 catalog ID=194 and weight=5. The
ALPO/BAA weight=3.
On 1982 Dec 30 at UT 10:09-10:58 D. Darling (Sun Praire, WI, USA,
12.5" reflector, x342, seeing=9/10), during a total lunar eclipse,
found that Romer had a faint blue glow to it. The Cameron 2006 catalog
ID=194 and weight=5. The ALPO/BAA weight=3.
On 1877 Aug 23/24 at UT 23:10-01:00 Airy, Pratt and Capron (Greenwich,
England, France) observed during a lunar eclipse an unusual spectrum
with strong absorption in yellow. (Airy) 2 patches of crimson light of
short duration. Cameron says that this is a confirmation observation
and that Airy was the Astronomer Royal. The cameron 1978 catalog ID=197
and weight=5. The ALPO/BAA weight=4.
On 1964 Dec 19 at UT 01:55 A.R.Taylor (London, UK) suspected
a brief pinpoint of light near Janssen (unconfirmed). The
ALPO/BAA weight=1.
On 1964 Dec 19 at UT 03:28-04:28 Sunduleak and Stock (Cerro-Tololo,
Chile, 16" reflector) using photoelectric photometry during a lunar
eclipse, observed on the northern edge of Mare Numbium, and south of
Copernicus (20W, 0N), a strong anomalous enhancement of radiation
(confirmation according to Cameron). On 1964 Dec 19 at UT 02:35 S.J.
Hill et al (Kitt Peak??) observed during a lunar eclipse an anomolous
bright area (location not given). Cameron says that this is an
independent confirmation of Sanduleak and Stock's TLP report. The
Cameron 1978 catalog ID=868 and 569 and weight=5. The ALPO/BAA
weight=4.
Aristarchus 1956 Nov 17/18 UT 23:30-00:30 Observed by
Argentiere et al. (Itatiba City, Brazil, 20, 10 and 6 cm
reflectors) Crater may have been brighter than expected(?)
during a lunar eclipse. NASA catalog weight=3. NASA catalog ID
#658. ALPO/BAA weight=1.
Byrgius 1956 Nov 17/18 UT 23:30-00:30 Observed by Argentiere
et al. (Itatiba City, Brazil, 20, 10 and 6 cm reflectors)
Crater may have been brighter than expected(?) during a
lunar eclipse. NASA catalog weight=3. NASA catalog ID #658.
ALPO/BAA weight=1.
Kepler 1956 Nov 17/18 UT 23:30-00:30 Observed by Argentiere et
al. (France?) "Crater was extra-ordinarily bright". NASA catalog
weight=3 and catalog ID #658. ALPO/BAA weight=2.
Manilius 1956 Nov 17/18 UT 23:30-00:30 Observed by Argentiere
et al. (Itatiba City, Brazil, 20, 10 and 6 cm reflectors)
Crater may have been brighter than expected(?) during a
lunar eclipse. NASA catalog weight=3. NASA catalog ID #658.
ALPO/BAA weight=1.
Proclus 1956 Nov 17/18 UT 23:30-00:30 Observed by Argentiere
et al. (Itatiba City, Brazil, 20, 10 and 6 cm reflectors)
Crater may have been brighter than expected(?) during a
lunar eclipse. NASA catalog weight=3. NASA catalog ID #658.
ALPO/BAA weight=1.
Tycho 1956 Nov 17/18 UTC 23:30-00:30 Observed by Argentiere et al.
(France?) "Crater was extra-ordinarily bright". NASA catalog weight=3
(average). NASA catalog ID #658.
On 1919 Nov 27 at UT 23:00-01:00 Fock (Germany) observed in the
vicinity of Tycho, during an eclipse (mid eclipse at 23:56UT) a long
ray in the direction of Longomontanus that remained visible. It was
glowing in weak gray-green colour for the whole of the eclipse. The
Cameron 1978 catalog ID=373 and weight=2. The ALPO/BAA weight=1.
On 1956 Nov 18 at UT 00:00? an unknown observer (Cameron gives an AGU
meeting reference) apparently saw a TLP in Aristarchus crater. The
Cameron 1978 catalog ID=657 and weight=0. The ALPO/BAA weight=1.
On 1964 Dec 19 at UT 03:13-03:14 Budine and Farrell (Binghamton, New
York, USA, 4" refractor, x200, S=7, T=5) observed that Aristarchus
brightened five times over 1 minute during a lunar eclipse. The cameron
1978 catalog ID=870 and weight=5. The ALPO/BAA weight=3.
On 1964 Jun 25 at UT ~01:07 Titulaer (Utrecht, the
Netherlands) observed that Aristarchus crater was very bright
during an eclipse. The Cameron 1978 catalog ID=822 and weight=4.
The ALPO/BAA weight=1.
In 1950 Apr 02 at UT 20:00 Chernov (Russia) observed two dark spots in
Atlas during a penumbral phase of a lunar eclipse to quickly darken and
become sharp in detail. The cameron 1978 catalog ID=524 and weight=1.
The ALPO/BAA weight=1.
On 1960 Sep 04 at UT00:00? Miranova (Russia or Israel) observed a TLP
at an unnamed lunar feature: "Spectral photom. of some lunar obj. in
4250, > 5000A bands. Spectral plates". Cameron suspects luminescence?
The Cameron 1978 catalog ID=730 and weight=5. The ALPO/BAA weight=1.
On 1905 at Feb 19 at UT 18:00-19:03 Moye (Montpelier, France) observed
Aristarchus shining as a star in the dark, during a lunar eclipse. The
Cameron 1978 catalog ID=320 and he weight=3. The ALPO/BAA weight=3. The
ALPO/BAA weight=2.
On 1968 Apr 13 at UT05:00-05:45 Cameron and Laczo (Greenbelt, MD, USA,
6" refractor, x50, 36" reflector x400, 12" reflector x80, seeing=
excellent) observed for the folliwing craters: Aristarchus, Pytheas,
Euler?, Censorinus, Plinius?, Proclus, Menelaus, Manilius: "Star-like
pts. in the craters. Only Aris. identified certainly, rest fairly
certain except Euler & Plinius. Seen in 6-in refr. at 50x but not in
36-in refl. at 400x where they were bright, but not star-lie pts. Seen
later in 12-in refl. at 80x. In another bldg. Seen 1st @ 1/2h before
totality ended, but not earlier dur. tot. tho't by author (WSC) to be
geom. & instrumental = power effect". Chilton, K.E. reports in RASCJ
that another observer did not report any of what the Greenbelt observers
saw at all?The Cameron 1978 catalog ID=1065 and weight=4. The
ALPO/BAA weight=1.
On 1892 May 11 at 22:53UT an Unknown observer, during a partial eclipse
noticed an extension of the Earth;s shadow beyond the north cusp.
Cameron 1978 catalog ID=278 and weight=0. ALPO/BAA weight=1.
On 1892 May 11 at 22:53UT an Unknown observer, during a partial eclipse
noticed an extension of the Earth's shadow beyond the south cusp.
Cameron 1978 catalog ID=278 and weight=0. ALPO/BAA weight=1.
On 1975 Nov 18 at UT 19:38-23:34 Moore (Johannesburg, South Africa, 2"
refractor, S=II), Peters (Kent, UK, 8.5" reflector, x120, S=IV), Good
(Guilford, UK, binoculars), Foley (Dartford, Kent, UK, 12" reflector
and photographs), and McKay (Kingston, England, UK, 6" reflector, x48)
observed the following in Aristarchus during a lunar eclipse: "It
appeared much fainter than ever before seen in ecl. by Moore. Fainter
than Proc., Cop., & Tycho. Others rated brightness in order-- Hell,
Stevinus, Furnerius, proc.; & Proc., Tycho, Hell, Aris. Photos
confirmed dimness of it. For some observers it became invis. at S=II
(good). Good ranked at least 4 other craters brighter than Aris. & that
at 2035h it dimmed. Earthshine cond. extraordinarily good. Peters, at
S=IV (fair?) rated Aris. brightest". At 23:50UT LeCroy Jr and Sr
(Springfield, VA, 4.5" reflector, S=7) observed four glowing spots on
the Moon during a lunar eclipse (including Aristarchus). At 23:50UT
Aristarchus was an oval shape with no details seen. It had a ray
extending from the south west rim (normal). The north rim was slightly
blue and the south west rim very very slightly red. At 23:55UT it was
clearing and details showed. At 00:02UT it was clear. Sketches were
provided. Cameron comments that the colours fit Fitton's predictions on
spectral dispersion in our atmosphere from atmospheric inversions. The
brightness measued was 10+ and normal should be 9, and the plain is
4.5. The Moon's altitude at the LeCroy site was 45 deg. The Cameron
1978 catalog ID=1418-1420 and weight=5 (1-0 for LeCroy report). The
ALPO/BAA weight=3.
