New Hrsc Images Up |
New Hrsc Images Up |
Jan 21 2005, 02:53 PM
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#1
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Interplanetary Dumpster Diver Group: Admin Posts: 4404 Joined: 17-February 04 From: Powell, TN Member No.: 33 |
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Jan 21 2005, 06:56 PM
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#2
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Member Group: Members Posts: 295 Joined: 2-March 04 From: Central California Member No.: 45 |
QUOTE (tedstryk @ Jan 21 2005, 06:53 AM) If you're talking about the images of Claritas Fossae, they did put hi-res images up. The 3d anaglphy is amazing! Those craters look so cool...and the ridges that show three levels of depth...breathtaking! Well done ESA! No just post more images per month... Eric P / MizarKey -------------------- Eric P / MizarKey
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Jan 21 2005, 08:45 PM
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#3
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Interplanetary Dumpster Diver Group: Admin Posts: 4404 Joined: 17-February 04 From: Powell, TN Member No.: 33 |
The images are high quality, but with resolutions of 62 meters/pixel. They still have none of the advertized 2 meters/pixel stuff.
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Jan 31 2016, 08:09 AM
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#4
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Member Group: Members Posts: 255 Joined: 28-October 12 Member No.: 6732 |
Recently, Emily Lakdawalla posted a couple of fascinating panoramas from the Mars Express HRSC processed by Justin Cowart. One should note, however, that the "Looking over Mars' north pole" image is a laterally-inverted mirror image of the Martian north pole. Also the caption is not fully correct. Acidalia Planitia is not visible, but on the left-hand side (in our world, not through the looking-glass) is western Utopia Planitia, in the upper right-hand corner is the transition to Terra Sabaea, and around the northern polar cap extending southward on the right-hand side is Vastitas Borealis.
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Feb 3 2016, 12:55 AM
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#5
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Member Group: Members Posts: 306 Joined: 4-October 14 Member No.: 7273 |
Thanks for the spot. I can't do anything about the information on the blog at this point, but I will be sure to correct the image and update my location notes. The confusion came from using the raw HRSC images, which are mirror flipped for some reason. I must have flipped it twice without realizing it.
During 2013 and early 2014, MEX was performing a series of Phobos flybys and Deimos imaging sequences. During these flybys the spacecraft acquired up-close images of Phobos with the HRSC Super-Resolution channel, which is a 1024x1024px imager embedded in the HRSC's pushbroom system. The pointing isn't as smooth as HRSC, but using machi's deconvolution method I was able to increase the sharpness of these images greatly. Here's a Phobos flyby on June 29, 2014 built from 6 SRC frames: Phobos - Mars Express by Justin Cowart, on Flickr The system has been used to make a good number of Kodak shots, too. Phobos, Earth and Moon - Mars Express by Justin Cowart, on Flickr (For some reason this one was stubbornly resistant to deconvolution, maybe stemming from the low S/N ratio of the original image?) Phobos and Jupiter - Mars Express by Justin Cowart, on Flickr Phobos and Saturn - Mars Express by Justin Cowart, on Flickr |
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Feb 3 2016, 01:07 AM
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#6
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Senior Member Group: Members Posts: 2106 Joined: 13-February 10 From: Ontario Member No.: 5221 |
Fantastic work!
Also nice to see that Saturn is visibly much dimmer than Jupiter; makes perfect sense given the greater distance from our collective light source, but certainly a contrast with the usual illustrations that show all the planets in the same light when lined up. |
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Feb 7 2016, 12:56 AM
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#7
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Member Group: Members Posts: 306 Joined: 4-October 14 Member No.: 7273 |
I found a couple of HRSC images of frost deposits in the southern hemisphere.
First one is some wilderness area in Terra Cimmera (I couldn't find a named feature for nearly a 100km in any direction) Frost in Terra Cimmera - Mars Express And some heavy frost in Hooke Crater (located on the northern rim of the Argyre Basin) Frost in Hooke Crater |
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Jul 16 2017, 10:12 PM
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#8
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Member Group: Members Posts: 306 Joined: 4-October 14 Member No.: 7273 |
I've been experimenting more with processing high-altitude HRSC two-color (GB) limb scans. I want to emphasize that these aren't geometrically-controlled or accurate color images. Basically I warp the blue channel image to overlay the green channel image, then partially subtract the blue channel image from the green to come up with a synthetic red channel. Since there's a lot of along-track motion between images, the color of the atmospheric haze structure doesn't come out too well, so I either paint it a single color, or maybe paint individual layers if there's enough color information for it. The shape of the limb is distorted in the original images (usually one half will have a different slope than the other), and this is semi-subjectively adjusted so that the horizon fits the outline of a circle of an arbitrary radius while craters near the bottom of the image are more or less round. So don't wander off and try to use these for science
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Dec 1 2018, 04:40 AM
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#9
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Member Group: Members Posts: 306 Joined: 4-October 14 Member No.: 7273 |
A couple of global shots over Tharsis from the most recent public HRSC release:
Olympus Mons - Mars Express Tharsis - Mars Express |
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Apr 3 2019, 02:21 AM
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#10
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Member Group: Members Posts: 306 Joined: 4-October 14 Member No.: 7273 |
A couple of south polar views from December '14/January '15 that I stumbled on in the archives:
Aonia Terra/South Pole - Mars Express HRSC Malea Planum - Mars Express HRSC |
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Sep 5 2019, 04:27 AM
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#11
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Member Group: Members Posts: 306 Joined: 4-October 14 Member No.: 7273 |
Working on a new processing technique for the HRSC limb-scan images. Same process as above, but with a geometric warp (in Photoshop, Arc 80%, with an additional vertical warp component -8%) to account for the off-nadir viewing angle and wide viewing angle (~50 degrees of latitude) of the images. I'm liking the results I'm getting out of this, and I think they're more geometrically accurate (but still not controlled!) so I will likely go back to reprocess the previous limb scans I've worked with in the same way.
Western Arabia Terra - Mars Express Western Arabia Terra - Mars Express High-altitude hazes over Arabia Terra - Mars Express |
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Sep 6 2019, 01:21 AM
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#12
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Member Group: Members Posts: 316 Joined: 1-October 06 Member No.: 1206 |
Wow! Controlled or not that's eye-popping work, especially the last one.
P |
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Sep 7 2019, 09:24 PM
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#13
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Member Group: Members Posts: 306 Joined: 4-October 14 Member No.: 7273 |
Wow! Controlled or not that's eye-popping work, especially the last one. P Thanks! I might have actually figured out a way to get better geometric control on these but still early in figuring out how to implement it. Reprocessed the image of Aonia Terra that I posted further up the page with my new pipeline before the idea for getting better control clicked; this will probably be the last one of these for a while while I try to develop that. Absolutely spectacular view of Argyre (when isn't it spectacular?), and a not-bad view of winter hoarfrosts deposited all around Lowell Crater. Argyre Basin - Mars Express Lowell Crater - Mars Express Aonia Terra - Mars Express |
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May 6 2020, 01:30 AM
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#14
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Member Group: Members Posts: 306 Joined: 4-October 14 Member No.: 7273 |
A handful of images from the most recent season of collecting global images
Lunae Planum - Mars Express Eastern Tharsis - Mars Express Terra Sabaea - Mars Express The last one is really cool because if you look closely you can see a zigzagging chain of von Kármán vortices downwind of one of the craters: Polar Cap - Mars Express HRSC |
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