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Moon photo mystery solved

Posted: Tuesday, December 04, 2007 5:30 PM by Alan Boyle


CNSA via Reuters / Xinhua
A detail from China's Chang'e lunar orbiter
shows cratered terrain on the moon. A yellow
circle has been added to highlight craters that
show evidence of botched photo retouching.

Some dogged sleuthing by a fellow space blogger has tracked down the truth behind the controversial first photo from China's moon orbiter.

In the week since the picture was released amid much fanfare in Beijing, there have been widespread rumors that the photo was a fake, copied from an old picture collected by a U.S. space probe.

The good news for the Chinese is that Planetary Society blogger Emily Lakdawalla's clears them of outright fakery. The bad news is, she found evidence that the photo was badly retouched for public release.

Lakdawalla's explanation would be embarrassing for Beijing, but it makes the most sense as the solution to this week's moon photo mystery.

Lakdawalla began her investigation by plowing through databases of lunar imagery and dredging up a U.S.-produced picture for comparison. It's not a NASA picture, as reported by the rumor mill. Instead, it's one of the tens of thousands of pictures taken by the Pentagon's Clementine lunar mapping orbiter back in 1994.

The photo from China's Chang'e 1 orbiter is clearly a higher-resolution view, with sunlight streaming from the northwest rather than the north.

"So the notion that China faked their lunar photo can be put to rest. (What is it about the moon and conspiracy theories, anyway?)," Lakdawalla wrote. "At least it certainly isn't a copy of the Clementine image; and it's certainly not a Lunar Orbiter image, either."

Case closed? Not quite.

Lakdawalla found that a mistake was apparently made in stitching together the 19 strips of imagery to produce the finished picture - and that Chinese officials unknowingly pointed out that mistake as they defended the photo's veracity.


NASA / DOD / CAST
The Planetary Society's Emily
Lakdawalla compared
Clementine imagery of the
crater, at left, with Chang'e imagery at right.

The mission's chief scientist, Ouyang Ziyuan, told the Beijing News that a new crater had been spotted on the Chang'e imagery - a crater that didn't appear on the U.S. imagery. Lakdawalla determined that crater in question it wasn't exactly new - instead, it appeared to be a crater that had been moved from one spot on the picture to another spot slightly south.

Lakdawalla, who knows her way around spacecraft photo databases as well as photo-retouching tools, hit upon the likeliest explanation for the gaffe. Often, surface features that show up on two strips of data have to be manually corrected to produce the finished image, due to subtle changes in perspective.

"You know that there should have been seams in that image, and I just did not look for them carefully at the time," Lakdawalla told me today.

She said the Chinese must have blended together the seams between the strips - misplacing the crater. The picture may be pretty, but it's pretty much useless as a scientific product, Lakdawalla said.

The detective work came in for kudos from other space mythbusters. "Go check out her really amazing sleuthing," said Bad Astronomy blogger Phil Plait. "This is how it's done, folks. Case closed!"

NBC News space analyst James Oberg, who has had his own experience with moon-hoax controversies, also saluted Lakdawalla's efforts. Even though the Chinese insist that the first picture from Chang'e is scientifically accurate, Oberg said he expected the Chinese to "be forced to backtrack a bit" once they see the full evidence.

"This isn't the first time that photo problems have created illusory 'moon features,'" Oberg wrote in an e-mail. "The very first Soviet moon photo probe, Luna 3 in 1959, sent back images of the back side that included a view of what Moscow grandiosely called 'the Soviet Mountains,' stretching for hundreds of miles. It turned out to be an emulsion smear on the negative."

"For a 'dead world,' the moon sure continues to offer surprises to explorers," Oberg said, "even if many of the 'surprises' are self-induced flaws in the exploration process!"

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I have always wondered why no one (professional scientist or amateur astronomer) has ever photographed a landing site on the moon. I think it would be very cool to see the bottom half of the lunar lander, tracks, flag, etc. from a satellite or extremely powerful earth-based telescope.
So after reading half the retarded entries having nothing to do with the crater, It came to me.. Aliens.. or a fraking meteorite (or similar) hit the moon again like it has for millions of years..
The issue isn't the small slip-up in stitching, it's that the resulting composite image was then digitally processed to blend the edges and eliminate the visible seams -- compare this to Lunar Orbiter images, for example.

