I'm working on Spirit at the moment. I will post a few examples of things as I go.
Right now the important job is updating the contemporary route map by locating the stops on HiRISE images. The existing maps at JPL, for the early part of the mission, were plotted on MOC images with inferior resolution and lighting, so I find many locations were about 15 or 20 m out. So at every site I am making circular panoramas (examples later) for comparison with HiRISE. Here's a first example, a map of the route during the Primary Mission. I have added a few extra placenames from the MER Analyst's Notebook at PDS.
Phil
Gorgeous! Are these for a book?
John
I like that a lot Phil - very nice.
There seems to be a trend in many space/astronomy magazine articles and books for over-doing the colour. If it is for a book, please leave it grayscale - it looks more crisp and authoritative imho.
I look forward to future posts on your progress.
VERY nice work, Phil!!!!
Hi John - it's for this book:
http://www.unmannedspaceflight.com/index.php?showtopic=4691&pid=181457&st=105&#entry181457
Phil
I wonder if they regret not going around Bonneville to the heat shield. Spirit could have easily made the trip and may have avoided the problem with the wheel that started around sol 125 when making the trek to the hills. Seeing this map reminded me of those heady early days when you had no idea how far they would take Spirit.
How would driving to the heatshield have avoided the wheel problem?
Giving the information available at the time, sprinting to the hills was clearly the right decision to make.
And don't forget that Spirit made some fantastic discoveries because of that stuck wheel. Particularly the subsurface silica layer.
(1) Having Spirit driving to its crumbled heat-shield on Bonneville and the eventual wheel failure, are not related
(2) The heat-shield, while visually interesting to us (a man made object on mars!), was smashed up on the rocks and of no real value to the engineers. They could get the same results by dropping a copy over the desert in CA
(3) As we learned with OPPY, the heat-shield is a lingering source of volatiles that are not good for scientific instruments
(3) Scooting to the hills was the right exploration decision.
Here is Spririt's crumbled heat-shield (super res):
http://www.unmannedspaceflight.com/index.php?act=Attach&type=post&id=10115
imho, the wreck of Oppy's heatshield was one of the most interesting stops between Endurance and Victoria. Engineers could analyse for the first time the performance of http://qt.exploratorium.edu/mars/opportunity/micro_imager/2005-01-01/1M157835731EFF40B8P2939M2M1.JPG, though i dont know what ever came out of that.. maybe just confirmation they didnt need to change a thing 'hmm yep, it did its job as expected!' not to mention http://qt.exploratorium.edu/mars/opportunity/navcam/2004-12-29/1N157575101EFF40B0P1985L0M1.JPG of crumpled metal, freshly disturbed soil, remnants of destroyed spacecraft, broken springs and all so curiously tossed asunder manmade derelict debris in such an alien humanless landscape, unforgettable..
Rob Manning recentely wrote about this here (i think) but I'm not able to find what he said. Anybody read this?
Here's another example of recent work. Hank's Hollow. I may be revising the route a bit but this is tied to the images as much as possible.
Phil
... and a comparison of project mapping and my new map a little west of West Spur. This is a slide for a presentation I'm giving here in London on Feb. 17th.
The orange line is the project map based on 'dead reckoning' with occasional ties to landscape features seen in MOC images. Dead reckoning includes knowing the intended direction and using the wheel turns to estimate distance. The ties to topography were necessarily approximate because of the limited resolution of MOC (how amazing it is to be saying that - grown men wept at the beauty of the MOC images at the time, now they are of limited resolution!) A few points found by feature matching are shown as crosses on or near the route.
My route is the black line. It follows the route quite well, but actual end of drive locations are often out by 15 to 30 m along the route. These locations are matched to individual boulders and I would stake what remains of my reputation on their accuracy... most of the time!
The square grid is at 100 m spacing.
Phil
Another little detail from long ago and far away...
