I'm starting a thread here in Mars Express for a new map of Phobos, because most of it will be based on MEX images.
This is the first section. It's the north pole, centred on the pole, out to 50 degrees north at the edge, in azimuthal equidistant projection (i.e. the parallels of latitude are equally spaced, unlike in a stereographic projection where they would get further apart away from the pole). This image is made of Viking, Mars Express and MRO images. Below it I show what the previous best map looked like, much more compressed to save space here. That is just Viking data, compiled by Damon Simonelli et al. at Cornell in the 1990s. The actual mapping is done at twice this scale.
Phil
Wow, Phil, the improvement's fantastic. I can't wait to see what's next.
Here's the south pole. This is only a small improvement over the earlier one as we don't have extremely high resolution images in the south.
Phil
Taking the north and south polar sections and adding them to the cylindrical map, we get this. Next step, I'll fill in the gap starting in the middle. I'm working at 4 times this resolution.
Phil
Wow that looks great even in that state!
¿Is there any DTM model of Phobos available with more accuracy than the previous based on Viking data, based on the more accurate data from Mars Express imaging data, obtained in 2008 and from these recent fly-bys (and maybe from MRO data?.
If yes, ¿where I can find that info?
Thanks
People are working on these things but I don't think anything is released yet.
Phil
I forgot about the new atlas of Phobos and shape model from DLR in Germany - see it here. So yes, there is a new shape model.
Phil
http://europlanet.dlr.de/node/index.php?id=214
Next step in the Phobos mosaic. Here's the original (middle part of the global cylindrical mosaic posted above)...
I've finished the central panel of the big new Phobos map. Here it is at 25% scale (and heavily compressed)
Phil
It looks like a real labour of love, Phil.
And boy do some of those grooves look like heavilly eroded uber-crater chains...
Interesting flipping back and forth between the images on post #11 and post #4.
Flip some more! Here's the next section of the equatorial map. I've already done more than half of it.
Original version with my sections at the edges to ensure a perfect match:
That really is pretty cool. Do you know yet if you'll add some MRO imagery?
MRO was used in the last section, but it only just creeps into the top left corner of this one. The right edge of this one is the anti-Mars longitude.
Phil
Great stuff, Phil!
Hmmm. Not sure about eroded crater chains. Some grooves appear to be long furrows with no pits at all; other grooves are decorated with overlapping crater-like pits. There are also linear associations of craterlike pits that could be interpreted as crater chains ...but to my eye the pits are too evenly spaced.
Maybe there is a real crater chain in there, but I'd side with interpreting these all as having some other common formation mechanism.
What process(es) would make these groove and linear pit features on Phobos?
-pjam
I've finished the eastern end of the global map now - here it is, reduced x4 and compressed. Eventually the full file will be available for anyone who wants it.
The west end is all that's left. That was the region least well mapped by Viking, so it looks really bad in the old map. It will be greatly improved by adding the HRSC coverage.
Phil
This new map already looks great in Celestia!
Nice to know! But wait 'til you see the next bit.
Phil
First tile of the new section. I do each section in nine tiles because my software is limited in the number of control points I can define for one reprojection.
I really need new rubber-sheeting software if anyone has any tips. Must do thin plate splines, though. Polynomials are useless for this application.
Phil
My, this'll teach me to run off to D.C. and miss all the action. Lovely improvements.
I'll just sit quietly until you finish, Phil. Then, please steer me to the full-res version and I'll pop it (warp it) onto one of the constant-scale natural boundary Phobos maps.
Interesting cross-thatch pattern at the lower-left of the new tile. A result of grainy images from the spacecraft?
Yes, and it will probably be replaced with better images soon.
Phil
Several additions now. All that remains is a long narrow gap along the equator and down the side of Stickney crater.
Phil
And the new map is finished:
A truly impressive labour of love Phil.
The Stickney crater looks quite unremarkable when the data's presented like this - I well remember first seeing that iconic Viking picture of Phobos where the surface almost looked like Stickney plus a few grooves - the image was captured at a relatively high phase angle I suppose.
That is nothing short of amazing. It looks great in Celestia too!
I eagerly look forward to seeing the full resolution version.
Beautifully rendered, Phil!
looking forward phil
it looks very nice
Here is Phil's new mosaic in a cut 'n' fold constant-scale natural boundary map;
http://rightbasicbuilding.com/asteroid-maps/phobos-and-deimos-moons-of-mars-captured-asteroids/foldable-phobos-2010/
Here I have reprojected the complete Phobos mosaic from the Cornell control network to that of the recent DLR maps - you can see their maps and data including a shape model here:
http://europlanet.dlr.de/node/index.php?id=214
There are some problems in their map - bad joins between images etc. - and attempting to reproject the original mosaic to fit a problematic base image is never going to produce a perfect match. However, their recalculated pole positions and improved shape in some areas probably make positions on tghis version a bit more reliable. Overlay this over the previous one to see just how much features move between them...
Anyway, if somebody was using the DLR shape for visualization, this is the version of the mosaic that should be used with it.
Phil
new mosaic:
And, for those of you who insist on the most accurate doodads and nick knacks, http://rightbasicbuilding.com/asteroid-maps/phobos-and-deimos-moons-of-mars-captured-asteroids/dlr-foldable-phobos-2010/ to the constant-scale natural boundary foldable map with the reprojected DLR shape.
Here is a version of Phil's map with features overlain:
Good work!
It looks, that you used vector fonts now, which are prettier than non-vector versions.
Very nice! (except something seems to have happened to Opik - a mixup with the special character.)
Phil
Thanks for the comments and feedback. Earlier I was using the default IDL fonts and now I'm using the TrueType ones. It's been an interesting challenge to get the font edges to look sharp and do the spherical projection remapping in an efficient manner. So far so good with the latest setup.
The special characters such as umlauts are a bit tricky. With IDL I can get the umlaut to show up when I use the default font and run interactively. However when running in batch mode and when using the TrueType fonts it isn't working so far. So for now I made a version stripping off the umlaut for "Opik".
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