On 1959 Mar 24 at UT 1851 Chernov (Russia) observed the follwing in
Oceanus Procellarum during a lunar eclipse: "During penumbra of ecl.
separate light pts. were sharply g?listing?. Possibly connected with
transparancy of the penumbra. (time given was 0851 UT but must have
been loc. time p.m. penum. phase started at 1756UT & umbral at
1916UT)". The cameron 1978 catalog ID=717 and weight=2. The ALPO/BAA
weight=1.
On 1989 Aug 17 at UT 01:02-04:20 G. Kolvos (Thesaloniki, Greece,
4"reflector) measured (using photometry) that although there was a
gradual fade over the Moon as the eclipse progressed, there was a 2"%
rise in brightness of Aristarchus.Graphs were submitted and photos.
A.C. Cook supplied CCD images and CCD photometry. A photograph by
Conway (Sun Prarie, WI, USA) at the start of the eclipse reveal a
bright colourless spot (aparently confirmed). The Cameron 2006 catalog
ID=373 and weight=5. The ALPO/BAA weight=2.
On 1898 Jan 08 at UT 00:00-01:00 Chrevremont (France?) notcied that
during a lunar eclipse, the mid-eclipse shadow was so dark that details
of the surface disappeared, all except for the Tycho SSW ray . Cameron
comments that it is unsual for that ray to remain when usually the ones
towards Kepler and Aristarchus are the ones to stand out? The Cameron
1978 catalog ID=297 and the weight=0. The ALPO/BAA weight=1.
Aristarchus 1974 Jan 08/09 UT i18:15-00:00 Observed by
Billington (England), Robinson (Devon, England), Amery (REading,
England), Moore (Selsey, England) "Orange & viol. hue in crater
seen by Billington. Robinson, Amery & Moore reported neg. blink
results at this time. (Prob. chrom. aberr., Moore concurs)."
NASA catalog weight=0. NASA catalog ID #1386. ALPO/BAA weight=1.
On 1979 Mar 13 (UT not given) an unknown observer (UK?) during a
partial lunar eclipse observed an anomolous brightening in the umbra in
the form of a large diamond shape between mare Serenitatis and the
Moon's limb, just shortly after mid eclipse (UT 21:08).
In 1902 Oct 17 at UT 04:35-06:00 Seen by S.J. Johson and also in
another report(s) by Brink, Swift, Wilson () observed a
"Dark band, no color, across center of moon dur. ecl. Copernicus
brighter than Tycho. Aristarchus brightest of all. Drawing by Brink &
Wilson at 1725(=0525UT)(Confirm. -- time given=16th at 1635-1800 = 17th
at 0435-0600 on present UT system". The Cameron 1978 vatalog ID=314 and
weight=5. The ALPO/BAA weight=3.
In 1935 Jul 16 at UT 05:01 deWitt (Nashville, Tennessee, USA, 12"
reflector) "Photos in lunar ecl. indicate a probable fading of Grim.
floor a possible fading of S. tip of Ricc. spot, a possible enlargement
of halo around Linne, a possible, but unlikely darkening of Schick's
dark areas & no effect on Eratosthenes or white spot E. of Webb. Linne
enlargement more pronounced at 1902 ecl. than at any other time. Fading
of Ric. spot was pronounced on May 14, 1938". The Cameron 1978 catalog
ID=413 and weight=5. The ALPO/BAA weight=3.
In 1921 Oct 16 at UT 22:00-00:00 Genin and others (Russia) observed
during a partial eclipse that different parts of Aristarchus crater had
brightness of phosphorecence. Cameron says that this is independent
confirmation. The Cameron 1978 catalog ID=383 and weight=5. The
ALPO/BAA weight=3.
On 1884 Oct 04 at UT 22:00 Bye (Brussels, Belgium) observed
during an eclipse that the peaks were visible as brilliant
points with slight red aureoles during a lunar eclipse.
Cameron says that this was a confirmation of #2443. The
Cameron 1978 catalog ID= and the weight=5.
The ALPO/BAA weight=2.
On 1963 Jul 06 UT 20:35-23:00 during a partial eclipse of the Moon,
some feathery fingers of light were seen in the shadow.
Parsehlan of England? saw Tycho as a 2nd magnitude star during a total
lunar eclipse. The Cameron 1978 catalog ID=244 and weight=5. The
ALPO/BAA weight=3.
On 1971 Aug 06 at UT 20:30 Chernov (Crimea?, Ukraine, Soviet Union)
observed a dark spot in Riccioli that was very dark for 3 minutes,
before coming out of shadow - however the dimensions were normal. This
was during the lunar eclipse. The Cameron 1978 catalog ID=1305 and
weight=3. The ALPO/BAA weight=1.
On 1985 May 05 at UT23:25-23:58 UT P. Moore (Selsey, UK) observed a
yellow tinge on the southern wall of Aristarchus - this was odd because
no colour was seen elsewhere on the Moon. The Cameron 2006 catalog ID=
271 and weight=3. The ALPO/BAA weight=3.
On 1988 Apr 03 at UT02:25-02:30 Culver (Harker Heights, X, USA, Meade
2045 reflector, x40, seeing=turbulent) detected flashes coming from
just north of the centre of Mare Tranquilitatis. Some of these flashes
were of a duration of seconds whilst others were several minutes.
Altogether ~20 flashes were seen, and not in the same place. "5 small
star-like points could be located - and there were lots of craterlets".
The spots were "lined up E-W at N of 10 deg latitude." Colour was not
visible on these nor variations. Apparently the observer had seen this
type of TLP before but had not reported them. The Cameron 2006 catalog
ID=323 and weight=2. the ALPO/BAA weight=2.
On 1956 Nov 19 at UT 00:00? an unknown observer (Cameron gives an AGU
meeting reference) apparently saw a TLP in Aristarchus crater. The
Cameron 1978 catalog ID=657 and weight=0. The ALPO/BAA weight=1.
On 1992 Jan 20/21 at UT 23:49-00:15 M.C. Cook (Frimley, UK, 3" Questar
telescope, x130, seeing=III) managed to see the central craterlet in
Plato and an unnamed one north west of Mons Pico. Cameron comments -
"were this & No. 429 LTP or just good seeing?)." Note it is possible
that she mean LTP 439 in which case it would refer to the previous
nights TLP. The Cameron 2006 catalog ID=439 and the weight=2. The
ALPO/BAA weight=1.
Aristarchus 1970 Feb 22 UTC 07:00? Observed by Thomas, Stump, Corral.
Obs. (Organ Pass, NM, 24" reflector+Moonblink) "Bluing around crater --
vis. in monitor, but not photographable due to clouds." NASA catalog
weight=4 (good). NASA catalog ID #1235.
Proclus 1938 Nov 08 UTC 20:00 Observed by Green (England? Seeing =
good) "2 bright spots in Schmidt & Wilkins' craterlets. Was struck by
whitish aspect of parts of floor -- possibly mists. S.wall concealed by
these strong white patches, as if breached ring." NASA catalog weight=3
(average). NASA catalog ID #443.
Aristarchus & A 1965 Nov 10 UTC 01:25-01:57 Observed by Bartlett
(Baltimore, MD, USA, 4" reflector, S=6, T=6) "Viol. tinge & radiance
around nimbus; used red filter. Aris. A became larger." NASA catalog
weight=4 (high). NASA catalog ID #913.
On 1989 Feb 22 at UT03:48-03:58 D. Darling (Sun Praire, WI, USA, 3"
refractor, x56, seeing=4/10 and transparency=4) found that the floor of
Proclus was a "uniform grey" shade and the east wall was bright. The
Cameron 2006 catalog ID=357 and the weight=2. The ALPO/BAA weight=1.
