As you may know I have a page on my site dedicated to Apollo's Metric Mapping Camera images, as well as Apollo's stellar photography. Knowing that part of the MMC's setup was a stellar camera used to pinpoint the location of the CSM in lunar orbit I asked NASA about the data collections.
It took some time for them to get back to me thanks to various shut downs and other work being understandably more important, but I finally got a couple of images back. The sender apologised for their quality, explaining that they only seem to have 3rd and 4th generation pooor quality copies of these, which is a real shame but they are probably only of esoteric interest in the grand scheme of things.
One image is essentially blank, but the other, numbered 511, shows a very bright object just left of the centre of the frame:
As any amateur sky watcher knows, any very bright object in the night sky is usually Jupiter. Is that the case here?
If I assume that the frame number corresponds to image 511 in the MMC sequence, it was taken on April 21st 1972. At that point Jupiter would have been visible from the lunar surface in the western sky. Again, assuming I have the time and image number correct, the CSM was over Mare Smythii at the time. If we plug the date into Celestia and position ourselves over that location we see this:
Which looks very promising. The camera design certainly suggests that the stellar camera could have been pointing in the direction of Jupiter while looking down to the surface:
Obviously I'm making a huge assumption there, so what I'm wondering is: does the combination of dots at the top mean anything to anyone? It is different to the combination of dots on the other image I was sent, so is likely to be some sort of unique identifier readable by machine, but I don't know how to read it!
Any suggestions, thoughts?