Google Goes to Mars 119
Kynn writes "Google has launched Google Mars, based on the work done by Arizona State University's THEMIS researchers. With an AJAX-driven interface based on Google Maps (and Google Moon), you can search the Red Planet in false-color elevation, black-and-white visual, or infrared. Be sure to check out the so-called Face, the landing sites for Spirit and Opportunity, and the Polar Lander."
"Happy Face" way better than "The Face" (Score:5, Interesting)
Unfortunately, after sorting through the list of stories and finding #116 (The Face on Mars [msss.com]) and #118 (The So-Called Face on Mars [asu.edu]), I could only make out the mound when looking in infrared. Also confusing is that two different locations are given (40.68N, 9.54W & 40.75N, 9.46W with the latter looking to be the correct location).
The level of detail you can see is not very high so you really shouldn't check out the face; just visit one of the above websites.
Instead of that boring face, check out The Happy Face Crater [msss.com] (#117 in the list of stories). Now that is one content crater. Put that image in tie-dye relief colors, screen it on a t-shirt and you've got one product that will sell to millions of hippies world-wide.
Let me see, if I know my European history, here's the business model
1. Send explorer, make him bring back maps with everything named in my language. Check.
2. Identify resources.
3. Send less friendly "traders" to said foreign land & requisition land from natives by asking chiefs to sign "treaties" in a language they don't understand (legalese).
4. Make sure the rest of the world doesn't know what you're doing. Masks of philanthropy or the spread of some major religion work the best.
5. Do not forget that manpower is a resource and is yours for the taking. The best kind of manpower is free manpower.
6. Sap land of all resources (Profit!).
7. Discard
When I looked at the map, I didn't see any dividing lines or (most importantly) flags. Does anyone want to visit Mars to open trade and represent king eldavojohn?
I'm reminded of a Cecil Rhodes Quote:
Re:"Happy Face" way better than "The Face" (Score:2)
Holy crap. Somebody call Dr Manhattan [waterholes.com]! It's a thermodynamic miracle...
Re:"Happy Face" way better than "The Face" (Score:2)
Re:"Happy Face" way better than "The Face" (Score:2)
Go to google mars, search for galle, look for it in 'elevations' mode & you get exactly that
Historical Revisionism, ho hum (Score:1)
Re:"Happy Face" way better than "The Face" (Score:2)
Re:"Happy Face" way better than "The Face" (Score:2)
I'd be more concerned about Martian censors here on earth. :-)
Re:"Happy Face" way better than "The Face" (Score:2)
Ah-ha! *mars* was the first web browser to correctly render the acid2 css test!
profit! (Score:2, Funny)
this really ought to relieve wall street's anxiety.
seriously.
real estate on mars, huge in 120 years. google's wayyyy ahead of the game.
Re:profit! (Score:5, Interesting)
One might also conclude as this technology continues to evolve that it will ultimately be saleable (universities for example?) in it's own right, in which case this is all R&D and testing which could thru advertising pay for itself.
On another note, I'm looking forward to seeing "Google Venus" using the radar mapping data of the Venusian Surface, should be interesting.
Re:profit! (Score:2)
Profit? (Score:2)
Re:Profit? (Score:2)
Google map of the Universe (Score:5, Funny)
O. Wyss
Google's Guide to the Galaxy (Score:2)
Where is the Google map of the Universe? I'd like to go to the "Restaurant at the end of the Universe".
Is the answer to life, the universe and everything [google.co.uk] close enough?
Re:Google's Guide to the Galaxy (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Google map of the Universe (Score:1)
Re:Google map of the Universe (Score:1)
Be prepared to wait for an update ...
Fine, can I sign up for an update notification somewhere?
O. Wyss
Re:Google map of the Universe (Score:1)
Set up a special bank account for your meal there. Prices are pretty steep at Milliways, but if you invest a little bit now, with all the interest building up over billions of years, you should be just fine.
Re:Google map of the Universe (Score:2)
Take a left where the post office used to be.
Re:Google map of the Universe (Score:1)
Re:Google map of the Universe (Score:1)
Re:Google map of the Universe (Score:1)
Re:Google map of the Universe (Score:1)
you create an instance of the class.
Similar functions for Google Earth? (Score:3, Interesting)
Of course, they have elevation data for the executable Google Earth but it would also be interesting to see a colour map.
Re:Similar functions for Google Earth? (Score:1)
Next stop Jupiter (Score:1)
Re:Next stop Jupiter (Score:2)
REWARD! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:REWARD! (Score:5, Informative)
Re:REWARD! (Score:2)
It's all a conspiracy (Score:5, Funny)
Re:It's all a conspiracy (Score:2, Funny)
(Just finished Dan Simmon's "Illium" and "Olympos".)
Somewhere on Mars... (Score:2)
But seriously, they should send the next lander to the highest elevation on Olympus Mons [esa.int] and then take some panoramic shots and see what is in the Caldera. You could get a shot from 22km elevation from Mars' surface, I think this would be very interesting.
Dust ... (Score:1)
IANAMS, I'm not sure which season would bring more clear atmosphere. Maybe some one would bring some knowledge into the thread?
Re:Somewhere on Mars... (Score:5, Interesting)
A second, slightly deeper alternative could be Valles Marineris - although I read somewhere that it's so huge, if you stood in the middle you wouldn't be able to see the multi-kilometre-high cliffs at the sides, thanks to the curvature of Mars. A lot of the 3D renders and fly-throughs around seem to have pretty extreme vertical exaggeration.