Macrobius 1938 Nov 08 UTC 18:00? Observed by McLeod (England? 5" ?
reflector) "Changes in dark areas. (near Proclus where Green saw
phenomenom. see #443)" NASA catalog weight=2 (low). NASA catalog ID #
444.
Heraclides Point 1948 Oct 19 UTC 22:00 Observed by Moore (England, 12"
reflector?) "Blurred, misty -- La Place was sharp. White diffused
bright spot in S. Iridum close to Heraclides pt." NASA catalog weight=4
(high). NASA catalog ID #512.
Aristarchus 1970 Feb 23 UTC 07:00? Observed by Thomas & Stump
(Corralitos Observatory, Organ PAss, NM, USA, 24" refletor+Moon Blink)
"Bluring around crater -- vis. in monitor, but not photographed due to
clouds." NASA catalog weight=4 (good). NASA catalog ID #1235.
On 1990 Aug 08 at OT 07:47-09:00 UT D. Louderback (South Bend, WA, USA,
3" refractor, x173) "(SS) Piton's all pts were << but nearby plain was
normal. Ridges at 5.3 at B, C, D but 3 alb at B, C, D (norm = 7) but
bearby plain was normal. At A 3, was hazy but ill defined. Parts of mt
brightened but others didn't. Times between brightening were 6-8s.
Similar to seeing fluctuations. In red mt stayed dull & steady. In blue
it blinked." - this is a direct quote from the Cameron 2006 catalog
because it is very difficult to summarize. Louderback comments that the
TLP was still going on at 09:00UT. The Cameron 2006 catalog ID=406 and
the weight=4. The ALPO/BAA weight=3.
On 1990 Aug 08 at UT 07:47-09:00 D. Darling (Sun Praire, WI, USA, 3"
refractor, x173) reported the following TLP in Promontorium Agarum
(Cape Agarum): "W flank of CA >>, even> Proc. interior." The cameron
2006 catalog ID=406 and the weight=4. The ALPO/BAA weight=3.
On 1984 Nov 10 at UT19:15-19:50 R. Moseley (Coventry, UK, the Moon's
altitude was low) noticed that the region from the central peak and
over and onto the east wall looked unusual. 8 bands were visible, "two
on E. wall of c.p. strongest, surrounding collar grey increasing
intensely outward. Band at 2 o'clock position was very dark. Bright
spot on W. wall at 4 o'clock position." A sketch was made that
illustrates bands on either side with bright patch. The Cameron 2006
catalog ID=252 and the weight=2. The ALPO/BAA weight=2.
Posidonius 1849 Feb 11 UT 02:00? Observed by Schmidt (Athens, Greece,
7" refractor) "Bright little crater in it was shadowless. Schroter saw
repeated changes in it & others & once saw this crater's shadow
replaced by a gray veil. Gruithuisen saw the same thing as Schroter in
1821." NASA catalog weight=4 (high). NASA catalog ID #128. ALPO/BAA
weight=3.
On 2002 May 30 at UT02:30-02:44 C. Brook (Plymouth, UK) suspected that
Aristarchus crater looked dimmer than normal. The ALPO/BAA weight=1.
On 1980 Aug 29 at UT07:32 D. Loudernack (South Bend, WA, USA, 8"
reflector, x140) found the south wall to have a broad dark band (only
visible in red light) at its base that covered nearly all of the
southern half of the crater. The brightness reading was 8.4 (in blue
light) and 4 (in red light). Cameron 2006 catalog ID=107 and weight=3.
ALPO/BAA weight=3.
Leibnitz Mountains 1955 May 24 UT 21:30-22:00 Observed by Firsoff
(Somerset, England 6.5" reflector, x240, seeing = very good). "Changing
lights over a period of time, lunar aurora? Beyond cusps were 2 bright
pts. 1 was sparkling and dancing and weaker intensity. Then a faint
beam detached itself & shot up vertically, becoming more intense but
faded at the base. Total length @ 160 km. Endured for > 2 s. Due to
telescope spider or lunar aurora?" NASA catalog weight=4 (good). NASA
catalog ID #593.
On 1981 Jan 09 at UT 00:30-00:45 D. Darling (Sun Praire, WI, USA,
12.5" reflector, seeing=8/10, transparency clear, but Moon low at 7 deg
above the horizon) found that despite Aristarchus being seen to be
bright in Earthshine, it was not as bright as Menelaus and Manilius.
Cameron 2006 catalog ID=121 and weight=1. ALPO/BAA weight=1.
On 1981 Jan 09 at UT 00:30-00:45 D. Darling (Sun Praire, WI, USA,
12.5" reflector, seeing=8/10 and the sky was clear - the Moon was at
7deg altitude though) saw that Manilius outshone Aristarchus - or was
it that Aristarchus was especially faint tonight? Manilius could be
seen even when the illuminated part of the Moon was in the eyepiece.
The Cameron 2006 catalog ID=121 and weight=1. The ALPO/BAA weight=1.
On 1981 Jan 09 at UT 00:30-00:45 D. Darling (Sun Praire, WI, USA,
12.5" reflector, seeing=8/10 and the sky was clear - the Moon was at
7 deg altitude though) saw that Menelaus outshone Aristarchus - or was
it that Aristarchus was especially faint tonight? Menelaus could be
seen even when the illuminated part of the Moon was in the eyepiece.
The Cameron 2006 catalog ID=121 and weight=1. The ALPO/BAA weight=1.
In 1965 Jul 02 at UT 04:20-05:50 Albert and Welch (Azuss, CA, USA, 8"
reflector, x375) and Emanuel (West Covina, CA, USA, 4.5" reflector)
observed 4th magnitude star-like flashes to blotches in Aristarchus, in
ashen light. Cameron says that this is independent confirmation and
also that the date in MBMW is 7/1/65 which is local time + 2nd UT. The
Cameron 1978 catalog ID=881 and weight=3. The ALPO/BAA weight=3.
In 1949 May 02 at UT 03:30-04:00 Barcroft (Madera, CA, USA, 10"
reflector, x96) observed in Aristarchus crater, in Earthshine, a
dull glow -- silvery phosphorescence.This was not visible for 30
min prior. Cameron comments that this is a confirmation of
Wilkins TLP from a few hours earlier? The Cameron 1978 catalog
ID=519 and weight=5. The ALPO/BAA weight=2.
On 1971 Jul 26 at UT 21:40-22:05 daSilva (Paranaiba, Brazil, 13"
refractor, x224, seeing=good and transparency=fair) observed two
brilliant points in Aristarchus - the right one was the more
brilliant of the two. The observer says that this was not a TLP,
but is similar to other reports (Apollo 15 watch). The Cameron
1978 catalog ID=1300 and weight=1. The ALPO/BAA weight=1.
Proclus C region 1985 May 23 UT 17:41 Photographed by Kolovos (observer
from Thessoloniki, Greece, observing site near Bafra Serrain, Greece,
4"refractor, seeing excellent) "Observer took a series of expousres on
a portable scope of the Moon. On one of them a very bright slightly
elliptical spot was seen. Spot was very close to the Proclus C crater.
Upon analysis it was claimed that the spot of light had rotated the
direction of illumination of shadows in adjacent craters - however
subsequent analysis casts doubt on this. Papers on this report
were published in Icarus. Rast and Maley suggested that it was sun
glint off a spinning US ex-military weather satellite that just by
chance came across the field of view of the Moon a few tens of seconds
around the time of the photographed flash. Was this a coincidence or
not? If it were a satellite sun-glint then the satellite would have to
be tumbling incredibly fast in order for the flash to be so sharp in
the photograph - so the satellite explanation is not completely 100%
confirmed." The Cameron 2006 catalog ID=273 and the weight=5. The
ALPO/BAA weight=2.
On 1990 Jun 27 at UT02:17-03:00 D. Darling (Sparta, WI, USA, 3"
refractor, x36) reported that the crater had "Flared up at 0225 as a
point of light then went down" - the effect was fairly brief.
Earthshine was quite clearly seen and all features elsewhere were
normal. The Cameron 2006 catalog ID=405 and the weight=0. The ALPo/BAA
weight=1.
