Does anyone remember those crazy images were you have to stare or look at them a certain way to see the real or hidden image. I think the moon is like one of those pictures.
What we are looking to see is that the moon's craters will invert so that they almost appear to be protruding above the moons surface. If you are able to zoom in on the image a little it may help. Once they invert you will see the moon' landscape looks entirely different... It may take a bit of time and effort to eventually see this, as we have been conditioned to see things the other way around, but when you finally do in fact you see it... it will surprise you.
Some questions:
How is it possible that meteorites travelling hit the moons surface at exacltly ninety degrees and thus create the uniform craters we see?
Why are there no glancing impact marks from meteorites being off the ninety degree impact plane?
Dave Wing
What we are looking to see is that the moon's craters will invert so that they almost appear to be protruding above the moons surface. If you are able to zoom in on the image a little it may help. Once they invert you will see the moon' landscape looks entirely different... It may take a bit of time and effort to eventually see this, as we have been conditioned to see things the other way around, but when you finally do in fact you see it... it will surprise you.
Some questions:
How is it possible that meteorites travelling hit the moons surface at exacltly ninety degrees and thus create the uniform craters we see?
Why are there no glancing impact marks from meteorites being off the ninety degree impact plane?
Dave Wing
Comment