Why has Cassini not done a high-rez mosaic of Titan? |
Why has Cassini not done a high-rez mosaic of Titan? |
Jan 27 2009, 07:27 PM
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Junior Member Group: Members Posts: 48 Joined: 27-December 06 From: Greensboro, NC USA Member No.: 1522 |
I've not be able to find a good answer to this question. High resolution visible light images of all the major moons of Saturn seem to exist but I don't see anything much over 500 pixels and not very usuable. I desperately need one for my film. I realize that the hazy world may make it seems there is not much science value in this but I'm not 100% convinced of that. Plus, I suspect a really high resolution image (say a 16-image one) would be well worth the cost from a PR viewpoint and perhaps it would reveal some interesting info as well.
I have not found any real orbital/mission reason it could not be done before Cassini is finished. Anyone have any insight? -------------------- stephen van vuuren
filmmaker |
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Jan 27 2009, 09:53 PM
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Member Group: Members Posts: 646 Joined: 23-December 05 From: Forest of Dean Member No.: 617 |
It depends whose "best" are referred to, I think. The set of images that are "best" by the criteria of scientific value[1] are unlikely to be a perfect union with the set of images are "best" at looking good at IMAX resolution.
[1] unquantifiable, anyway stephenv2 - there are surely high res colour images of sections of Titan's limb and atmospheric hazes. Depending on the extent you're willing to cheat (or extrapolate from such images) perhaps it'd be possible to generate a [partially] artificial image /based on/ the highest resolution image of the full disk, plus some carefully selected limb shots? -------------------- --
Viva software libre! |
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