Om 1990 Mar 01 at UT 00:59-02:20 D. Darling (Sun Praire, WI, USA, 3"
refractor, x36) observed that Aristarchus could barely be seen, but at
02:15 UT it brightened by about two times. Note that brightening might
refer to Lambert - it is worded in an ambiguous way in Cameron's
catalog). The Cameron 2006 catalog ID=392 and weight=0. The ALPO/BAA
weight=1.
Om 1990 Mar 01 at UT 00:59-02:20 D. Fryback (Madison, WI, USA, 8"
reflector) observed that Lambert was a star-like point, but later saw
it brighten up (02:15UT) by two times (note that this brightening might
refer to Aristarchus - it is worded in an ambiguous way in Cameron's
catalog). The Cameron 2006 catalog ID=392 and
weight=0. The ALPO/BAA weight=1.
In 1965 Jul 03 at UT 04:25-05:34 Emanuel (West Covina, CA, USA, 4.5"
reflector) observed 4th magnitude star-like flashes and pulsations
coming from Aristarchus. Cameron says this confirmed and that the date
in MBMW is 7/2/65 which is local time = 3rd UT. The Cameron 1978
catalog ID=882 and weight=3. The ALPO/BAA weight=3.
In 1865 Jan 01 at UT 18:00-18:30? Grover (England? or USA?, seeing =
good and transparency = clear) observed south east of Plato at the foot
of Mt Blanc a small bright spot like a magnitude 4 star - slightly out
of focus. This bright speck remained unchanged for 30 minutes. The
Cameron 1978 catalog ID=137 and the weight=3. The ALPO/BAA weight=2.
On 1978 Mar 13 at 17:25UT V.M. Chernov (Soviet Union) observed that the
northern cusp was elongated into Earthshine, 4.6 days after New Moon.
One day before this the cusps appeared nromal to him. The ALPO/BAA
weight=1.
1951 Apr 11 UT 02:39:30+/-15s L.T.Johnson (USA) observed a mag 7
flash S ofGrimaldi. ALPO/BAA weight=1.
In 1933 Mar 30 at UT 20:00 Douillet (France?) observed in the
Aristarchus region: "White. (in the dark part)". The Cameron 1978
catalog ID=404 and the weight=2. The ALPO/BAA weight=1.
Posidonius 1821 Apr 07 UTC 18:00? Observed by Gruithuisen (Munich,
Germany) "Small bright crater in it was shadowless. Schroter also saw
it shadowless several X" NASA catalog weight=4 (good). NASA catalog ID
#87. ALPO/BAA weight=3.
In 1965 Jul 04 at UT 03:53-05:59 Gridley, Welch (West Covina, CA, USA,
4.5" and 8" reflector, seeing=excellent), Albert (CA, 8" reflector,
x375) and Emanuel (8" reflector) observed star-like flashes in
Aristarchus crater. Cameron says this confirmed and that the date
in MBMW is 7/3/65 which is local time = 4th UT also but is in error due
to misreading of handwriting. The Cameron 1978 catalog ID=883 and
weight=3. The ALPO/BAA weight=3.
On 1965 Oct 30 at UT 0200 Eastman (Palos Verdes, CA, USA, 12"
reflector) observed a brightening in Aristarchus in ashen light. The
photographs that were taken show it. The phenomenon was seen each
lunation since July. The Cameron 1978 catalog ID=908 and weight=5. The
ALPO/BAA weight=2.
On 2009 Mar 01 at UT 18:50-21:00 G. Smith (East Yorkshire, UK, 127mm
Maksutov Cassegrain telescope with zoom eyepiece and later a Plossl
eyepiece) observed an area between Plato and Sinus Iridum to be glowing
as a bright nebulous patch. It was brighter than anything else in
Eartshine. A change in eyepiece did not affect the appearance of the
nebulous patch. The patch had faded somewhat by 21:00UT. The observers
brother attempted to observe the patch through a 114mm reflector at
20:30UT but the optics were of poor quality and the effect was not
seen. BAA observers were alerted, but only after the event had faded -
they made observations from 22:00-23:46 UT but failed to detect
anything unusual in the region concerned. The ALPO/BAA weight=1.
This may have been a mis-identification with Aristarchus - however
we cannot be 100% sure.
On 1985 May 24 at UT 21:01-22:40 P.W. Foley (Kent, UK, 12" reflector)
observed that Aristarchus was very bright (varied) and had a strong
(transient) red/rose colour and the crater floor was glowing. Detail
was visible. Mobberley (Suffolk, UK) also found the floor of the crater
to be "glowing". Photographs of Earthshine excellent. The Cameron 2006
catalog ID=274 and the weight=5. The ALPO/BAA weight=3.
On 1984 Jul 04 UT 22:08-23:09 Foley (12" reflector, Kent, UK) found
that Censorinus gave a low brightness CED reading of 58%, despite all
other measured points on the Moon as being normal. M. Cook (Frimley,
UK) found Censorinus to be extremely dull compared to Proclus. J.D.
Cook (Frimley, UK) found Censorinus to be quite dull, barely above
background levels. The Cameron 2006 catalog ID=246 and the weight=4.
The ALPO/BAA weight=3.
On 1984 Jul 04 at UT 22:05-23:09 Richardson (Swinton, Yorkshire, UK,
seeing=VE) found that a peak west of Theophilus crater had a deep blue
colour, and this was strange because no colour was seen elsewhere on
the Moon. Foley (Kent, UK, 12" reflector), once alerted, found a dome
east of Kant? to be blue, and likewise no colour was seen elsewhere on
the Moon. Cameron 2006 catalog ID=246 and the weight=4. The ALPO/BAA
weight=3.
On 1984 Jul 04 UT 22:08-23:09 Foley (12" reflector, Kent, UK) found
that Torricelli B was a much lower brightness than was expected and
this remained the case for the rest of the lunation. The Cameron 2006
catalog ID=246 and the weight=4. The ALPO/BAA weight=1.
On 1984 Jul 05 at UT 00:00-01:25 Marshall (Medelin, Columbia,
seeing=II) observed that Censorinus was much less bright than Proclus
(confirmed by CED readings). Cameron 2006 catalog ID=247 and weight=3.
ALPO/BAA weight=1.
On 1891 Nov 07 at UT=19:00 d'Adjuda of Lisbon, Portugal (seeing fair)
whilst observing Aristarchus noticed that the crater appeared as very
distinct luminous point in the dark. Cameron 1978 catalog ID=275 and
weight=3. ALPO/BAA weight=1.
On 1984 Jul 05 at UT 00:00-01:25 Marshall (Medelin, Columbia) found
Proclus to be much brighter than Censorinus (which of the two was
abnormal is a question) - though he thought that Censorinus looked
dull. The Cameron 2006 catalog ID=247 and weight=3. The ALPO/BAA
weight=1.
On 1992 Dec 30 at UT 17:36 A. Dollfus (Meudon, France, 1m aperture
telescope used) detected evidence for a dust cloud using CCD
polarimetry. The ALPO/BAA weight=5.
Mare Crisium 1826 Apr 13 UT 20:00 Observed by Emmett (England?) "Black
moving haze or cloud" NASA catalog weight=2 (low). NASA catalog ID =
109. ALPO/BAA weight=1.
Albategnius 1972 Jun 18 UTC 19:20-19:25 Observed by Schnuchel (13.25E,
52.5N, 20x60 binoculars?) "Bright area at the inner N wall, diminution
of brightness well observable" S=4 T=4. Ref: Hilbrecht & Kuveler Moon &
Planets (1984) Vol 30, pp53-61.
Proclus 1972 Jun 18 UTC 20:50-21:15 Observed by Kern (8.75E, 48.25N,
60mm refractor) "Yellow to white bright pattern at the NW wall, visible
only occasionally" S=4, T=3 Ref: Hilbrecht & Kuveler Moon & Planets
(1984) Vol 30, pp53-61.
