View Full Version here: : Google Earth Astro Challenge - for when the weather's bad...
sheeny
21-06-2007, 03:29 PM
I've just been having a play on Google Earth (yep, the weather is ordinary!) and thought an interesting thread might be to share google earth views of sites that are significant to space / astronomy.
To start things off here's a few locations I've had a look at on Google Earth:
Korolev: There are 2 locations by this name in Russia (in google earth). I have no idea if these are space related, but entered the name and had a look. There is some interesting triangular markings on the ground at the location in the Province of Volgograd - zoom out to see. Not enough resolution in google earth yet to see much else though. The location in the Province of Rostov just looks rural.
Parkes CSIRO Radio Telescope: Resolution is disappointing. There are a multitude of inaccurate markers for the radio telescope in google earth. This exact name is the best one to use (some put it in Parkes itself).
Coonabarabran: I found this the easiest way to find the telescopes in the Warrumbungles. Look for the white blob(s) just WNW of town. Resolution is disappointing. a search for Siding Spring doesn't work anyway.
Kennedy Space Center: Wow! Heaps of detail and it's big! Zoom out and pan around and zoom back in on launch pads, etc. Definitely worth a look.:thumbsup::thumbsup::thumbsup:
Edwards Air Force Base: Reasonable detail here. Shuttle landing strips are visible to the north east of the base. Zoom out and pan around to check it out.:thumbsup::thumbsup:
Baikonur Cosmodrome: Looks derelict and barren. Evidence of ruins, and significant activity and isolated pockets of heavy industry scattered around the area. Hard to identify a launch pad though. North of Baikonur town. For more info on Baikonur have a look at http://www.russianspaceweb.com/baikonur.html.
Undarra, Australia: The earthly equivalent of lunar rilles. Collapse lava tubes show up as bright green oases in meandering lines. Also associated volcanic craters. Zoom out and find a "rille" (collapsed lava tube) just south of the airstrip.
Woomera, Australia: Airstrips and a "base" of some sort NNW from Woomera Township. Interesting clearings along the sides of the highway and eastern side of the gully north of Woomera:shrug:.
If you've had a look at some interesting terrestrial craters or astro/space locations why not share?
Al.
sheeny
21-06-2007, 04:19 PM
Here's another one:
Tanegashima Space Center - one of Jaxa's launch facilities. Best way to find is to enter "Tanega-shima" then pan down to the SE coast and find Osaki and Takesaki. According to the Jaxa web site their facility includes both these localities. (Google earth lists these names but won't find them in the search!?:shrug::screwy:) Zoom in on Osaki.
Al.
sheeny
21-06-2007, 04:44 PM
OK, now that I've found some info about Baikonur I realise the launch pads aren't so hard to find. I think they are just more spread out than KSC and they blend in to the ground better. Attached is a crop of the view of the R7 launch pad where Yuri Gagarin was launched from.:)
Al.
Dennis
21-06-2007, 05:05 PM
Nice work Al - very interesting stuff.
Cheers
Dennis
Omaroo
21-06-2007, 05:21 PM
Yep Al - just look for flame trenches.
Well done! :)
sheeny
21-06-2007, 05:38 PM
FYI the Woomera Rocket Range is NW from Woomera at Koolymilka.
Al.
Gargoyle_Steve
21-06-2007, 06:35 PM
I have the NASA facility on the East coast of Florida in the US (inc launch pads 39 A and B) saved on my pc at home. You can follow the "road" from the launch pads back to the service building, etc. Wonderful area to meander around.
Google Earth is amazing - where I was based in the Middle East was considered quite sensitive - yet you can see every little road and hut on the base with google earth - even count the aircraft on the ground......
okiscopey
21-06-2007, 08:55 PM
How about the world's LARGEST single-aperture RADIO TELESCOPE - Arecibo in Puerto Rica?
:eyepop:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arecibo_Observatory
ballaratdragons
21-06-2007, 09:11 PM
Here are 2 very interesting sites you may find facinating.
1. Tunguska - site of the 1908 Meteor explosion which flattened 80 million trees over 2,150 square kilometers. (don't use 'Tunguska' in the search window. The town of Tunguska was moved after the event)
How to find:
60*54'06.96"N
101*55'44.94"E
And 'AREA 51' The site of whatever!
How to find
37*14'36.27"N
115*48'41.16"W
Here are pics of the 2 locations.
1. Tunguska
2. Area 51
ballaratdragons
21-06-2007, 09:17 PM
Now that you have zoomed in on Area 51, go a few miles North and you will see the censored buildings! (covered up by green dots!)
Must be where the Aliens live :lol:
37*38'52.18"N
115*47'54.35W
okiscopey
21-06-2007, 10:27 PM
Another Google Earth location and some interesting reading for a rainy night - the Royal Greenwich Observatory.
Pluto was demoted once, but poor old Greenwich Observatory has been done-in twice!
Firstly, the RGO headquarters was moved from Greenwich (London) to Herstmonceaux (Sussex) in the 1950's, moved again to Cambridge (UK), and closed in 1998. Well, at least Pluto didn't actually disappear.
The second demotion came with the adoption of WGS84 and GPS positioning ... now the prime meridian runs 102.5 metres to the east of the 'zero degrees' originally defined by the Airy Transit Circle.
Is nothing sacred?
