China has officially denied rumours that it faked a photograph apparently
taken from its satellite in orbit around the Moon.
Ever since the
Chang'e-1
satellite photo was released, there have been rumblings on the internet that
the image was copied from an earlier American survey.
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China pointed to a double asteroid crater which is not consistent with
existing knowledge of the Moon as proof that the image is genuine.
"There is absolutely no forgery," Ouyang Ziyuan, chief scientist for the
lunar probe, told the
Beijing
News.
"Maybe it is because the resolution of the American photo was not high
enough, or a new pit might have been generated by an asteroid hitting the moon
between 2005 and 2007.
"I understand the doubts of the internet surfers. They hope the Chinese lunar
probe can do well so they don't want the photo to turn out to be fake."
The photo was created by matching strips of images taken along a particular
line of longitude. But it has been suggested that the Chinese photographic lab
slightly misaligned one of the strips, thus giving the appearance of a double
crater.
Emily Lakdawalla, from the
Planetary
Society, said in a
blog
entry: "The Chang'e image is not a fake as far as I can tell.
"My opinion, based on the evidence I was able to dig up, is that the Chinese
do have an orbiter at the Moon and that it is producing really beautiful images.
"But the one released image is a processed product, and was altered slightly
to make it pretty. This alteration made it difficult for a scientist to realise
that what appeared to be a new feature was in fact an artefact."
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