Censorinus 1984 Jul 05 UT 21:05-21:25 Observed by Cook (24" reflector
with line scan photodiode array at Mill Hill observatory, London) "Two
line scan photodiode array images were taken which used the motion of
the Moon to build up an image. The first image at 21:25UT did not
include all of Censorinus, but the part that it did include was not
very bright. The 21:25UT image did include all of Censorinus and the
crater was bright, including the part that was just visible in the
previous image. Possibly the seeing was worse at 21:05? and this could
explain the brightness descrepency, but it is worth checking again by
taking images at the same illumination conditions" BAA Lunar Section
report. At 21:17 M. Cook (Frimley, UK) found Proclus to be brighter
than Censorinus (more so than the previous night) and obtained variable
readings for Censorinus. Cameron 2006 catalog ID=247 and weight=3.
ALPO/BAA weight=2.
Knopp of Paysandu, Uruguay on 1885 Feb 21 at 23:00-23:30? UT saw red
patches in the crater. Reddish smoke or mist. The observer says several
others had seen a star like point there that night. Cameron's 1978
catalog ID=348 and weight=4. ALPO/BAA weight=3.
Triesnecker Rille 1912 May 23 UT 18:00? Observed by Gordeenko
(Russia) "Change in shape from representation by Brenner and
Krieger not accountable by lighting conditions" NASA catalog
weight=0. ALPO/BAA weight=1. NASA catalog ID #339.
Messier 1968 May 05 UT 01:35-03:35 Observed by Delano (USA).
No oclour noticed with Moon blink device, but Messier A's W.
wall did brighten slightly over the 2 hours of observations
compared to Messier's W wall. The ffect was less marked in
the 2nd hour. ALPO/BAA weight=1.
Piton 1961 Jan 25? UTC 00:00? Observed by Schneller (Cleveland, Ohio,
USA, 8" x53) "Red obscuration concealing peak, @10mi sq (if near SR,
date is 27th; ancilary data given for 27th -- date not given)" NASA
catalog weight=3 (average). NASA catalog ID #731.
Alphonsus 1968 May 05 UT 20:00 Observed by Farrant (Cambridge,
England, 8" reflector, x220, Seeing: Good). "Did not see gray patch SE
(ast. ?) of c.p. Noted W. (ast. ?) dark patch was invis. while S. one
was seen easily, emerging from shadow. On 7th all seen easily, emerging
from shadow. On 7th all 3 clearly vis. with the darkest one the invis.
one on 5th." NASA catalog weight=3. NASA catalog ID #1071. ALPO/BAA
weight=1.
Proclus 1984 Jul 06 UT 20:29-20:43 light green spot observed by Madej
(England) in the central region. No colour seen elsewhere. At 20:10
Foley (Kent, UK, 12" reflector) had seen a small extending of darkening
in the south east floor (not present 2 hours before) and a lot of fine
detail - though everything was normal again by 22:50UT. At 22:15 Amery
(Reading, UK) found a large dark spot on the south east floor. Other
observers: J and A.cook (Frimley, England) could not confirm but their
seeing was IV and tranparency was poor" Mobberley found no colour and
also no detail on the floor. BAA Lunar Section Report. Cameron 2006
catalog ID=248 and weight=3. ALPO/BAA weight=3.
On 1979 Sep 29 at UT10:00-12:00 S. Turner (Maryborough, Australia)
observed a strong beacon like flash in white light that moved back and
forth in the east wall of Plato (very bright) and Mons Pico. tried
changing eyepiece and the field of view, but this wasn't the cause of
the effect. A check at 11:07UT did not show the effect, but it was back
again by 11:18UT being more pronounced at Mons Pico than the east wall
of Plato. SSW of Mons Pico was also blinking slightly. At 11:32 the
blinking effect was irregular 5-10 sec and this continued until
12:00UT. Cameron 2006 catalog ID=71 and weight=0 but she suggests
atmospheric scintillation as a cause. ALPO/BAA weight=1.
On 1979 Sep 29 at UT10:00-12:00 S. Turner (Maryborough, Australia)
observed a strong beacon like flash in white light that moved back and
forth in the east wall of Plato (very bright) and Mons Pico. tried
changing eyepiece and the field of view, but this wasn't the cause of
the effect. A check at 11:07UT did not show the effect, but it was back
again by 11:18UT being more pronounced at Mons Pico than the east wall
of Plato. SSW of Mons Pico was also blinking slightly. At 11:32 the
blinking effect was irregular 5-10 sec and this continued until
12:00UT. Cameron 2006 catalog ID=71 and weight=0 but she suggests
atmospheric scintillation as a cause. ALPO/BAA weight=1.
Plato 1972 Jun 19 UT 21:40-22:30 Observed by S.A. Jones
(Swansea, Wales, 12" reflector x150) and Moore (Selsey, England,
12.5" reflector x450) "Noted a bright area in the center. Moore
noted nothing unusual & he tho't obs. saw one of permanent light
patches" NASA catalog weight=0 (very low). NASA catalog ID #
1336. ALPO/BAA weight=1
Knopp of Paysandu, Uruguay on 1885 Feb 22 at 23:00-23:30? UT saw a
definite light, looking like Saturn in Cassini?. The previous night he
had seen red patches in the crater. Cameron's 1978 catalog ID=348 and
weight=4. ALPO/BAA weight=2.
On 1871 Nov 20 at UT 17:30-19:30 H. Pratt (UK) saw one of the most
spectacular TLP obscurations that he had ever seen in Mare Frigoras. He
observed a kind of haze around the north west (NE?) slopes of Plato.
This effect was not seen elsewhere and all objects in Mare Frigoris
were indistinct or veiled. By 18:30 the effect was modified and by
19:30 very little trace was seen. Ref. from Corliss.
Plato 1895 May 02 UT 20:45, 23:45 Observed by Brenner and Fauth
(Germany?) "Streaks of light (Brenner) bright parallel bands in
center Fauth (indep. confirmation?)." NASA catalog weight=5.
NASA catalog ID #284. ALPO/BAA weight=1.
Plato 1887 Feb 01 UT 18:00 Observed by Elger (England) "Ill-defined
shadow of peaks of W.border-in contrast to sharpness of mts. outside
it. Never seen before. Such phenomena occur on floor, but never on
ramparts. (Drawing)." NASA catalog weight=4 (high). NASA catalog
ID #254. ALPO/BAA catalog weight=1.
Plato 1916 Jul 8 UT 19:00? Observed by Markov (Russia) "Light on the
shadow of the bands at the bottom (similar to #362)" NASA catalog
weight=3 (average). NASA catalog ID #364. ALPO/BAA weight=2.
On 1972 Feb 23 at UT0010-0035 Fornarucci (Garfield, NJ, USA, 6"
reflector, x250, seeing=fair and transparency=3.5). Shading
usually visible west of it was not seen. Cameon comments that
the albedo must have been at 5, where normally it is 4.5 and the
nearby plain is 5). Cameron 1978 catalog ID=1322 and weight=2.
ALPO/BAA weight=2.
Theophilus 1978 Nov 08 UT 20:49-22:00 Observed by J.D. Cook
(Frimley, 12" reflector, 6mm Ortho eyepiece, seeing III-IV)
Orange discolouration seen on ESE crater floor. Moon blink
tried, but no blink detected. By 21:10 the effect had lessened,
but was still orange. By 21:50-21:58 the effect was smaller and
perhaps more on the SE of the floor. Colour confirmed by Foley.
Fitton may also have been observing. At 22:00 A.C. Cook observed
and commented that a darkish, perhaps brown-orange colour seen -
but suspected it was probably spurious colour - but by now the
seeing was V. J.H. Robinson, whilst doing a Moon Blink sweep of
several features, including Theophilus, had not noticed anything
unusual 18:50-19:10. By 22:30-22:35UT, he still could not detect
a blink, but noticed intermittent darkining on the shaded area
on the E. floor, but seeing was now IV. The darkening was more
noticeable in blue than red light. BAA Lunar Section
observation. 2006 Cameron catalog ID #40 weight=3. ALPO/BAA
weight=1.
Copernicus 1976 Nov 30 UT 19:40 T. Flynn (Edinburgh, UK, 29cm
reflector, Wratten 25 and 44a filters) observed that the
Copernicus craterlet chains werebetter seen through a red
filter than a blue. ALPO.BAA weight=1.
Purbach 1976 Nov 30 UT 19:40 T. Flynn (Edinburgh, UK, 29cm
reflector, Wratten 25 and 44a filters) observed that the
crater interior was better see through a red filter than a
blue. ALPO.BAA weight=1.
