Lunar Section Blog
The Lunar Observer March 2024
2/29/2024

Please find below the March 2024 ALPO The Lunar Observer newsletter.   

PLEASE CONTACT ME IF YOU CAN NOT OPEN THIS!  

Find the March 2024 The Lunar Observer here.

Also, Greg Shanos has submitted a short piece about lunar events in mid-February 2024. I hope that you can get out and observe these events! Please send in your reports to the ALPO Lunar Section. You can access his report here

Clear Skies,

David Teske
Coordinator, Lunar Topographic Studies Program
Assn of Lunar & Planetary Observers


The Lunar Observer February 2024
1/31/2024

Please find below the February 2024 ALPO The Lunar Observer newsletter.   

PLEASE CONTACT ME IF YOU CAN NOT OPEN THIS!  

Find the February 2024 The Lunar Observer here.

Clear Skies,

David Teske
Coordinator, Lunar Topographic Studies Program
Assn of Lunar & Planetary Observers


The Lunar Observer January 2024
12/31/2023

Please find below the January 2024 ALPO The Lunar Observer newsletter.   

PLEASE CONTACT ME IF YOU CAN NOT OPEN THIS!  

Find the January 2024 The Lunar Observer here.

Clear Skies,

David Teske
Coordinator, Lunar Topographic Studies Program
Assn of Lunar & Planetary Observers


The Lunar Observer December 2023
12/1/2023

Please find below the December 2023 ALPO The Lunar Observer newsletter.   

PLEASE CONTACT ME IF YOU CAN NOT OPEN THIS!  

Find the December 2023 The Lunar Observer here.

Clear Skies,

David Teske
Coordinator, Lunar Topographic Studies Program
Assn of Lunar & Planetary Observers


Call for Observations: The Hook of Plato’s Shadow
11/1/2023

In the August 2023 The Lunar Observer, lunar imager extraordinaire KC Pau of Hong Kong, China presented an excellent article entitled “Plato Hook Shadow Is Real”.  As with all of his lunar work, this was an excellent study of the hook of Plato’s shadow.  

I presented KC’s article for inclusion in an upcoming issue of the JALPO due to the widespread interest in the Hook. In addition, aspects of the feature remain enigmatic, such as the exact conditions (and their parameters) required to create the feature. Therefore I am putting out a call to all ALPO lunar observers for any additional images or observations of Plato’s hook.  Please send the images or drawings – along with all the usual metadata including time and location of the observation – to me at drteske@yahoo.com and david.teske@alpo-astronomy.org.  Your images and observations will be used to advance our understanding of this most interesting feature. 

Thank you for your assistance in this matter.
Clear skies!
David Teske