So the image WAS altered, for what they thought was purely cosmetic reasons, but the accidental result was an error of no small scientific value -- the notion of a 'fresh' crater in the past decade, on the moon. That notion is a mistake based on over-eager (but I presume innocent) misrepresentation of the released image.

But hey! -- this takes practice, so I cut a lot of slack -- about 240,000 miles of it -- for this very admirable accomplishment.

The newsworthy angle to ME is the unintentional and delicious irony of the Chinese scientist DENYING any fakery, and as proof, he pointed to the 'new crater' -- which actually was the hint Lakdawalla followed to discover the 'real' (but trivial) 'fakery'. Now THAT'S worth making a public issue over -- and us all having big laughs. The Chinese, too, when they finally have to face up to it....

Now, as long as the images don't show any vast collapsed glass domes and other ruins up there --
even half-vast ruins would be newsworthy! They would be a match for the half-vast theories of some recent authors and bloggers on 'lunar anomalies'.

Maybe we should fly around and see if the jeep and flag the americans left behind are still there.After all if they truly did go there, there should still be evidence of this no? besides pictures are touched up all the time, you think that's really mars?
Perhaps all Chinese moon probes should be recalled.
To J Lewis from Savannah, who wrote:  I think it's an effort to hide the secret Nazi bunker planted there at the end of WWII.  Everyone knows the Apollo missions were just for resupply, right?  The Nazi's got the technology from the alien dinosaurs they thawed out in antartica.

ROFL.  Love the way you put this whole thing in perspective!
In response to the comment about the Islamic crescent moon and star, the star itself may not represent a star itself in the vastness of space, but a beacon of light, or hope, emanating from the surface of the moon itself.  It is, as if, to foreshadow the possibility of creating a lunar colony on the moon.  In order for the facility to operate in the darkness, light must be provided.  As a result, a shimmer of bright light could be detected from the surface of the Earth during a crescent moon.  Of course, this could fall under scrutiny, but I'd rather be sipping a cold fruit blend.
Wow, China & Japan are sending unmanned orbiters to the moon and taking pictures!  Welcome to the 1960's!!! [Yawn...]
MMM, my chinese made Garmin will have to sent back for recalibration. I had it set up for the moon.
Check out some more photos which I think are of much more interest.  On pages 2 and 3 of the Chinese news report there are some initial 3-D images from their lunar probe.
http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/china/2007-12/03/content_6294146_5.htm
The picture on the right looks to me like both craters are identical but taken on different angles.Both craters in the right photo show identical marks to the photo on the left.2 photos of the same crater have been joined.
it just makes for better feng shui without the crater there
Hilarious article...the Soviet mountains, the Chinese crater!  Funny stuff
Obviously the Chinese took one photo from column A and one from column B.  Steamed or fried with that?
This is entertaining.

Yes, the photo will have seams on it, just like your globe of the earth has seams on it.  You have to do some cutting/manipulation of a FLAT representation of a ROUND object, which this photo is.

I for one, am impressed that China has been able to get the probe to the moon and return some quality photos.

All cultural bashing aside, it's an impressive accomplishment for any nation.

Let's leave all the distracting issues of product quality control out of the discussion, and let's leave the religious fervor of Islam vs. the rest of the world out of this as well.

It's an article on "space-based conspiracy theories" getting explained.

Out of the hundreds of thousands of pictures taken by all the various space agencies on this planet, I am VERY certain this isn't the first/only mistake.
Nice job Dragon people of the center kingdom!
Let's try and release some of that stuff... would love to have a google earth or baidu of Chinese moon map in HD.
we have so many other problems getting along, can we just have the province of knowledge and education as a green zone? everyone makes mistacks.  
I think Kurt's right; if you look at the larger photos in Lakdawalla's blog, the crater enlargements are from the same area of the moon.  So her explanation seems very plausible.
To be honest, we don't deserve to venture off this rock called Earth anyway. We can't even get along on this planet, never mind another one. Were still fighting over race, religion and land after how many thousands of years. Humans are still way to primitive to start travelling the universe.
Peace!
Throw in the factor of anonymity, and suddenly everyone's an expert.