Plato 1932 Apr 15 UT 06:57 Observed by A.V. Goddard & friend
(Portland, Oregon, USA, 16" telescope, S=G steady) "Sudden
appearance of a white spot like a cloud of steam (in appearance
only), and in less than a minute it had spread in a NW
direction, until it almost reached the rim of the crater" NASA
catalog weight=4. NASA catalog ID #403. ALPO/BAA weight=4.
On 1980 Jan 26 at UT21:35-22:25 Blair (Refrewshire, Scotland, 10"
reflector, 83-276x, seeing=III-IV and transparency poor) discovered a
bright spot on the north rim and through filters it "flashed" green,
red and blue. Clouds interupted observing, but when they cleared the
effect was still present. Other craters did not show this effect.
Cameron catalog ID=83 and weight=4.
On 1993 Jan 02 at UT 17:42 A. Dollfus (Meudon, France, 1m aperture
telescope used) detected evidence for a dust cloud in Langrenous crater
using CCD polarimetry. The ALPO/BAA weight=4.
Plato 1964 Nov 14 UT 01:00? Observed by Bartlett (Baltimore,
MD, USA, 4" refractor?) "Peak on E. wall brilliant white,
strong blue band at inner base; on S. wall was a small, bright
red spot." NASA catalog weight=4. NASA catalog ID #864.
ALPO/BAA weight=3.
On 1968 May 07 at UT 03:00-03:40 Kelsey (Riverside, CA, USA, 8"
reflector) observed Messier and Messier A and noted the following: "The
ray-tail halo (in N. ray) showed a possible enhancement in blue filter
at 1st obs. per. but not seen at 0330. Later enhancement was indicated
in red filter but not apparent at 0600h. The red enhancement is very
unsual; but has been suspected on a few previous occasions. Not seen
vis. (confirm. of Jean?)" The Cameron 1978 catalog ID= and weight=5.
The ALPO/BAA weight=3.
La Hire 1887 Feb 02 UTC 20:00? Observed by Klein (Cologne, Germany, 6"
refractor) "Intense yellow streak that cast shadows around neighboring
features". NASA catalog weight=4 (good). NASA catalog ID #255.
Posidonius 1970 Apr 15 UT 21:05-22:10 Observed by Wanderley
Nazareth (Sao Paulo, Brazil, reflector) "Intermittant
pulsation. Drawing 20S interval for pulsations. (too long for
atmospheric aberration? Apollo 13 watch)." NASA catalog
weight=3. NASA catalog ID #1254. ALPO/BAA weight=3.
Near and on Plato 1970 Apr 15 UT 21:45-22:04 Observed by da
Silva (Sao Paulo, Brazil, 10" & 20" refractors) "Crater chain W.
of Plato -- 3rd crater W. (Plato Y) was brighter than
surroundings. Lozenge on W. wall (landslip?) was darker than
inner wall. Bright part of wall was yellowish-white. da Silva
reports this as neg. (normal aspects) obs (Apollo 13 watch
probably normal as Y is a bright halo crater)." NASA catalog
weight=0. NASA catalog ID #1255. ALPO/BAA weight=1.
Tycho 1970- Apr 15 UTC 22:00-23:00 Observer: Nelson Travnik
(Matias Barbosa, Minas Gerais, Brazil, 4" refractor, x250 &
x400, seeing excellent, Wratten 15 and 23 filters used)
"Slightly pulsating white glow on W. (IAU?) wall's external
slope (Apollo 13 watch). NASA catalog ID #1256, NASA weight=2.
ALPO/BAA weight=2.
Plato 1968 May 07 UTC 20:48-21:05 Observed by Farrant (Cambridge,
England, 8" reflector x220) "Red color No. of landslip in W. wall seen
in blink & vis. Vanished by 2105h. Had not returned at 2125. (Moore has
wrong date in his extended catalog.)." NASA catalog weight=3. NASA
catalog ID #1074.
South of Copernicus 1972 Feb 24 UT 19:30-20:00 Observed by McConnell
(England, 6" reflector, x195, seeing=good) "White spot just S. of Cop.
about same size as Copernicus H (@ 5km), (there is a bright area or mt.
SW of Cop. H)." NASA catalog weight=1 (very low). NASA catalog ID 1323.
On 1984 Jul 08 at UT 20:10-22:05 P. Moore (Selsey, UK, seeing IV-V)
suspected that the floor of Proclus was slightly darker than normal.
The Cameron 2006 catalog ID=249 and the weight=1. The ALPO/BAA
weight=1.
On 1994 Apr 21 at UT 06:00 W, Cameron (Sedona, USA) detected a reddiah
colour on Pronontorium Laplace, This is TLP event No. 9 in the ALPO
Clementine LTP program Nov 1994. The ALPO/BAA weight=2.
Proclus 1989 Jul 13 UT 21:04-21:13 Observed by M.Cook (Frimley, UK,
90mm Quastar Cat., Seeing III, transoparency hazy) and by Moore
(Selsey, England) "Following an alert call by Miles concerning the
crater Proclus looking different, Cook observed a circular dark patch
that filled about half of the eastern half of the crater floor. To cut
down the glare a blue filter was then used and a slightly less dark
area was seen extending from this in a southerly direction. 8 rays were
seen. The dark patch was confirmed by Patrick Moore. However David
Darling (USA) who observed a few hours later on 1989 Jul 14 at 03:28 UT
could not see this dark patch." BAA Lunar Section observation. The
Cameron 2006 catalog ID=370 and weight=?. The ALPO/BAA weight=2
Scarcely a trace of nebulae tonight. As long as to June 10 at
2000UT? A little blackness remained. (P. Moore thinks it
was a LTP, WSC it was a permanent feature?) Drawing. Seen
by Nevelius Emmett, J. Boroughbridge, England. The 2006
Extension catalog by Cameron assigns an ID No. of 4 and a
weight of 1. The ALPO/BAA weight=1.
On 1983 Jul 20 at UT 18:50-22:40 P.W. Foley (Kent, UK, 12"reflector,
seeing II-III) noted that the south wall of Plato at the 11 o'clock
position, at the location of a cleft, was fuzzy on either side of the
cleft. There was also a deep red colour along the cleft and the outside
wall. The colour had gone by 22:40 though. All other parts of the rim
of Plato were clear and distinct. M. Cook (Frimley, UK, seeing III)
sketched some obscurations at 22:03UT. At 22:08UT the red colour
reduced to a red line and vanished by 22:37. The south wall obscuration
varied in size and there was a possible obscuration at the 7 o'clock
position. J. Cook (Frimley, UK, seeing II-III) confirmed Foley's and
M.Cook's observations. Detail inside the crater was sharp, but colour
oppoiste to what is usual. Price (Camberley, UK, seeing IV-V) a few km
away had atmospheric ripples affecting his observations. At 21:36UT G.
North described the south wall as odd in appearance and the terrain
south of this was lacking in detail - this was odd because elsewhere
Plato was nice and sharp. At 21:45UT though the north section of the
crater was a hazy red. The cameron 206 catalog ID=224 and the weight=5.
The ALPO/BAA weight=3.
A.S.Williams of West Brighton, UK, using a 5.25" Calver, x150 and
definition fairly good. Observer noticed that the Mare seemed covered
with a close network of innumerable streaks, and spotted with countless
numbers of light specks, so that it would hardly be possible to
delineate them all in one night. The spots and streaks together must
have numbered ~1000. The observer had never seen anything like the
number of spots and streaks. Peirce A, was not at all easy to see and
neighboring spots almost as bright made it difficult to distinguish
which one was Peirce A. ALPO/BAA weight=3.
Plato 1966 Sep 25 UT 23:12-23:35 Observed by Moseley (Armagh, Nortern
Ireland, 10" refractor, x140) "Eng. moon blink sys. blinks inside the
crater. Very dubious due to low alt. of moon." NASA catalog weight=1
(very low). NASA catalog ID #982.
On 1976 Apr 10 at 21:15-21:49UT S.Spencer (60mm refractor x60, seeing
quite good) noticed a faint red glow at the south west wall of Gassendi
covering a span of about 35 deg arc. The observer had some doubts about
this because they were using a small telescope, but thought that they
ought to report it, just in case. A BAA Lunar Section report. ALPO/BAA
weight=1.