Speaking of Spirit retrospective, we (that is, the Society) are thinking about trying to gather Salley's MER Updates into an easier-to-access form, like maybe a PDF (or several PDFs; she's written several novels' worth of words about the MERs). But this would be a fair (by which I mean gargantuan) amount of work cutting and pasting. Would there be anyone here interested in donating time to such a project?
Right now those reports are spread out among lots of other pages and they take some tracking down. Maybe all you need is one page for each rover providing links to all the existing reports.
Phil
Time for another blast from ye olde past: Spirit at Low Ridge Haven.
A final blast from ye olde past at Spirit's site... I've pretty much finished the image part of Spirit's journey and I'm working on the sol-by-sol text. This is a close view of the main targets of study at Troy before the end of the mission. Much more information on target names and locations will be released soon and I will be adding to the existing maps where appropriate. Meanwhile mapping is beginning at Meridiani.
Phil
One other goodie. On sol 620 Spirit was on the summit of Husband Hill, taking a big panorama. This subframe is looking due east with three horizons visible - the near rim of Thira crater, the far rim of Thira, and in the distance the rim of Gusev itself. And in front of Thira is a towering dust devil. We normally see these DD images with the sky brightened enough to reveal the DD on the ground, overexposing anything in the sky. Here (from the 16 bit data) is the full vertical extent (cropped by the top of the frame). I found it while making a full mosaic of the rim of Gusev.
Phil
That last image was from a new study of the rim of Gusev from the pan shot at Everest (Husband Hill Absolute Summit) on sols 620-622. Here is the full panorama turned into a circle. The rim of Gusev has been subjected to an extreme contrast enhancement relative to the near horizon, resulting in artifacts in places. But I think the distant rim has never been seen so fully. Clearer views of small parts of it were obtained from West Spur, but this is the best look at the whole thing. The processing was done from the 16 bit images at PDS. I am working on an identification of features and will post it later, but I think the most interesting thing is the view of the large flat-topped mesas south of the rover, at the supposed Ma'adim Vallis delta, and the hills beyond which extend up the valley a bit inside the breached crater New Plymouth. Vertical exaggeration at the horizon is 5.5x.
Phil
Very nice Phil!
As it happens I've recently been thinking back to some long ago discussion on who-knows-which thread about some even more distant horizon features that could be seen through a gap in the Gusev rim. Is that visible on this panorama? If so where, and if not where's the location? I would like to revisit the precise identity of what may have been the most distant features seen by either rover. I wasn't paying enough attention at the time, but I don't think it was nailed down as thoroughly as it could have been, or could be now with Google Earth Mars or James Canvin-type reverse polar plots, or pgrindrod inter-visibility charts.
I don't remember that. If it was seen before it should be seen here. Can anyone find that discussion?
Phil
Sightlines plotted on a merge of THEMIS IR data (with inverted shading) and MOLA topography. This is a first attempt, but I may have to make some adjustments.
Phil
(EDIT - replaced original with an improved version)
It looks like it's on that line you've drawn at about half past five. If that's correct there's not much doubt about the identification. The horizon is one smaller crater-width further away. But how far is that? How does the distance compare with the Miyamoto rim peaks ('Mule Ears') seen by Opportunity?
Find the discussion - now that's a challenge. I'll have a go.
Phil, can you put a scale on that image?
There was some related discussion in http://www.unmannedspaceflight.com/index.php?showtopic=698 many many years ago...
"Phil, can you put a scale on that image?"
Now I have replaced the previous image with one with a scale!
Phil
Thanks Phil and fredk. Unfortunately the links in the old thread no longer seem to work so I'm still not sure how thoroughly and securely distant horizon features were identified back then. First impression is that Spirit's visibility range probably exceeded Opportunity's Miyamoto sighting in several directions, though only by a few km. If she broke the 100km mark anywhere it was most likely to the S but it's not possible to tell without closer scrutiny of the terrain out there.
Yes, it's sad to go back and see all the things that have disappeared.