Seriously, never have I seen the line between opinion and fact blurred so profoundly. Before you post your thoughts, please

a) Read the actual blog post - not just this summary.

b) Think carefully about your post, and try to keep the political overtones (e.g. lead paint scandal) to a minimum. Posting witty social commentary fueled by media hysteria only makes you look ignorant.

c) Keep the conspiracy theories out of it. If there is one thing that all humans are good at, it is confirmation bias.

c) Spellcheck. ESPECIALLY when criticizing others for spelling. Nobody likes a hypocrite.
So they fudged a picture up.  Who hasn't done this?  It's not like they are blowing up satellites or something like that... wait a sec.
I don't know what all the fuss is about.  The moon is made of green cheese.  I know this is true because my father told me this many many years ago.  And everyone knows fathers do not tell fibs to thier children.  So now you have insulted Islam, China, NASA, the U.S., the Moon, and now my father.  Enough already.  It's a nice photo of 'green cheese' I think and the reason it appears different is that as cheese molds it takes on different appearances.
We don't know who made mistake of stitching pictures by one crater to two craters or two craters to one crater? the US or China?
John from SF, the photo wasn't generated by radar.  It was a high-resolution CCD with a lens on it, ie a digital camera.  The images where recorded by the CCD into a memory device of some sort, and then transmitted to a ground station, where they was processed, and stitched together.  The error in the stitching process could well have been a very small one that's been picked up by the Western press and amplified for all it's worth.  If you have a look at some of the press-release Mars rover images, sometimes there is a noticeable overlap when the image is a composite of smaller images.  
If you look closely enough, you can just make out weapons of mass-destruction...
Are there any other pictures?  Why don't they take some hi-res photos of the lunar buggy and American flag to finally dispel rumors that America never went there?  Why out of all those 10's of thousands of photos mentioned in this article aren't there any pictures of tire tracks or the flag??? The Chinese could score some authenticity points by publishing that!
Everyone makes mistakes. The real test of scientific integrity is to observe what remedial actions are taken and the level of care in future publications.

It is evident from many of the comments above that few respondents read the Planetary Society blog entry by Lakdawalla.

In it she provides pretty conclusive evidence for a (minor) error and takes a very balanced view.

She says "... the Chinese do have an orbiter at the Moon, and that it is producing really beautiful images that are a great improvement over Clementine" and "It is incredibly difficult to get every tiny feature in a large mosaic to line up properly; you have to have very, very precise knowledge of the shape of the body being photographed, and we actually don't have very good topographic models of the Moon".

All in all, the Chinese have done an excellent job - as has Lakdawalla, NASA and the Pentagon's 1994 Clementine mission. All should be applauded, none pilloried.
EGAD! It's an alien space base that the governments know about and are hiding with the "crater" image.
I'd just like to know why governments feel the need to edit photos of planets and moons.  There is no point to it, and this is the main reason why people doubt their sincerity.  

Stop retouching the damn photos, and maybe people will stop screaming "you're hiding something!!!" at you, pigs.  Or are you actually hiding something...?

There is ALWAYS a reason for shifting scientific data and reconnaissance photos around, and the explanation is rarely innocent.
I have a query. Seem that the lighting and shadow falls on the same direction. So did they take this photo on the same date or session as the US did. During the same session ? Even on earth, the shadow falls on different direction on different session of the year.
Who knows, maybe it is the US pictures that are flawed and this is how it really is?? ;)
I am not a rocket scientist, but if the picture was seamed together incorrectly one would see the duplicate of other artifacts along the same seam.  I just don't see it in the image that I have.  Does anyone know where the NASA 1994 pictures are so that I can compare them?
Taking a picture of the moon?  Say Cheese!

i honestly can't believe how dumb some people are - so they stitched a couple of images together to make a composite (NOT nasa images btw) and made a slip in aligning one perfectly.

big deal

show me a nasa large area pic that doesn't use the exact same technique and i'll be impressed. btw i've NEVER seen a perfect composite even from nasa - not one.

so is it fake? no

is it being deceptive? no

they did exactly what nasa does, only thing that makes it a big deal is that it was china, nobody wants to believe they did it because us westerners are just so damned superior....smacktards