On 1982 Aug 01 at 00:00-01:00 K. Marshall (Medellin, Columbia, 12"
reflector, seeing I-II) noted shading on the east floor of Plato that
was apparently lighter than the rest of the floor and this was seen at
both low and high magnifications. Foley notes that this was unusual.
There were three craterlets visible on the floor - the central one was
the brightest. Cameron 1978 catalog ID=178 and weight=3. ALPO/BAA
weight=1.
Gassendi 1967 Jun 18 UT 22:50-23:59 Observed by Whippey
(Northalt, England, 6" reflector?) "Faint redness outside NE &
SE wall of crater." Moore (10" Armagh refractor, x360) was
observing earlier 22:10-22:40, with and without a Moon Blink but
detected no redness, however his observing conditions were not
very good at the time. NASA catalog ID #1039. NASA catalog
weight=3. ALPO.BAA weight=2.
Posidonius 1952 Jul 03 UT 19:13-19:27 Observed by Dzaplashvili,
Ksanforalif, Negrelishvili (Georgia, Soviet Union, 13" reflector,
polarimeter, S=clear) "Making polariz. mess. of it. Aristotles.
Eudoxus. & Aristillus. only Pos. gave higher rdgs. & oscillated while
others gave repeatedly same results. 40 other times Pos. was normal.
Never had seen such behavior Table gives deflections. Obs. repeated 2X
Obs. from 1843-1947h." NASA catalog weight=5. NASA catalog
ID #552. ALPO/BAA weight=5.
On 1985 May 30 at UT 20:10-23:54 P.Moore (Selsey, UK, 15" reflector)
and at the same time Doherty (Sussex, UK, 15" reflector) observed a
strangely bright and pink/red north rim of Aristarchus crater during
UT20:20 and 20:36UT. The effect reduced between ~20:39 and 20:44UT.
M.C. Cook (Frimley, UK) found the northern wall to have a red/purple
colour but the effect vanished after 50 minutes. Cook also saw a "V"-
like notch in the NW crater shadow and this appeared to be bigger than
normal. G. North (Sussex, UK) saw a tinge of pink colour on the
northern rim and a bit later a "ruby red" colour on the north-west wall
- again this effect lasted 50 minutes. Moseley verified the colour.
Finally M. Hather (Yorkshire, UK) suspected the north wall of
Aristarchus to be blue in colour. Cameron suspects that this TLP is not
spurious colour because it is in the wrong place. The Cameron 2006
catalog ID=276 and the weight=5. The ALPO/BAA weight=4.
On 1985 May 30 P.Madej (Huddersfield, UK, 77mm refractor, x111
and x250, seeing II-III, transparency good) whole spectrum of
colours seen on the central peak area, visible in both
eyepieces, and was more prominent at the higher magnification.
Not aware if the observer checked for this effects on other
terminator peaks? xALPO/BAA weight =1.
Aristarchus 1975 Dec 14/15 UT 17:05-00:30 Observed by Foley
(Dartford, England, 12" reflector, S=II) and Moore (Sussex,
UK, 15" reflector x250 S=IV) and Argent and Brumder (Sussex,
UK). In early sunrise conditions, W. wall was less brilliant
than usual -- matched only by Sharp, Bianchini, & Marian.
Extraordinary detail could be seen on this wall. Also noted
intense & distinctly blue color entire length of W. wall. 3
others corroborated detail, but not color. Moore found things
normal & saw Aris. brightest at 2030-2125h tho Argent &
Brumder made it < Proclus" NASA catalog weight=4. NASA catlog
ID #1422. ALPO/BAA weight=1.
On 2013 Apr 22 UT 01:39-02:37 P. Zeller (Indianapollis, USA,
10" f/4 reflector, x200, seeing 6, Transparency 3 - scattered
cirrus) observed visually (depicted in sketch) the two closely
spaced NW wall dark bands) to have a rusty-red hue. The colour
of these bands did not change over the period of the observing
session. Images were taken, but resolution and image S/N is
not sufficient to resolve separate bands here, or to detect
colour. The ALPO/BAA weight=1.
On 1981 Aug 11 at UT21:05-21:36 G. North (England, seeing=poor)
detected, in green light, a darkening on the floor of Plato. This
effect was not seen elsewhere. J-H Robinson (Teighmouth, Devon, UK)
detected on the SSE rim (inner and beyond) a triangle that appeared
hazy in a wide range of filters at 21:05UT. However at 21:36UT it was
only hazy in green and blue light. No similar effect was seen
elsewhere. The Cameron 2006 catalog ID=150 and weight=5. The ALPO/BAA
weight=3.
On 2017 Feb 08 UT 01:45 A.Martini Jr (10" Schmidt-Cassegrain
with ASI 120 MC camera +IR filter, Gain 40, Gamma 36,
exposure 0.003 sec) saw on a computer monitor screen a flash
to far to the west of Herodotus and Aristarchus at the
location 54.53W, 23.5N. It had a duration of 0.5 sec and on a
brightness scale of 0 = night side of the Moon to 10 =
Aristarchus, ranked 7. Unfortunately they were not recording
at the time. As there was no confirmation observation and it
could be a cosmic ray air shower detection, the ALPO/BAA
weight=1
On 1983 Jul 21 at UT 21:02-23:18 P.W. Foley (Kent, UK, 12" reflector,
seeing=III) found the region around the cleft on the souther rim to be
out of focus - however atmospheric conditions were turbulent until
23:18UT. An unsual dark triangular region (long base against rim) was
seen to extend from the inner rim at 12 o'clock onto the floor for 13-
16km. The crater had lots of detail elsewhere. M. Cook (Frimley, UK)
found the south east to soth west to be obscured again, but not as
badly as she had seen on the 20th July. J. Cook (Frimley, UK) found the
dark region had 2 white bands on the side and the south west wall was
blurred like it was on the 20th July - this time tough colour was not
present. There were also two light patches on the floor. Mosely
(Coventry, UK) observed the south wall at x120 and found the wall out
of focus at the 11 o'clock location. Through a yellow filter he saw a
"white mistiness: on the top of the southern rim and only the south
east cleft could be seen (no colour). By 22:40-23:00 the effect had
cleared up. No dark triangular patch was seen. When Marshall (Surrey,
UK) observed (22:30-03:00) nothing unsual was seen, though a sketch
provided shows a light patch on the floor located at 11 o'clock. All
observations, made by all observers had some atmospheric turbulence,
however trsnparency was good. The Cameron 2006 catalog ID=225 and the
weight=5. The ALPO/BAA weight=3.
Aristarchus 1965 Nov 06 UTC 03:20-03:50, 05:50 Observed by Bartlett
(Baltimore, MD, USA, 3" refractor x300, S=6, T=5) "Strong blue-viol.
glare on E. & NE wall; dark viol. hue in nimbus. (absent at 0320-0350.
Listed as 11/8/55 in both ref. 210 & MBMW, but should be 1965). NASA
catalog weight=4, NASA catalog ID #911.
On 1994 Apr 23 at UT 03:30 the US Navy Clementine Spacecraft, in orbit
around the Moon, obtained images of the Cobra Head region of
Aristarchus crater that suggested a ~15x colour ratio increase (0.4
microns / 1.0 microns) in comparison with images obtained on 1994 Mar
03. This was presented as a poster paper 18.04 at AAS 31st DPS meeting.
However it was later suggested that this was due to incorrect
radimetric calibration procedures being followed. The ALPO/BAA
weight=1.
Herodotus 1998 Dec 30 UT 18:50-19:10 observed by J.Knott
(Liverpool, UK 22cm Newtonian, x216, seeing II, transparency
good). Observer reports a bright spot, as bright as the
central peak in Aristarchus on the NW rim of Herodotus at
19:10 (still there at 19:15, but the curious thing was that it
was not visible earlier at 18:50? Now there is a bright
craterlet here, and the observer doubted if what he had seen
was unusual - though we have the rise in brightness o20
minutes to account for? The ALPO/BAA weight=1.
In 1950 Aug 25 at UT 10:55 T.Saheki (Osaka, Japan) observed a
stationary yellow-white flash on the Moon of duration 0.2 sec
and mag 6.5. Cameron suggests that this was a meteor. The
Cameron 1978 catalog ID=536 and weight=0. The ALPO/BAA weight=1.
