The Martian Sky |
The Martian Sky |
Oct 11 2009, 06:41 PM
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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 have been attempting to make computer generated images of the Martian atmosphere, both as seen from the surface and from space. To check the results I have been looking for spacecraft images to use as ground truth. I have found lots of images - by far the best ones I have found are from UMSF in this thread: http://www.unmannedspaceflight.com/index.php?showtopic=3324
However, I'm always looking for more ;-). So if anyone knows of more and/or better images I'm interested in them. What would be best are mosaics showing the sky from the horizon (with the horizon/surface visible) and towards the zenith. The sky varies a lot because of variable amount of dust but the general impression I get is that the sky is bright near the horizon (usually brighter than the surface) but gets much darker higher in the sky. There is probably a fairly large, bright area in the sky near the sun, possibly less reddish (lower R/B ratio) than parts of the sky farther from the sun. I'm already getting fairly interesting results, this one has a field of view of 90 degrees: (needless to say this one is 'overexposed' near the horizon; dynamic range is sometimes a problem) The problem is that even though this may not be bad the limb currently appears far too bright as seen from space : This shows that my atmospheric model is erroneous in some way - I suspect that as seen from the surface the Martian sky is darker high above the horizon than I have been assuming. |
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Jan 31 2018, 11:35 PM
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Martian Photographer Group: Members Posts: 353 Joined: 3-March 05 Member No.: 183 |
Navcam images of Phobos just before & after sunset: https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA17270. Look in PDS for the lossless version of the image mcaplinger posted; and see http://www.planetary.org/blogs/emily-lakda...phobos-msl.html.
Overall, daytime visibility of Phobos is very seasonal. Omitting non-rover sites, and the advantages trained observers have, especially with positional cues, it is unlikely any other stars would be easily visible in most conditions. The Mastcam mosaics (sol 100, 101) were taken in a moderate dust storm. Even so, the sky never clears, and there are many images of zenith that show this (see Navcam zenith movies and many Mastcam images on PDS, where exposure times can be found). But, Phobos is bright. In less dusty skies, it seems not too hard to see it, at least with the Sun low. With very dusty skies, no way. There is also an approximate true color 'sky' release at http://www.planetary.org/blogs/emily-lakda...n-analemma.html. The sky part of the image was taken with the Sun nearly at zenith, and it was dusty, but it's another view (the sol 100 Mastcam survey also had a high Sun). Note that the brightness peak near the Sun is typically supplemented by another near the horizon (high scattering path length), leaving a darkest region either partway down (if the Sun is high) or medium-low and opposite Sun if the Sun is medium-low and moving up toward zenith as the Sun sinks. |
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