If the USA is so good, how do you roll a shuttle out to the launch pad with two bad fuel gage sensors.  Don't those things get checked before you leave the hangar?
RE: Timothy Bryant (Sent Tuesday, December 04, 2007 8:50 PM)
I have plenty of problems with islam, but give them a break on this one.  This fall, during Ramadan, I happened to walk out pre-dawn, looked up, and saw...the crecsent and star.  It's close enough to what they use for their symbology, for crying out loud.  It was very striking, I have to add.
Uhh, wow. Orbiters DO use cameras. They film strips of the target area, and the strips are put together to form the full image. That's how it has been done for a very very long time.
We don't have the technology to take one snap of the whole moon at high res. We have to focus in on a small area, snap that picture, then move to the next section, snap that picture, etc.
This was, as the researcher says, an error in pasting those two pictures together.

Here is a test. Take a camera, and take a picture of half of a bridge.
Now shift and take a picture of the other half of the bridge. Now line those two pictures up, for one wide shot of the bridge, in a closer focus than the camera could have been to take the whole thing in one shot. is this picture faked?
And scale. We won't see photos of the rover or lander for a while yet. the moon isn't the size of your neighborhood playground!
picture this:
Lay a penny on a sheet of sidewalk. Now, go up 1 mile and point to that penny. you can't. heck, you'd be lucky to even see the sidewalk! this is the scale you are looking at. that crater that moved.
The photo you see above is 120 meters per pixel. pixel, folks. 120 meters fit under the point of a pin on that photo! you are looking at the small "new" crater being miles across. At that res, you aren't going to make out a 7.5 meter diameter lander base at all, it isn't even 1 pixel on the photo!
Just one picture, makes all the sence in the world!
Some how china must find a way to make money of this new data. If you give away too much how could you hope to sell the data afterward?
About all the cospiracy theories...  There are things that are not easily explained and some time accums razor is not the proper anser, so let say something in the picture is not easy to explain but it looks like a building, what do you do then? you let the morons say it is like the faces on mars or you say we can't explain it or you just cut it out of the picture and not cause any laymen to speculate on it?

and last! if the china could proff any of thos conspiracis that there stuctures on the moon that imply inteligence (wich i poses litle on acount of my spelling he?)the would come rigth out to proove that god does not exist like mention in genesis in the koran talmut and bible, the moon would be their joke on religion and their way of discrediting western thougth.

so finaly my take on it, it is just a cam mistake!
You space people are really weird.
Let's just assume it isn't a fake and that this little foray into space by the CNSA will ultimately be a good thing - even though it puts them around 50-odd years behind, principally, NASA and RSA and to a lesser extent, ESA, JAXA et al - since it'll carve NASA into the streamlined powerhouse of ingenuity that ultimately won the Space Race, leading to the winning of the Arms Race and ultimately the Cold War and securing the United States' position as the greatest country in the world, and not the bloated, bureaucratic, almost socialistic entity it is today. That's not to say it doesn't do stellar work (heh) and that it still has the best and the brightest working for it, but let's face it - it's a shadow of its former self.
And who cares about the Islamic symbol? That's the least of their problems.
Blogger Rich:

It wasn't touched up - the way orbiters work is that they take their pictures in long, thin strips as they orbit repeatedly, each time taking a picture a little bit further over, of the ground directly beneath the orbiter. These strips then get patched together to create a full image.  If you look at the raw data some of the pics from NASA probes, you'll see the same thing - it's one image created from many smaller images.  It sounds like what happened here is the error was introduced when the smaller images were patched together.  So it's not so much the quality of the HD images that's the issue, it's the processing after it that turns them into usable images.
Always fun to slam China, isn't it?  Well, it works best when you have your facts straight.  Photo stitching isn't done by a bunch of people sitting around drawing in craters on photoshop.  There are photo stitching tools.  I've used them extensively myself (I'm a Hugin user, personally) to make massive landscape photos (hundreds of megapixels) from many shots taken by my 6MP camera.  Nowadays, you don't even have to tell it what parts of the image match up to what other parts; it can figure that out on its own.  The difference between blending shots and not blending shots?  A checkbox.  That's it.  The software does all of the work for you.  NASA does the exact same thing.  Photos for scientific use don't have the edges blended, to make it clear where one shot stops and the next one begins.  Photos for public release generally have them blended to make them look prettier.  And the only difference is a checkbox.