On 1985 May 31 at UT 20:23-22:00 G. North (Sussex, UK, turbulent
seeing) found Torricelli B at 20:23 to be mauve in colour and to be
very bright. However the colul had gone by 20:29UT. "Varied in albedo
2s then image blurred at 5-10s (atm) at 2034 became pink). At 21:35UT
M. Mobberley (Suffolk, UK) found a white patch in the crater centre and
a mag 8 flash was seen (confirmed independently by a 2nd observer ~
113km away)- there was no shadow. At UT 20:30 P.W. Foley (Kent, UK,
12"reflector, seeing excellent) found no colour, but the brightness was
changiong and he confirmed the bright patch on the crater's floor,
variable 22:15-22:25UT, "then expanded over rim". The Cameron 2006
catalog ID=277 and weight=5. the ALPO/BAA weight=4.
Two small conical mountains, near last 4th May eruption,
close to the third one that he had seen before, but not
these two. They were not on any map.
On 1788 May 17 at UT 21:00 Schroter (Lilleanthal, Germany, 210x
reflector) observed small depression, 1, near Aristarchus to be a
bright spot, similar to Cameron 1978 catalog ID report #45. The Cameron
catalog ID=48 and the weight=4. The ALPO/BAA weight=2.
NE of Philolaus 1948 May 20 UT 22:00-22:15 Observed by Baum
(Chester, UK, 4.5" refractor) A distinct reddish tint suddenly
appeared to the NE of the crater, and persisted for 15 min,
before rapidly fading away. NASA catalog weight=3. NASA
catalog ID #505. ALPO/BAA weight=3.
Proclus 1950 Jul 27 UT 02:56 Observed by Bartlett (Baltimore,
MD, USA) described in the NASA catalog as: "C.p. of Proc.
disappeared)" 5" reflector used at x100, NASA catalog weight=4.
ALPO/BAA weight=2.
In 1962 Dec 09 at UT 07:36 Wildey and Pohn (Mt Wilson, CA, USA, 60"
reflector) observed that Oceanus Procellarum was 1.13 magnitudes
brighter than normal. Observation at sunrise and is abnormal if area
measured was mare. If it were an east facing wall it would be normal.
The Cameron 1978 catalog weight=5. The ALPO/BAA weight=2.
In 1962 Dec 09 at UT 07:42 Wildey and Pohn (Mt Wilson, CA, USA, 60"
reflector) observed that Aristarchus was 0.80 magnitudes (x2) fainter
than average for this age (photometric measurement) Vmag=3.80, average=
3.0. The Cameron 1978 catalog weight=5. The ALPO/BAA weight=2.
On 1992 Feb 16 at UT 01:05-01:35 P. Moore (Selsey, UK, 12.5"
reflector, seeing=III) found the north rim area to be both very
bright and misty - though he did not think it to be a TLP but
wanted it to be recorded, just in case. The Cameron 2006 catalog
ID=440 and the weight=1. The ALPO/BAA weight=2.
Aristarchus-Herodotus 1970 Apr 18 UT 20:14 Observed by MacKenzie
(UK,2.5" refractor x45, seeing Antoniadi I) "Fairly strong blink
in a spot 1/2 way between the 2 craters. Drawing (Apollo 13
watch). NASA catalog weight=2. NASA catalog ID #1257. ALPO/BAA
weight=2.
Herodotus 1950 Jul 27 UT 03:56 Observed by Bartlett
(Baltimore, MD, USA) described in the NASA catalog as: "Pseudo
c.p. in Herod. Drawings. (Similar to NASA catalog event #523)"
5" reflector used at x100, NASA catalog weight=4. ALPO/BAA
weight=3.
Torricelli B 2002 Oct 18 UTC 20:56-21:59 Observer: G.North (UK, 8"
reflector, x134, Seeing Antoniadi IV, Transparency good) - thought that
Torricelli B was perhaps a little brighter than expected, especially
when compared to Moltke and Censorinus based upon past recollection of
relative brightnesses at this colongitude). Slight bluish tint seen as
well. The ALPO/BAA weight=1.
On 1975 Apr 23 at UT 20:30 J-H Robinson (Teighmouth, Devon, UK, 260mm
reflector, x200). Observer was observing since 20:30UT, at 21:00UT
though they noticed red on the outside south wall of Aristarchus, a
hazy ill defined area that was larger in a red filter than in blue
filter, and outside east wall was bright in red. At 21:08UT the outside
west wall of Aristarchus no longer gave a colour blink reaction, and at
21:22UT the colour blink on the southern end of the crater ceased, but
the image blur remained (in both red and blue filters) despite the rest
of the crater being sharp in detail. Observations ceased at UT 21:35
because the blurring at the southern end seemed to be normal and this
was confirmed when checked with photographic atlases. Other craters
such as Proclus, Pickering, Tycho, Gassendi, Copernicus, Alphonsus,
Plato, Menelaus, Manilius, Linne and Theophilus, showed no colour blink
reactions. However Picard had a red bright blink from 20:30-20:40 and
the permanant blink on the N. Floor of Fracastorius was detectable.
Also Plato floor shadings were clearer in red than in blue -
intermittently. This is a BAA lunar section observation. No estimation
of transparency or seeing is given, nor any comment on whether spurious
colour was seen in any craters visually. ALPO/BAA weight=1.
In 1959 Nov (Day unknown) at UT 21:15-22:15 Bradford (South Shields,
UK, 15" reflector, x480) observed in Littrow: "Cocealed by a dusky cloud.
Appeared to be stream or smoke. No change in 1h. Following week no
trace. (SR Nov 5, SS Nov 18. Says he obs. at time of unmanned landing,
but there were none in Nov.) Similar to #722". The Cameron 1978 catalog
ID=726 and weight=2. The ALPOS/BAA weight=2.
Lichtenberg 1966 Jun 02 UTC 03:05-03:35 Observed by Schneller
(Cleveland, Ohio, 8" reflector, slit spectrascope) "Red glow on W. wall
(Schnller thinks this is "normal" reddening at SR; however, these vary
according to Ricker), (This rep't is the only positive one from alert
sent out to observe for J.Green's tidal predictions, See list of neg.
obs.)" NASA catalog weight=3 (average). NASA catalog ID #944
On 1789 Jan 10 at UT 00:00 Seyffer (Germany) observed "a lunar
volcano". Cameron comments that this must have been bright as it was
near full Moon. The Cameron 1978 catalog ID=56 and weight=4. The
ALPO/BAA weight=2.
Marius 1881 Jan 13 UTC 20:00? Observed by Williams (England?,
5.5" reflector) "Speck of light in crater". NASA catalog weight=
3 and catalog ID #220. ALPO/BAA weight=2.
Aristarchus 1966 Jun 02 UTC 04:06-04:20 Observed by Jaeger (Hammond,
Indianna, 6" reflector) "Brownish-yellow edge on ? rim. 2 other obs.
this site saw nothing unusual." NASA catalog weight=2 (low). NASA
catalog ID #945.
Vieta 1923 Sep 23 UTC 19:00? Observed by Cernov (Russia, 2 refractors?
x94?) "Both dark spots merged together even with 94x magnification.
(due to libration &/or seeing?)" NASA catalog weight=1 (low). NASA
catalog ID #389.
Gassendi 1972 Feb 27 UT 23:15-00:10 Observed by A.Kemp (Cheshire,
UK, 8.5" reflector x286) "Suspicion of blink between Gass. c.p. &
Gass A. Clouds prevented confirm. Hedley-Robinson didn't see
anything unusual earlier (20:00-20:20)." Note that the duration
of the event, or indeed precise UT at which it was seen is not
given. NASA catalog weight=1. NASA catalog ID #1324. ALPO/BAA
weight=1.
On 1994 Apr 24 UT08:15 A.T. Brakel (ACT, Australia) noticed that
Mare Frigoris appeared darker than the day before. This was
during a Clementine watch. The ALPO/BAA weight=1.
On 1985 Sep 27 at UT 20:55 M. Mobberley (Suffolk, UK) found that the
brightness of Torricelli B varied and starlike points seen in the
crater. There is no Cameron 2006 catalog entry for this TLP report. The
ALPO/BAA weight=2.