LAC

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Lunar Astronautical Chart (LAC)

lac-header.jpg

Table of Contents

[#Lunar Astronautical Chart (LAC) Lunar Astronautical Chart (LAC)]
[#Lunar Astronautical Chart (LAC)-Description Description]
[#Lunar Astronautical Chart (LAC)-Additional Information Additional Information]
[#Lunar Astronautical Chart (LAC)-Other uses of the term Other uses of the term]
[#Lunar Astronautical Chart (LAC)-LPOD Articles LPOD Articles]
[#Lunar Astronautical Chart (LAC)-Bibliography Bibliography]

Description

The original meaning of the term Lunar Astronautical Chart is one of a series of maps of the Moon produced by the U.S. Air Force [/DMA ACIC] in the 1960's. The Moon was systematically divided into 144 "sheets" or zones (later called [/LAC%20zone Regions] by the IAU) and the features within each were portrayed on the basis of first telescopic, and later [/Lunar%20Orbiter Lunar Orbiter] images. The original printed maps measured 22x29 inches (56x73 cm), and portrayed the lunar topography in an airbrush "shaded relief" style at a scale of 1:1,000,000 (1 unit on map = 1,000,000 units on Moon; that is, 1 cm on map is ~10 km on Moon) with spot elevations and crater depths based on shadow lengths. Occasionally, 300 m contours were added as well. The maps represent aerial views of the Moon, but the projection used depends on the latitude zone. The background color varies to represent the brightness of the area at [/Full%20Moon Full Moon]. Features are labeled according to the then-current [/IAU%20nomenclature IAU nomenclature].

Additional Information

  • The 144 sheet layout is said (Carder, 1962) to be "similar to the The International Map of the World," but it actually seems to quite different. The reference is apparently to the World Aeronautical Chart series, which was also at the 1:1,000,000 scale. - JimMosher JimMosher
  • Only 44 of the sheets were ever completed in the original LAC series -- about half the 84 needed to cover the hemisphere visible from Earth. They show the Moon's disk to about +/-65° in latitude and +/-50 to 70° in longitude. The [/USGS USGS] issued a corresponding geologic map for each of these regions, using the LAC map as a background, although they chose to number them differently. A handful of LAC regions were added, and a few were revised, in the [/DMA DMA]'s later [/LM%20map%20series LM] series, based on Apollo imagery.
  • All 44 of the original LACs are available for download from the LPI website.
    • They were also published at slightly reduced size in 1969 in the [/Times%20Atlas%20of%20the%20Moon Times Atlas of the Moon].
    • Reproductions at various sizes up to 23.4 x 33.1 inches are currently available from British amateur/author Peter Grego's ebay Moon Maps and Memorabilia store.
  • The original project was intended to include only enough LAC's to map the Moon's equatorial zone, but was later extended to most of the nearside. For more information about the original LAC series see: [/History%20of%20the%20LAC%20maps History of the LAC maps]


Other uses of the term

  • The term "LAC" map has somewhat confusingly been adopted to designate maps prepared by other agencies and institutions, portraying the same zones with other imagery. - JimMosher JimMosher
    • I think of LACs as being both the original map series and a very specific way to divide the Moon into map-size pieces. It is very convenient to know that a LAC number covers the exact same area whether it is the original LAC maps from the 60s, later revisions in the 70s, the [/USGS USGS] geologic maps, or the Bussey and Spudis sheets in their [/Clementine%20Atlas Clementine Atlas]. This is exactly analogous to what we do on Earth. The USGS has a variety of map series, including a widely used 1:1,000,000 set. If a user knows the topo map number of their area of interest, that same series number commonly allows rapid identification of maps of the same area but showing different types of information (aerial photography, water quality, climate variations, etc). Long live LACs! - tychocrater tychocrater Aug 16, 2007
  • The LAC sheet system was also adopted for the [/USGS%20Digital%20Atlas USGS Digital Atlas], which illustrates the IAU-approved [/IAU%20nomenclature lunar nomenclature] for all 144 Regions on [/Lunar%20Orbiter Lunar Orbiter] and Shaded Relief-topographic backgrounds called "LAC"s.


LPOD Articles

LACs and More!

Bibliography

  • Carder, R. W. 1962. Lunar Charting on a Scale of 1:1000000. In: The Moon, (Kopal, Z., and Mikhailov, Z. K., editors) IAU Symposium 14, Academic Press, pp. 117-129. (detailed information on how the first LAC's were produced)
  • Kopal, Zdenek; Carder, Robert W. 1974. [/Kopal%20and%20Carder%2C%201974 Mapping of the moon. Past and present]. Astrophysics and Space Science Library, Dordrecht: Reidel.
  • LAC map on display at the Linda Hall Library




This page has been edited 1 times. The last modification was made by - tychocrater tychocrater on Jun 13, 2009 3:24 pm - mgx1