HRSCview, New online HRSC image viewer |
HRSCview, New online HRSC image viewer |
Mar 19 2007, 08:50 PM
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#1
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Administrator Group: Admin Posts: 5172 Joined: 4-August 05 From: Pasadena, CA, USA, Earth Member No.: 454 |
I just received this press release and didn't see it on ESA's website so thought I'd post it in full here. But first, here's the URL for the new HRSC image viewer:
http://www.geoinf.fu-berlin.de/hrscviewweb/ Have fun, guys! --Emily QUOTE NEW ACCESS AND VISUALISATION FACILITY
FOR MARS EXPRESS HRSC IMAGES Press Release: March 19, 2007 Issued By: Gerhard Neukum, HRSC Principal Investigator The High Resolution Stereo Camera (HRSC) is one of the outstanding experiments on the ESA Mars Express Mission (MEX) (cf. Neukum et al., 2004, ESA SP-1240). MEX has been in orbit about Mars from January 2004. The mission has just been extended until May 2009. By now, the HRSC has covered close to 35% of the surface of Mars in stereo and color at a resolution of between 10 and 20 m/pixel. Much more of Mars has been covered at lesser resolution. All data are and will be available in preprocessed form up to level 3 through the ESA Planetary Science Archive (PSA) and in parallel through the NASA Planetary Data System. So far, digital terrain models, although produced for the needs of the HRSC Co-Investigator Team from the stereo data, have not been archived with ESA or NASA and have only in exceptional cases been made available to the community at large outside the HRSC Team proper. The reason for that is that the DTMs produced so far are of non-certified, non-archivable quality. We have received word from the community that generally better and faster access to the data would be appreciated and DTMs as the main asset of the HRSC experiment would be required for scientific needs and mission planning. Therefore, we are undertaking - with substantial support from our national space agency (DLR-Bonn) - the task of reprocessing all data for the derivation of high-resolution certified DTMs that will eventually be archived with ESA and NASA depending on successful negotiations and agreements. The hi-res DTM production is being done in cooperation between my group at the FU and the Experiment Team under the leadership of Ralf Jaumann at DLR. Also, the need for faster access by the community at large for quick screening of the HRSC image data and some instant manipulation for a rough overview of the assets of the data through computer-based means before going to the ESA or NASA archives for substantial downloading efforts has been expressed to us. The solution we have come to is to establish the following: HRSCview: Online visualisation of the Mars Express HRSC dataset A website that provides the ability to explore within the nearly 2 TB of HRSC images is opened for public access thorough a joint website of the Freie Universitaet Berlin and the German Aerospace Center (DLR) at: http://www.geoinf.fu-berlin.de/hrscviewweb/ HRSCview permits exploration within the images by carrying out on-the-fly data-subsetting, sub-sampling, stretching and compositing, and in the case of perspective views, projection. This means regions of interest can be explored at full resolution without needing to download full data-product sets. It is possible to view colour and elevation composites with nadir images and select different colour stretches or infra-red channel substitution. It offers perspective views with a choice of viewpoint and exaggeration. The data are explored using Mars surface coordinates, making it simple to move between multiple images of the same location, between adjacent images, and also from a global image-footprint map directly into an HRSC image at a position of interest. The pixel scale of the view can be selected; distance and elevation scale bars are provided. Images can be accessed by orbit/image number as well as via the footprint map. In either case, a link is provided to a data-product page, where header items describing the full map-projected science data-product are displayed, and a direct link to the archived data-products on the ESA Planetary Science Archive (PSA) is provided. In general, the elevation composites are derived from the HRSC Preliminary 200m DTMs generated at the German Aerospace Center (DLR), which will not be available as separately downloadable data-products. These DTMs are to be progressively superseded by systematically generated higher resolution archival DTMs, also from DLR, which will be made available for download through the PSA, and be similarly accessible via HRSCview. A number of images which have already been processed in this way are immediately available for visualisation or download via HRSCview. HRSCview differs from the service provided by the PSA in that it provides a means to explore within the individual (but very large) images, carrying out a preliminary on-the-fly processing of the science data. HRSCview features: * nadir, colour composite, elevation composite browsing * footprint map, with direct navigation into images * location selection by surface coordinates or orbit number * perspective views * direct switching between overlapping images at point of interest * click off-the-edge of one image to move directly into adjacent coverage * links to full level-2 and level-3 data-products from product description page * links to high-resolution level-4 data-products for several images where archive-quality DTMs have been generated * alternate archive-DTM footprint map Comments, questions, or suggestions are very welcome, and should be directed to Greg Michael (gregory.michael at fu-berlin.de) and the HRSC Science Coordinator, Stephan van Gasselt (vgasselt at zedat.fu-berlin.de). A poster on the system was presented at the LPSC meeting last week in Houston and will be presented at the EGU conference in Vienna. -------------------- My website - My Patreon - @elakdawalla on Twitter - Please support unmannedspaceflight.com by donating here.
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Mar 22 2007, 01:41 PM
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Member Group: Admin Posts: 468 Joined: 11-February 04 From: USA Member No.: 21 |
After a little more hunting, I found two wide angle MOC images that show exactly when the newer N-S streaks were formed. S04-00238 was taken on March 5th, 2005 and S04-00558 was taken on March 12th, 2005. The difference between the two images is dramatic given the short amount of time between them but what is even more shocking with regards to Spirit are the equivalent sols: 416 - 423. Much to my surprise, the formation of these N-S streaks corresponds to Spirit's first and most significant cleaning event, as well as the first dust devil sighting!
Full res |
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Mar 24 2007, 05:56 PM
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#3
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Member Group: Members Posts: 267 Joined: 5-February 06 Member No.: 675 |
After a little more hunting, I found two wide angle MOC images that show exactly when the newer N-S streaks were formed. S04-00238 was taken on March 5th, 2005 and S04-00558 was taken on March 12th, 2005. What surprised me is that when I checked the individual images, rather than the blink, the dark streak was in the later image, but there was a faint dark streak in the same place in the earlier image. Are we looking at the cleaning off of a light dust cover or is this the deposit of a second streak in the same place? The second point is that the dark streak (or streaks if this is a generation of a new one rather than cleaning of an old one) begins at a crater. I seem to recall that many of the dust devil tracks in the early satellite images of Gusev began at craters and, of course, we've seen the streaks downwind of Victoria. Can anyone hazard an informed guess of what's going on here? Steve This post has been edited by Steve: Mar 24 2007, 05:57 PM |
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