Voyager and Galileo Images of Ganymede, The Ganymede images and mosaics thread |
Voyager and Galileo Images of Ganymede, The Ganymede images and mosaics thread |
May 18 2007, 09:43 PM
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#31
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IMG to PNG GOD Group: Moderator Posts: 2254 Joined: 19-February 04 From: Near fire and ice Member No.: 38 |
I've been processing some of the high resolution Galileo Ganymede images recently. As far as I know the two mosaics below have not appeared at the official websites (at least not in this form) so in a sense they are 'new'.
The first one was obtained during the G1 flyby in 1996. It covers a part of Memphis Facula which is centered at roughly 15°N, 132°W. The images were obtained at a distance of approximately 5000 km from Ganymede's center. The second one was obtained during the G28 flyby in May 2000. It is centered near 14.5°S, 319.7°W. The images making up the mosaic were obtained at a distance of roughly 4500 km from Ganymede's center. I will probably post more Ganymede mosaics later this month or next month. |
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Oct 18 2010, 03:36 AM
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#32
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Junior Member Group: Members Posts: 74 Joined: 9-October 10 From: Victoria, BC Member No.: 5483 |
This is a colour global view of Ganymede, taken using Orange, Blue and Violet images (in the RGB channels respectively) from Voyager 2. I made it using ISIS around 1998 or 1999, it's an orthographic reprojection of a mosaic of the antijovian hemisphere. I don't think I stretched the histograms in the component images at all.
I wish I could remember what specific images I used (I'm reasonably sure that I was using the images that start around C2063105). Annoyingly I can't find my notes on it - I'm lucky I actually managed to find the image itself! . I think there were around 39 images in total (about 13 for each filter)? I do remember that I had to manually match the images - I didn't have IDL or any of that other fancy stuff, working in a UK university that didn't have the funds to buy it. I looked at each adjacent/overlapping image pair in a given filter, looked for a minimum of three match points between the images, and noted down the pixel locations for all of them in a little black book and in a text file that ISIS would read, and then did that several times for each overlapping image pair - it took weeks to find all the match points, and sometimes ISIS would still just not match the darn thing properly and so I had to go back and find different ones. As it is it nearly broke the computer I used to make it (which of course was great for the time and completely laughable by modern standards), and I think the end mosaic (in original .cub format) was over a gigabyte in size! I'd have to leave the ISIS script to take it from level 0 to level 4 running overnight and hope it all worked. I also used updated SPICE data for Voyager that I got from Tim Colvin at RAND Corporation (that IIRC wasn't in ISIS at the time). The resolution of the mosaic is 2 km/pxl. Probably not awesomely useful for science, but I'm pretty proud of it considering the effort it took to make it - hope you like it . |
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Oct 18 2010, 01:35 PM
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#33
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Member Group: Members Posts: 207 Joined: 6-March 07 From: houston, texas Member No.: 1828 |
>>I wish I could remember what specific images I used (I'm reasonably sure that I was using the images that start around C2063105). Annoyingly I can't find my notes on it - I'm lucky I actually managed to find the image itself! . I think there were around 39 images in total (about 13 for each filter)?
yep those are the numbers. it was a 3-color 6-frame mosaic (18 total). i dont know why it didnt cover the poles. the basic color patterns of ganymede are in this mosaic: the reddish color of dark terrain, the different colors of the dark rays, even the bluish polar caps in a few spots. i used it in the Atlas to fill certain areas but used lower resolution Galileo color because that included IR data globally. -------------------- Dr. Paul Schenk, Lunar and Planetary Institute, Houston TX
http://stereomoons.blogspot.com; http://www.youtube.com/galsat400; http://www.lpi.usra.edu/science/schenk/ |
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Oct 18 2010, 04:28 PM
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#34
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Interplanetary Dumpster Diver Group: Admin Posts: 4404 Joined: 17-February 04 From: Powell, TN Member No.: 33 |
One of my Ganymede mosaics uses that set with wide angle data for the poles.
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