Phil
Imagehost, XS and others have all gone away or have a policy of deleting older content. It's a shame, but that's the risk you run with free hosting facilities.
If anyone's curious, here are a couple of the images from that old thread, resurrected from the cobwebby depths of my harddrive:
Well rescued! There's all the information I was after right there - a useful complement/comparison with Phil's excellent summit pan.
So as far as seeing outside of Gusev, I've marked three locations on the view map:
Will do when I get to the office on Monday.
Phil
One other thing which I have not done yet... these images were part of the Everest panorama taken on sols 620-622, and it was multispectral. Some bands were subsampled images but three were full resolution. So it would be possible to take all three full res bands at 16 bit from PDS and stretch to optimize the distant features, and then merge them to increase signal. That might help reveal details on the distant rim.
Phil
OK, here is a cropped version of my full horizon panorama. It's quite dirty, and got cleaned up quite a bit for the circular view. It really is quite hard to pull out that very faint detail.
Phil
That's awesome!!
Ugliest pan ever!
Phil
Cool, ugly panorama!
So many peaks everywhere!
Amazing even if it is ugly
Just a little side note...
Today would have marked Spirit's 3000th Sol on Mars had she still been operational
It's not my thread! It belongs to all of us. Thanks for this - very nice.
Phil
Yes, very nice work, Fred. Thanks.
Here's a text file containing descriptions of Spirit's activities for every sol of the mission. It is just the data from the PDS Analyst's Notebook mission summary, but in a different file format, in case anyone may find it useful.
spirit_activities_by_sol.txt ( 104.38K )
: 485
Phil
Thanks a lot Phil : yes very useful. I'll compare it with my own log
Looking back at our dear departed Spirit one more time...
This is an image of Phobos made by Spirit during the sol 675 eclipse ingress sequence. I collected six 16 bit frames from the PDS, stretched the contrast, enlarged each frame x3, sharpened it, stretched the contrast more for the part wholly on the disk, and combined them - in effect the super-resolution process. I don't recall seeing Stickney so clearly before from the surface.
Phil
Amazing Phil. Never would have thought you could do this with MER photos.
Phil, that is incredible!, thanks
wow, just wow. I can't imagine what Phil would do as a rover driver!
Paolo
I have concerns over what he might attempt with respect to +Z motion
Gorgeous, Phil - it needs to be on the cover of a Mars novel
You write it, I'll provide the cover art!
Phil
A synthetically bumped up copy of Phobos
http://imgbox.com/addlH67h
More and more detail!! I tried to find "a similar" image of Phobos taken by a Mars orbiter, but no luck. But I wonder if one could use Celestia (which I don't have) to generate a modeled view of Phobos from this perspective?
--Bill
This is the same viewing angle but different lighting - it's MRO's CRISM observation of Phobos.
Phil
This is just GREAT Phil, I love this kind of work
And I love your work!
Phil
That is what I ran into-- "same viewing angle but different lighting" in many cases. The viewing angle is fairly fixed-- being the "middle of the subarean hemisphere" (within bounds of nutation), with the lighting being the variable...
--Bill
"I wonder if HiRISE was ever pointed at anything that was not Mars"
Paolo, there are spectacular images of Phobos and Deimos from HiRISE.
Phil
http://hirise.lpl.arizona.edu/phobos.php
http://hirise.lpl.arizona.edu/deimos.php
And - this is Mars Express - it's from a sequence showing Phobos and Deimos in the same frame, not quite the same view but close, with opposite lighting.
http://www.planetary.org/blogs/emily-lakdawalla/2009/2250.html
Phil
About PDS imagery, I think I forget to show you this late afternoon Navcam panorama taken at Sol 1984. I've made this about 1 year ago.
http://www.db-prods.net/marsroversimages/Spirit/2009/Sol1984_PDS_pano.jpg
Spectacular! I love those oblique lighting images.
Phil
Powered by Invision Power Board (http://www.invisionboard.com)
© Invision Power Services (http://www.invisionpower.com)