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Photographic techniques capture electromagnetic wavelengths beyond human vision, revealing features invisible to the naked eye. These signals are processed into interpretable forms using methods like color mapping.
Pink lacks a specific electromagnetic wavelength, while grey poses a limitation due to its representation of only intensity—a blend of light and dark without spectral specificity. Imaging techniques reliant on spectral variation produce identical results for greyscale images unless non-visible data is present. Deviations from this uniformity may indicate errors, misinterpretations, or unknown phenomena.
Contention persists over analytical debates, including dismissible claims like Van Allen belt dangers and contested evidence of lunar mirrors. The precision of laser reflections targeting a moving 3x3-foot marker on the Moon highlights technical skill but often fails to resolve skepticism. For instance, a 0.1° shift moves a laser spot 670 km across the Moon's surface.
Forensic analysis (2022, 2023) of Apollo 11–17 photographs assessed authenticity claims. Images of humans in space, Earth, and the Moon's distant views were validated, but Moon landing visuals showed variations, suggesting diverse techniques may have replicated certain elements.
PEMi (Photoelectromagnetic Image) software enhances forensic analysis by differentiating natural and artificial light sources, revealing hidden features. Each PEMi-ID links to original sources, ensuring traceability and comparison.
Further exploration is available:
Lehti, A. (2024). The Silence of Inquiry: Forensic Reflections Reveal a Crisis of Perception. figshare. doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.28078982
Credits
2022-2025 © Andrew Lehti
1961–2023 © NASA, ESA
Software: PEMi (GitHub: andylehti/PEMi.git)
Explore PEM-I: pemimage.streamlit.app
CC BY-SA 4.0 License: creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/
Research:
Lehti, Andrew (2024). Cognitive Psychology and the Education System. figshare. Collection. doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.7532079
CC BY-SA 4.0
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License. To view a copy of this license, visit creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/ or send a letter to Creative Commons, PO Box 1866, Mountain View, CA 94042, USA.
The Phoenix Mars lander has traveled millions of miles, survived a dangerous entry at hypersonic speeds, and successfully set up operations on the surface of an alien world. After all that, what's stopping it now? Dirt clods. The Martian soil samples it came to examine turn out to be too clumpy to pour into its onboard laboratories using the planned procedures.
The clumpiness could be a sign the soil was once wet, which would be an important find, but meanwhile, how to examine it? In this animation, engineers are experimenting with a technique of gently sprinkling the sample onto the deck of the lander. That might do the trick.
Sent by: Phoenix | From: Mars | Credit: NASA/JPL/UA
Added to www.ridingwithrobots.org June 10, 2008.
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I might have accidentally bought a sweater's worth of Cascade 220...I think this could be dangerous.
Just before I went to sleep last night I had an idea. I don't think this has done before but let m know if it has. I was trying to think of a good way to put a minifig's arm sideways. Here you see some of my space marines running from... something. One of them chose to fire s few shots off. He looked back and fired with one arm. Now comes my technique. Take a BA monopod and clip it onto a minifig arm. Then take the round end of the monopod and stick it in the arm socket. The arm moves around a bit but you should be able to pose it long enough to take a picture at least.