Well...Ace does it again.
I see the moon shifting at night...and never take a good picture.
If you watch it long enough it winds up almost sideways b4 morning.
The argument of the scoffers is that what I am seeing doesn't happen.
Well The Ace scores again. Check out his pics on the link!
And Now the big question is HOW DOES IT DO THAT?
Here is his Email 2 me.
monk
Moon on 27 feb
Good day, Monk
First I'd like to thank you for posting my replies. Very kind of you. I would be very grateful if you would post the following.
Time and again there have been posts about the rotation of the moon during one nights travel, but noone ever seems to have a camera handy. Well, I had the luck of a clear sky last night, so I took my cheapo 3.3 megapixel with 10x optical zoom and snaped some pictures of the moon. First @ 0.55 CET, second @ 4.17 CET in the east of the Netherlands. Both pics were taken with a horizontaly held camera and 10x optical zoom.
I took the 2 moons, the pics full pixelsize from the cameraimage, and made a composite today, and did some image prosessing to clear up the features of the moon and stuff like that. The rapid rotation can be c;ear;y seen. I put the composite image on http://img184.exs.cx/my.php?loc=img184ℑ=moon27feb20051so.jpg
for all to see.
I will not draw any further conclusions, just wanted to put some pictures to the discussion about the moon.
On request I can e-mail the original pictures with the camera-data, which is readable in photoshop.
Best wishes
Acetro