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| Animation made from seven LROC images of the Apollo 17 landing site, ordered from sunrise to sunset, and showing the changing length and location of the shadow cast by the U.S. flag erected by the crew. The frames are: (1) M116113215RC, Sun 8 degrees above the eastern horizon; (2) M131447374LC , 11 deg. east; (3) M129086118LC , 35 deg. east; (4) M109032389LC , 68 deg. east; (5) M134985003RC , 26 deg. west; and (6) M117291316LC , 5 deg. west. LROC images courtesy NASA/GSFC/Arizona State University. | 

| Detail from AS17-140-21354,
                taken out the LMP window after EVA-2.  The flag is
                pointing in an easterly direction.  At the end of
                EVA-3, the Rover
                was parked 128
                meters from the LM on an azimuth of 112 (22 degrees
                south of east). (Click on the image for a larger
                version.) | 

| Image taken by the
                  Rover-mounted TV before Ascent Stage liftoff. 
                  The camera was operated remotely from Houston. The
                  flag is still pointing in an easterly direction. | 

| TV image taken after Ascent
                  Stage liftoff.  The flag swung around to a
                  northerly direction because of engine exhaust. 
                  Note that the fabric loop holding the bottom left
                  corner of the flag to the pole seems to have slipped
                  upward, raising that corner of the flag, at least
                  temporarily.  Because the flag is outstretched
                  horizontally, parallel to the ground, perpendicular to
                  the Sun’s rays at dusk and dawn and not drooped or
                  tilted, it will cast the best  possible shadows
                  for imaging by the LROC. | 

| This stack displays the six
              LROC images details used to make the animation at the top
              of the page.  The vertical yellow lines approximate
              the east-west location of the flagpole. In the early
              morning images at the top of the stack, the flag shadows
              start from points west of the flagpole and end farther
              west.  The situation is reversed for the late
              afternoon images at the bottom of the stack. | 

| Preflight image of an Apollo
              flag assembly, possibly Apollo 11.  The upper part of
              the flagpole is at the top, with the support rod for the
              top of the flag attached by a latching hinge at the
              right.  The bottom section of the pole is below those
              two items.  The portion of the bottom section that is
              pushed or hammered into the surface on on the right, with
              two short knurled sections indicating how far the pole
              should be pushed in for adequate stability. | 
    
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