There was no, and I mean absolute no ill will or deviousness required for this mistake.  If you knew more about what you were talking about, you'd understand that.  But hey, can't miss a chance to bash other people's hard work, now can you?

By the way -- these sorts of errors -- called "parallax errors" -- are rather tricky beasts.  I have a number of stitches with parallax errors in them, to my chagrin, because I don't have a panoramic head for my mount.  To understand parallax errors, move your head close to a narrow vertical object (a pole, a speaker, a lamp, whatever),and close your right eye.  Now open your right eye and close your left.  Notice how the speaker moves relative to its background?  That's a parallax error.  If you eyes were cameras and had  taken photos of what you saw, those images wouldn't be able to be stitched together without problems.  Well, Chang'e is orbiting the moon at high velocity, grabbing strips of images as it goes.  Mountains and crater ridges will appear to move relative to one another depending on where the shot is taken.  This can make it difficult for a stitcher to line up properly.
"whoop-te-do!!!! A new crater or not....it has no relavancy to our life on earth...right? So what's the big deal?... And who REALLY cares, anyway?"

Actually space exploration and the research required to support it has a direct affect to life on Earth.  There are countless technologies used everyday that would not exist without the space program.  Not to mention the less tangible affects of knowing more about the world around you...Would you rather believe that the world is flat?


"Screw the pictures...lets start landing and mining for resources; the moon is relatively close compared to Mars and asteroids, other possible sources of raw materials.  Logic would dictate that some type of settlement/mining establishment would be within our current capabilities, would it not?  At the very least we should be exploring.  Why send robots to Mars but no the moon?  NASA is out of touch with reality, we need developments/discoveries that affect us in helpful and useful ways to justify the funding we give them as taxpayers. We could make it an international venture like the ISS and encourage teamwork amongst the various space agencies, which hopefully would translate into goodwill between the nations involved.  Who agrees?"

For one thing, NASA does not get much money from taxpayers (in relation to other programs).  Secondly, Mars offers the possibility of supporting life, of potentially harboring life in the past and of actually having valuable resources.  What raw materials would you bring back from the Moon?  NASA has and continues to produce more "developments/discoveries that affect us in helpful and useful ways" than any other government funded project/agency that I can think of, despite being devestatingly underfunded and unfairly unpopular.



If people in this country paid an equal amount of attention to space exploration (and all scientific discovery) as they do to 'celebrity' activity we would be in a much better place...
Hmmm, wanna see some real master photo retouch work? Look at Google Earth.  :>p  China struggles with technology like the west does, but it will take them a few years to match our smoothness. I agree with Garaboldie in that China is pace setting, but cosmic football is fun too! We are the leaders of the pack, but can only taunt so long until our @$$e$ are handed to us. Maybe they should outsource their photography to India or Taiwan (lol)...
Just another Huanan tiger.
Ms. Lakdawala has done a good research on this image . No doubt about that.

These things do happen when images are meshed together ( see Google Earth which has several of such instances ) but then a couple of questions crop up:

1. There should have been some more repeatations in the image ... there seems to be none.. I tried to find seams in various directions but could not succeed.

2. The person who matches the images knows thoroughly well that there is some repeatation.. then why did the Chinese specialists say that a new crater has been found?
Gosh! the craters must be floating on the moon.  Just compare the craters' relative positions in the two pictures (in this link: http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/china/2007-12/03/content_6294146.htm) and you will see what I mean. (Use a ruler or an empty envelope and measure across horizontally.) The difference is so obvious!  
The 3-D picture of the moon surface, generated from Chang'e transmited data, indicates that other sensors are onboard other than the CCD camera.  Any mistake on the composite picture is therefore quite easily verifiable with these data or by a comparison with the 3-D picture. So, whether it's a error or not, we will just have to wait for the Chang'e team to respond to these questions.
yeah lets strip mine the moon, it will only cause it to lose mass which will in turn mean it effects the Earth and her tides less and God only knows what happens next. Yeah weve screwed this planet up enough lets move to the next one. Brilliant


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