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Vallis Schroteri: Deep Canyon


The "Grand Canyon" of the moon turned out to be the most challenging target of the entire program.

Observer Comments

Target DescriptionVallis Schröteri is the longest sinuous rille on the lunar surface, snaking for about 100 miles. It is volcanic in origin, averages about 500m depth, and was a major contributor of lava to Oceanus Procellarum. The ridge that parallels south of the rille is fairly prominent: imaging the rille itself is challenging. I spent a fair amount of time analyzing what I could see at extreme enlargements of my capture, compared to a Lunar Orbiter image of this feature. Of course, the lunar orbiter image is looking straight down, whereas my telescope is viewing the same set of features at an oblique angle. I developed 5 points of comparison between two telescope views (light and dark) and the lunar orbiter view. I believe all 5 match up; #5 shows an unambiguous section of the rille in my telescope view.

I would love to capture a near-full-moon view of this area using my EdgeHD with lucky imaging and wavelet sharpening. Whether the clouds will permit this before I submit this package to the AL, is an open issue at this time.
Image Capture DescriptionThis full moon image was an opportunistic capture with my Seestar on a clear night with good visibility, just because. At the time I was not contemplating the AL Lunar Program.
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Capture Details

Date and Time Observed2024-05-22 21:12:00
Phase Age14 days
Lunar PhaseFull Moon
Illumination100%
ConditionsTransparency: Good. Seeing: Good.
Obs. Lat/Long42° 17', 073° 57'
Capture SoftwareSeestar
Capture TypeSingle-image
InstrumentSeestar S50 f5.0-250mm FL
CameraSeestar Built-in SONY IMX462 Sensor
Capture DetailsAuto capture
Post ProcessingLevels and sharpened in Affinity Photo