User Guide What LTVT Can Do For You - fermigas/ltvt GitHub Wiki
What LTVT Can and Cannot Do
LTVT Can:
Draw a map of the Moon (or other planet) as a flat disk seen in projection from any distant point, such as on Earth (or elsewhere).
Tell you the positions in the sky of the Sun and Moon (or selected planet) at the specified time.
Accurately indicate the position of the terminator based either on manually entered sub-solar and sub-observer points, or on the same data independently computed by the program using the downloadable JPL ephemeris files
Accurately portray the angular orientation of the Moon in the sky as seen through a particular telescope configuration at a particular hour of the night.
Allow you to easily zoom in and re-center the image.
Identify all named features falling within the image area, representing their centers by dots.
Automatically plot and label such dots with user-selectable colors and fonts.
Display the origin of the feature names or such additional information as may be present in the dot file.
Perform the same operations with other dot-like data, such as Clementine altimeter points.
Take you instantly to any named feature, showing you both how it looks from overhead and in projection from Earth or elsewhere.
Measure distances on the planetary surface and interpret the length of shadows in terms of elevation differences.
Search for future or past times with similar lighting conditions or librations.
Search through a user-provided list of photographs or observations, and tabulate them by the position of the terminator and the magnitude of the librations.
Search through the same list and automatically flag those that were made when lighting conditions were similar to the present simulated image.
After a simple calibration procedure, load any photo of the Moon (or other planet) taken from Earth or elsewhere as a texture so that all the above functions can be performed directly on it, rather than on a specially prepared reference map.
If a Digital Elevation Model is available, create accurate simulations of the three dimensional appearance of the surface, including cast shadows, as seen in projection from a distant point.
LTVT Does Not:
Predict eclipses.
Tell you the dates and times of the lunar phases.
Tell you about the geology of the features portrayed in the images.
Blur or sharper the reference map: LTVT copies and displays pixels exactly as they appear in the reference map, using a single pixel from the source image of each pixel in the displayed image. Competitive products, such as VMA, may do a better job of rendering by averaging data over a larger area in the source image.