A personal view of the RGO disaster:
http://personales.ya.com/ejmills/astro_pages/rgo/rgo.html
Standard RGO blurb:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Royal_Observatory_Greenwich
*Apparently* you can see details within Area 51 in Nevada too..... Probably not enough detail to see Neil Armstrongs footprints though! hehe :D
sheeny
25-06-2007, 05:17 PM
Just having a play this afternoon...
Stonehenge: Just enter stonehenge as a single word and it'll get you there... and anything else and you'll be touring the bed and breakfasts anywhere but where the real stonehenge is (e.g. Armidale NSW!:lol:) Good detail, but you'll need to zoom in from the default view.
Woodhenge: This just picks a street in suburbia somewhere in England.
Uxmal: This should be an archeoastronomical site in Mexico, but the resolution is too poor to tell.
Machu Picchu: In Peru. It's a couple of ridges to the west from the Google Earth marker. Actual position 13°09'10.17"S 72°31'43.44"W. Check out the road leading up to it! Good detail.
Knowth: Knowth is another megalithic site in Ireland. The web results of the search obviously pick up the locations of various parts of the Knowth complex but the resolution is not up to the task!
Newgrange: This is another meglithic site in the Boyne valley in Ireland. Again the resolution is inadequate, though a blob on the screen seems to match the location of the major mound.
Al.
sheeny
25-06-2007, 08:30 PM
Here's India's Satish Dhawan Space Centre (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Satish_Dhawan_Space_Centre).
Hmmm... I'm just wondering how difficult it would be to find North Korea's missile launch site from data on the web...:P:confuse3:
Al.
sheeny
25-06-2007, 08:46 PM
:lol:
Well there wasn't much of challenge in that...
Korea's missile Launch facility...
http://www.fas.org/nuke/guide/dprk/facility/nodong.htm
Al.
sheeny
25-06-2007, 08:58 PM
That's pretty cool! Lots of detail there!:thumbsup:
Al.
ballaratdragons
25-06-2007, 09:04 PM
And the Australian 'Man of the Desert'.
He is about 2k long!!!
29*31'58.98"S
137*28'01.28"E
Eye Altitude - approx 6.5k
sheeny
25-06-2007, 09:14 PM
Hmmm... a spear in the left hand? I can't make out the right hand...
Very cool though! GPS art at it's best!
Al.
ballaratdragons
25-06-2007, 09:18 PM
Yep Al, his left hand has a Woomera and spear. I think his right arm is just pointing, like he's taking aim :shrug:
Interesting how the green bushes grow where his fishing tackle is :lol:
h0ughy
25-06-2007, 10:28 PM
LOL spinifex or scrub???:P
this stuff is great!
okiscopey
25-06-2007, 11:35 PM
Gosses Bluff, nr. Alice Springs
Seen it from a distance on an outback tour ... not much of it left nowadaze.
http://asterweb.jpl.nasa.gov/gallery-detail.asp?name=Gosses
"Gosses Bluff, about 205 km west of Alice Springs, in the Northern Territory, Australia, is one of the most significant impact structures in the world. This crater is thought to have been made by the impact of a large comet or meteorite, about 143 million years ago. It has been estimated that the original crater would have been about 22 km in diameter ... "
Landsat 7 image:
http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Newsroom/NewImages/images.php3?img_id=16503
Also:
http://www.ahc.gov.au/publications/geofossil/gosses.html
ballaratdragons
26-06-2007, 12:38 AM
Here are some bombed out buildings in Iraq:
33*31'07.48"N
44*17'46.75"E
And just to give an example of how close in Google Earth can get!
Check these out and see how close in you can get!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! :eyepop:
Villagers
4*22'18.92"N
18*31'35.63"E
Water Well
15*17'54.60"N
19*25'47.02"E
Camel Rider & his Camels
15*17'40.19"N
20*28'47.61"E
sheeny
26-06-2007, 07:21 AM
Why would anyone have such close up shots of Iraq????:P:lol:
They are close aren't they!
Al.
iceman
26-06-2007, 07:38 AM
That's amazing resolution.
sheeny
04-07-2007, 08:04 PM
A few more sites of interest...
The Canberra Deep Space Communications Centre at Tidbinbilla. Pretty good resolution - worth a look!
The Chernobyl disaster site. OK it's not astro or space related... but you might be interested...
And, of course, Lostock!!!! Site of the famous IISAC. Resolution needs improving though if we are to be able to pick our campsites between the cow pats before leaving home!;)
Al.
hookedonsaturn
05-07-2007, 09:29 PM
I just got google earth a few days ago and did check on a place that i wouldnt have thought was important enough to have sattelite foto.My place.Dam the resolution.you can count the trees,see how little water is in the dam,plus all the junk i have hauled home for different projects.While it is nice to be able to view things of intrest it is kinda scarey we have no privacy
ballaratdragons
05-07-2007, 09:36 PM
Yep, it's a kind of blessing that my little town isn't high res yet. Everyone would see all the junk in one of my paddocks :P
hookedonsaturn
07-07-2007, 02:22 PM
thats what bothers me The wife said she didnt realize just how much junk i have here .Now she wants me to clean up:( Dam google. if i do that its all:work: :work: :work: and no time for:fishing: :campfire: :astron: :stargaze:
sheeny
08-07-2007, 06:17 PM
I was doing a bit of esearch into earth impact sites and stumbled over the Earth Impact Database. It contains google map links as well.
http://www.unb.ca/passc/ImpactDatabase/austr.html
Al.
vBulletin® v3.8.7, Copyright ©2000-2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.