A place were I can write...
My simple blog of pictures of travel, friends, activities and the Universe we live in as we go slowly around the Sun.
April 18, 2014
Green beam
This is not a scene from a sci-fi special effects
movie. The green beam of light and red lunar disk are real enough, captured in
the early morning hours of April 15. Of course, the reddened
lunar disk is easy to explain as the image was taken during this week's total lunar eclipse. Immersed in shadow, the eclipsed
Moon reflects the dimmed reddened light of all the sunsets and sunrises
filtering around the edges of planet Earth, seen in silhouette from
a lunar perspective. But the green beam of light really is a laser. Shot
from the 3.5-meter telescope at Apache Point Observatory in southern New Mexico,
the beam's path is revealed as Earth's atmosphere scatters some of the intense
laser light. The
laser's target is the Apollo 15 retroreflector, left
on the Moon by the astronauts in 1971. By
determining the light travel
time delay of the returning laser pulse, the experimental team from UC San
Diego is able to measure the Earth-Moon distance to millimeter precision and
provide a test of General Relativity, Einstein's theory of gravity. Conducting
the lunar laser
ranging experiment during a total eclipse uses the Earth like a cosmic light
switch. With direct sunlight blocked, the reflector's performance is improved
over performance when illuminated by sunlight during a normal Full Moon, an
effect fondly known as The
Full Moon Curse.
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