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NASA creating 3-D moon images

An example of a moon anaglyph which, when viewed through red/blue-green glasses, gives a 3D image of the surface. Credit: NASA
An example of a moon anaglyph which, when viewed through red/blue-green glasses, gives a 3D image of the surface. Credit: NASA

GREENBELT, Md., Sept. 25 (UPI) -- NASA says its Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter is acquiring stereo images of the moon in high resolution to provide 3-D views of the surface.

A team of researchers from the University of Arizona and Arizona State University is developing a processing system to automatically generate anaglyphs -- images that can be viewed in 3-D using red/blue-green glasses -- from most of these stereo pairs, the space agency reported Tuesday.

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The anaglyphs will give better understanding of the topography of the lunar surface by making lunar features such as craters, volcanic flows, lava tubes and tectonic features jump out in 3-D, NASA said.

The stereo images are created by the orbiter's Narrow Angle Camera targeting a location on the ground and taking an image from one angle on one orbit, and from a different angle on a subsequent orbit.

Detailed images of the moon's surface in 3-D will be available to the general public through Arizona State University's website at http://lroc.sese.asu.edu/ and a NASA website at www.nasa.gov/lro as they become available, NASA said.

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