After having discovered the proper calibration process for the black&white CTX images (thanks again
to slinted, cartrite and others for the valuable contributions !) I found that many of the cleaned up CTX images with the increased dynmiac range are
very well suited candidates for artificial colorization. Here are the first results:
A martian polar dust storm over ice dunes
http://www.thethirdplanet.de/P07_003624_1135_XI_66S198_col_a.jpg
and a crater landscape with central mountains:
http://www.thethirdplanet.de/T01_000813_1388_XN_41S163W_d1_col_b.jpg
Please keep in mind that, as always with artificial colorization, the colors, although I usually do base the palettes on "real" color images of similar areas with similar surface composition, are, of course not intended to reflect the "true colors" but rather be understood as a kind of "artitst impression"
Lost for words, truly...
Absolutely gorgeous Nirgal! Great picks, and colors!
I'm enjoying these too, but I expected the dust clouds to look yellower, relative to the surface. Have I been looking at too many Chesley Bonestell paintings?
Simply amazing!
Outstanding work Nirgal! Thanks for posting these!
Here are another two of my favourite CTX images found at the great http://global-data.mars.asu.edu/, calibrated and colorized:
http://www.thethirdplanet.de/P01_001473_1426_XN_37S169W_col_jpg.jpg
P01_001473_1426_XN_37S169W
http://www.thethirdplanet.de/P02_001628_2652_XI_85N123W_col_jpg.jpg
P02_001628_2652_XI_85N123W
Those are beautiful. Good to have you back at it Bernhard.
That second one in particular is just insane... should really be in a gallery.
... ...
Dokka crater from CTX camera (NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS). Color is from MEX' HRSC images (ESA/DLR/FU Berlin).
http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-GmfaeaYNepU/T_Hn7C8rK8I/AAAAAAAAARg/QtWPuOzH1Zs/s0/Dokka_CTX_HRSCcol.jpg
Second image is again from CTX and colorised from HRSC images.
This crater is lowest place on Mars (if it is referenced to the areoid).
http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-f24PXPSACVw/T-0PW4K1eeI/AAAAAAAAAQQ/y6HIJGcmPFI/s0/HellasCraterCTX.jpg
Color is more or less artistic impression, partly because of completely different light condition in first image (low sun (CTX) vs. high sun (HRSC)) and massive haze in second case (after all it is place with highest atmospheric pressure). Resolution is reduced to ~13 m/pix (resulting images had higher dynamic range and after adjustments much higher contrast).
Both images are part of myhttp://my-favourite-universe.blogspot.cz/2012/07/martanske-extremy.html about lowest and highest places on Mars.
Here is a large CTX mosaic of Eberswalde Crater colorized using HRSC data. Please note that this isn't full CTX resolution - I needed to downsize it to 80% (~7 m/px scale) to fit the uncompressed image on Flickr.
https://flic.kr/p/2aw2YxG
https://flic.kr/p/2aw2YxG
Full inline quote removed- Admin
That's an impressive lookig delta, very similar to the one in Jezero crater.
So jumping off from my project to figure out http://www.unmannedspaceflight.com/index.php?s=&showtopic=8568&view=findpost&p=248222, I realized that the code I developed could be applied to convert CRISM spectra and I could make true-color/natural-color/false-color stretches of my choosing. The products I am currently creating from the Map-Projected Reduced Targeted Data Records are very similar to those produced by the team, although I think going this route saves me from needing to use a work copy of ENVI to use the data like I have in the past. The technique I am using is probably only a minor improvement on the official CRISM processing is in terms of reduced color noise, since this can incorporate every spectral channel into a product, rather than relying on a median value of 5 channels to create a channel for an RGB composite.
The raw output is a little boring (it's a more or less butterscotch/orange color) so I'm going the route of producing either enhanced true color products (each channel individually stretched, similar to the the TRU browse product produced by the CRISM team), or enhanced natural color products (where each channel is individually stretched, and the brightness of each color channel adjusted to match the color of Mars dust). Some examples
Enhanced natural color
https://flic.kr/p/2jYFcmP
https://flic.kr/p/2jYFcmP
Enhanced true color (similar to CRISM TRU product)
https://flic.kr/p/2jYFsZH
https://flic.kr/p/2jYFsZH
Infrared false color (800 nm to 2000 nm)
https://flic.kr/p/2jYK3Z8
https://flic.kr/p/2jYK3Z8
A couple of additional sites:
https://flic.kr/p/2jYJCcP
https://flic.kr/p/2jYJCcP
https://flic.kr/p/2jYHCXC
https://flic.kr/p/2jYHCXC
Amazing work! I just finished colourising almost 400 family pictures from the 1950s. It's an art and work of love.
While not colorized this MRO CTX image https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/nasas-mro-finds-water-flowed-on-mars-longer-than-previously-thought and article in AGU Advances https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1029/2021AV000534 provides interesting evidence that Mars may have had “surface waters forming chloride deposits continued through the Hesperian and into the Amazonian, making them among the latest-formed, large-scale deposits of water-related minerals on Mars.”
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