It appears Rosetta stuff, including the Mars flyby Osiris data, has hit the PDS. I don't have time to look at it now, but I'm downloading it. http://pdssbn.astro.umd.edu/holdings/
Finally...
A couple of RGB products:
NAC view of Moon from 2nd Earth flyby, magnified 2x:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/ugordan/6733334533/sizes/o/in/photostream/
Full frame NAC view of Mars with Phobos and its shadow:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/ugordan/6733326721/sizes/o/in/photostream/
^ I can't believe they just sat on that Mars shot for nearly five years.
Is this a crescent view of Deimos???? That huge south polar indentation identifies it, I think. Dang, should have checked the index file, it's Phobos. (Thanks, Gordan.)
Nearly every shot of Mars includes Phobos.
And to think these weren't shared with the world because they were "overexposed" and therefore not of any interest.......grumblegrumblegrumble......
OMG....is this what I think it is??? Can it be one of Mars' moons, mostly Marslit, setting behind Mars' nightside, Mars' atmosphere forward-scattering sunlight to us...? There is a TON of these, a whole animation of crescent Phobos? setting. Not sure what the source of the noise is. If my interpretation is correct, WOW.
Global inbound shot revisited:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/ugordan/6733745309/sizes/o/in/photostream/
Lovely. I'd like to see this or something very much like this used as the 'default' Mars image rather than that Viking photomosaic centered on Valles Marineris.
Gordan, lovely treat. Just got home from the symphony. I will have to have a crack at these in the coming days.
Fantastic! Thanks everyone.
The thing that looks like an earwig's posterior in the Mars shots is Gale crater.
Phil
Thanks for pointing that out Phil, that's one more note for the images.
At the time of the encounter it was made known that some images of a "crescent Mars" had been taken, but hadn't been released because they were "over-exposed". I was - some may recall! - rather upset about that, and emailed the ROSETTA team more than once asking for the images to be released, even if they were over-exposed, because they were still of interest. Nope.
Found them.
I had just a quick look at the data, but I couldn't find what I was looking for: the raw Philae image of the orbiter with the background of Mars (to me, the best UMSF image ever!)
has anybody seen it?
I think, that it's similar situation as in case of the Stardust' Tempel 1 images. Mars and Earth data from Rosetta are not officially released and same situation in case of the Philae lander.
Thanks, machi. Here's another one with Phobos:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/ugordan/6736094773/sizes/o/in/photostream/
I like the quality of the NAC images. Too bad most of the stuff from Mars and Earth flyby 2 is overexposed and unusable.
Yes, the clouds are exquisite! Good work everybody.
Phil
Here is a pretty one.
Very nice, Ted, as usual... but flipped E-W (as you probably knew)
Phil
Are we (apart from UG) using img2png? I'm getting a combo of very very dark moon images from the Earth flybys, but full pixels in some of the Mars images.
D
I'm using IMG2PNG, and getting nice results. What do you mean by full pixels?
Here's my take on the inbound global shot.
Saturated white pixels - meaning I can't make a shot like that one, as the polar cap is bleached out.
Did you just do img2png.exe *.img - or did you use any tags on the end?
D
Nope, just vanilla IMG2PNG, no switches at the command line. Have you downloaded a new version recently? Bjorn makes adjustments every time a new data set comes out that I can't open with IMG2PNG I'm pretty sure he modified it when the Steins data came out.
I'll have another hack it it tonight, see what happens.
I haven't modified IMG2PNG for Rosetta yet - actually I was waiting for the Mars flyby data to appear. The problem is probably that when converting the floating point (level 3) images, IMG2PNG 'knows' nothing about the data so it uses the actual data range to map the floating point values to 0-65535 (the mininum floating point value is usually set to ~0 though). This is bad if there are bright specks in the images and makes them dark. Another problem is that different filters (or more accurate - images) get stretched differently. I need to upgrade IMG2PNG to 'know' the Osiris data. I may do it this weekend or possibly earlier.
Interestingly, the Messenger data is somewhat comparable to the Osiris level 3 data since it contains floating point data. The important difference is that IMG2PNG should know how to handle the Messenger stuff.
And by the way this is clearly a beautiful dataset - I get the impression that these are the best global views ever of Mars, at least if you only count framing cameras.
AHHhh - I was using Level 3. I'll try again with l2 tonight.
D
Because it was getting late, and somehow I missed that they were there. Ooops.
I have uploaded a new version of IMG2PNG. It has a new command line parameter "-fstretch" which is used to specify how to map the floating point data to 2 byte integers in cases where IMG2PNG doesn't 'know' which parameters are applicable (in these cases it has always used the actual range of the data as described earlier).
For example:
img2png *.img -fstretch0,0.1
This is useful for forcing IMG2PNG to use the same parameters for many images which is necessary when doing color composites. To get a rough idea of which fstretch values might be good first run IMG2PNG without -fstretch and notice a line in the output that looks like this:
Floating point to 16 bit integer conversion: [-0.000023,0.059897] -> [0,65535]
This suggests that -fstretch0,0.06 might be good - or maybe -fstretch0,0.1 to avoid getting saturated areas for images where different and 'brighter' filters might have been used.
The new version is available http://www.mmedia.is/bjj/utils/img2png/img2png_exe.zip.
(By the way, when you run this new version of IMG2PNG the first line you see should read "IMG2PNG v2.02 20120125" - otherwise you have an old version. There were some weird problems a few days ago when uploading and/or downloading IMG2PNG so you should check this just in case).
Bjorn, I just want to say here publicly how grateful I am for your continuous support of IMG2PNG. I know that you use the software yourself, which may be why you update it so regularly, but by making it available and useable by the public and maintaining it so up-to-date you are doing an immesurable service to our community. Thank you!
This is the result of enlarging (x4) and merging twelve of the Phobos occultation frames. The noise partly cancels out leaving a clearer view of Phobos itself.
Phil
many years later... ESA has released one Rosetta Mars image as its image of the week
http://www.esa.int/esaSC/SEMAR9ERI7H_index_0.html
And it's Emily's composite at that.
In her http://www.planetary.org/blogs/emily-lakdawalla/2013/01311445-rosetta-philae-mars.html, Emily Lakdawalla reminds us of the famous Rosetta/Philae Mars flyby photo. But the caption is erroneous. The view is not centered near Syrtis Major. The photo shows the border between Acidalia Planitia and Arabia Terra. On the left side is visible the southern part of Cydonia Mensae, and on the right side is visible Mawrth Vallis and the Oyama crater.
Thanks, I've fixed the caption. Also, it's been pointed out in the comments to my blog post that CIVA-P is not a color camera; the photo was colorized before release. Shame on ESA for not mentioning that.
It's interesting that CIVA-P isn't color camera, so for color panorama, we'll need color images from ROSETTA's OSIRIS cameras.
Another Philae imagers CIVA-M and ROLIS are capable of color photography, but only in case of small area under lander (ROLIS) or even smaller (~3 mm diameter) extreme close-ups (CIVA-M).
Less than a year until Rosetta's hibernation ends, too (January 20th, 2014).
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