That's a really great question, Clif! Some special planning will
certainly be required if the predicted impact plume is too faint to
register with the combination of f/numbers and exposure times normally
used for lunar observations.
In addition, I would guess that all estimates of the plume size and
brightness must be extremely rough, since the LCROSS scientists
probably have only a vague idea of how the surface will respond to the
impact (how much lunar dust will it kick up?) and even less idea of
whether it will contain a (more reflective?) water/ice component
(since deciding that is, I think, the point of the experiment).
That said, if they want their predictions to be accessible to non-
scientists (and probably to other scientists as well) it would seem
helpful if they could supplement the raw photometric predictions with
some kind of comparison to more familiar terms of reference. For
example, a curve showing how bright the predicted plume is in
comparison the normal lunar surface would be useful. It would seem
much easier to plan observations if one knew, for example, that (at a
particular wavelength) the plume after 60 seconds is expected to have
(over an area of 10 km ?) twice the brightness of the nearby normal
lunar surface, or one-hundredth of it, or whatever.
Given such information you could easily make a test run with your
telescope adjusted to simulate those conditions (for example, by
stopping it down or using a neutral density filter if the brightness
is expected to be some fraction of the normal lunar surface
brightness), and seeing if you could detect anything under those
conditions. That would completely avoid any need for complex
calculations of the sort you are attempting, and the many additional
assumptions that are needed to complete them (e.g., is the curve
presented in the slide the intensity before or after attenuation by
the Earth's atmosphere?, how great are the additional losses in your
reflector?, etc.).
Hopefully at some point before the impact, the LCROSS science team
will give a more clear indication of how their predictions for the
size and brightness of the plume relate to some easily accessible
reference (such as normal lunar surface features); although based on
their participation in this forum to date I wouldn't hold my breath
for an answer.
As a rough guess, I believe the surface brightness of the Sun (at its
peak in the visible and as observed above the Earth's atmosphere) is
said to be about 26,000,000 W/m^2/micron/sr. The "Full Moon" (which
is not really the real Full Moon, but rather something obtained by
extrapolating the brightness from other phases) is said to be about
1/400,000th of that, giving an average Full Moon lunar surface
brightness of something like 66 W/m^2/micron/sr. At the First and
Last Quarters the surface brightness is said to be only about 1/5th of
this value, which would work out to something like 13 W/m^2/micron/sr
(the total light from a Quarter Moon is only about 1/10th of that from
a Full Moon because only half the surface shines with this reduced
brightness).
I haven't had a chance to download the AAS presentation you are
referring to:
http://lcross.arc.nasa.gov/observation.htm
but it sounds like the slide you mention is the one that shows a peak
plume brightness in the visible (10-60 seconds after impact) of 35-40
W/m^2/micron/sr. If my numbers given above for the "normal" Moon are
correct, this would seem to imply that the LCROSS scientists think the
initial impact plume will be considerably brighter than a typical
lunar surface feature at Quarter phase, and probably even brighter
than the maria (but not as bright as the brightest surface features)
in a nearly Full Moon. Of course, I have no idea if this is actually
what they are predicting or not.
I'm also not sure how large a diameter the peak surface brightness
quoted at 10-60 seconds after impact is supposed to extend over; and I
would assume that whatever the initial surface brightness is, the
plume's surface will, at some point, start to fade as it grows.
-- Jim
On Dec 2, 1:08 pm, Arnold Ashcraft <
wa2...@optonline.net> wrote:
> Folks,
> I would like to image the impact plume from the LCROSS mission and I
> would like to use the correct exposure and focal ratio to maximize my
> chances of getting something. In slide 24 of the talk presented by
> Dr. Jennifer L. Heldmann at the May 2007 AAS conference is a plot of
> the expected impact plume irradiance as a function of wavelength and
> time. The units given for the irradiance is watts per meter squared
> per micron per steradian. I did a rough integration of the plot over
> the range of wavelengths my camera CCDs are sensitive to and got an
> area of about 20 watts per square meter per steradian.
>
> From the aperture and focal length of my telescope and the area of a
> pixel on my cameras, I calculated that if I placed the CCD of my
> DMK31 camera at the un-amplified focus of my 12.5" f/6 Newtonian, I
> will get 0.012 microwatts of power deposited in each 4.65 micron
> pixel. Doing the same calculation for my SBIG ST-8 and assuming 2x2
> binning of its 9 micron pixels, I get 0.18 microwatts in a 2x2 bin.
>
> That's where my calculations ran out of gas. I would like to relate
> this power level to the exposure I would need to get a perceptible
> image (say, 10x the noise level from dark current) with either of the
> cameras. If possible, I would like to take either a video or a time-
> lapse sequence of images from the DMK31, or if it is not sensitive