I am continuing with my studies of Apollo shadows on the moon and I skipped ahead of my current focus (Apollo 15) to Apollo 17 and its stupendous fly by of Taurus Littrow.
Seemed to me that, in the presence of bright sunshine, there might just be a shadow of a command module to be seen somewhere.
A likely candidate can be seen in AS17-147-22465, a 49Mb TIFF of which you can get here
https://archive.org/details/as17-147-22465and you can see what I think is the CSM shadow here:
That little blob on the mound is not visible in the other images in this sequence, neither does it appear to be anything on the lens.
So, is it the CSM shadow?
Well, we have to do some educated guess work here. We know from the mission times that the sun angle at this point is 14.75 degrees.
The mission information suggests an altitude for the LM at this point of around 10000 metres. This would mean that the shadow of the CSM would be roughly 25 km from the point directly beneath the CSM.
What would this actually look like?
Google Moon allows you to position a marker at a known height above ground. We can also draw a line from the point where the shadow falls 25 km in length, and position the CSM 10 km above the end point. This is what I've done in the image below.
The black line represents a 25km distance from the location of the shadow. The CSM figure is 10km above the end of that. The red line represents the path followed by the CSM, which coincidentally is pretty much with the sun behind it. The yellow line represents the path of light from the sun, based on a position determined by Stellarium and the path of shadows on the ground.
Thoughts?
I also think I've spotted where the LM's shadow is:
You can also find what looks like the CSM shadow half way up the south massif in
https://archive.org/details/as17-147-22466What I need to know is are the numbers right and are my conclusions reasonable?
For anyone who decides to check the 16mm footage, most of the dark blobs that appear to trail the movement of the CSM & LM seem more likely to what we in the trade call 'bits of crap'.