Martian geology tends to work on a stupendously huge scale, and some of the largest features probably won't look all that great from the ground. Maybe we need to look for the smaller features, which are still far larger than anything similar on Earth - like those giant cliffs I mentioned earlier...
Just wondering... (Score:2)
Re:Just wondering... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Just wondering... (Score:2)
North and south have nothing to do with magnetic fields, but rather with the spin of the planet.
Re:Just wondering... (Score:1)
Re:Just wondering... (Score:2)
Re:Just wondering... (Score:1)
Uranus polar location [was Re:Just wondering...] (Score:1)
Uranus? Did you check the back side?
(Spare me the lame Uranus jokes...)
Apparently I couldn't help myself.
Sorry.
I'm done now.
Re:Just wondering... (Score:2)
Re:Just wondering... (Score:3)
Re:Just wondering... (Score:2)
Re:Just wondering... (Score:2)
Re:Just wondering... (Score:1)
Re:Just wondering... (Score:2)
That can happen. Look at Earth for comparison: the great majority of the land is in the northern hemisphere. Drain away the oceans and you have something looking quite similar to what we see on Mars.
Hooray! (Score:5, Insightful)
You know, as much as humans have screwed up the Earth, we've also made it interesting. I find the architecture and placement of buildings/roads/other man-made monuments to be the most interesting things on Google Maps. Google Moon is rather boring in comparison.
What I want to know (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:What I want to know (Score:5, Informative)
Zero elevation: Since Mars has no oceans and hence no 'sea level', a zero-elevation surface or mean gravity surface must be selected. The datum for Mars is defined by the fourth-degree and fourth-order spherical harmonic gravity field, with the zero altitude defined by the 610.5 Pa (6.105 mbar) atmospheric pressure surface (approximately 0.6% of Earth's) at a temperature of 273.16 K. This pressure and temperature correspond to the triple point of water.
Coincidence (Score:1)
Re:Coincidence (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Coincidence (Score:2)
Re:Coincidence (Score:2)
Triple point doesn't work that way (Score:2)
Um... awesome I guess! (Score:2)
Actually this is kind of cool, but strange that it defaults to the colored elevation map.
Or Mars in /3D/ With World Wind (Score:5, Informative)
Another post [nyud.net] on a comparison of how large Olympus Mons is.
World Wind has many Mars add-ons already... And I have heard that Venus may also show up in 3D with World Wind 1.3.4's release. You can install it as an add-on now sans 3D data.
Re:Or Mars in /3D/ With World Wind (Score:2)
I've seen another. This one has a 3D fly over with relief, pilotable. It's nice and simple, but effective. (Warning, Flash/Shockwave ahead)
Mars Quest [marsquestonline.org]
It has quite a bit of background on mars and the various missions. It's worth a look if you can get in.
Or for a smaller-footprint 3D option (Score:2)
Re:Or Mars in /3D/ With World Wind (Score:1)
Finally. (Score:2, Insightful)
Ancestor to the Lens? (Score:1)
Look! (Score:1)
Found it (Score:2, Funny)
How about a 3D version like google earth 3D? (Score:2, Insightful)
Open-source real-time 3d version of mars data (Score:2)
I want to see google... (Score:1, Interesting)
Grits extra.
Marvin? Dejah? (Score:4, Funny)
What kind of bogus Mars search engine is this if it can't find Marvin and Dejah? I bet MSN Mars Search (being rushed out any day now) has them.
Re:Marvin? Dejah? (Score:2)
I'm disappointed (Score:2, Funny)
Resolution? (Score:1)
Interestingly (Score:1)
Real-time 3D version of the Mars MOLA data... (Score:2)
Red Mars, Green Mars, Blue Mars (Score:2)
Hey! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Hey! (Score:2)
Re:Hey! (Score:1)
Your comment also brought to mind that it would be quite neat to see the paths of the rovers if such data is procurable.
Re:Hey! (Score:2)
spirit/opportunity landing sites (Score:1)
Podcast Interview with Noel Gorelick (Score:4, Informative)
This is gonna get better real soon. (Score:1)
I really hope the data from the latest Mars probe [theglobeandmail.com] gets included in this when it starts sending back pictures.
Equipped with the most powerful telescopic camera yet sent to a foreign world, the craft, known as the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, is expected to photograph the Red Planet in unprecedented detail.
Its onboard optics can spot an object "as small as a kitchen table" on the surface as it cruises 300 kilometres overhead, said Robert Lock, the lead mission planner.
Let me be the first to say "coo
Re:This is gonna get better real soon. (Score:1)
Re:This is gonna get better real soon. (Score:2)
Bruce
Wildcard searches work (Score:2)
It's Percival Lowell's Birthday (Score:2)
Homesick (Score:2, Funny)
-
IMHO, every sig should be encrypted and $x\|å:ÛNË{ÛN,ùàr}Y
Google is headed downhill (Score:2)
Re:Google is headed downhill (Score:2)
I'd be more than willing to sell you some real-estate there...
Microsoft's response (Score:1)
Ballmers comments on the launch, "Those f****** ***'* ** *******,beat us again!".
And now back to you Tom.
Now wait a minute (Score:3, Funny)
Great! Now I can ... (Score:3, Interesting)
What!?!?!? (Score:1)
Dudes, I was JOKING!
Google Goes To Middle Earth (Score:2, Funny)
Umm...I Think I Noticed Something... (Score:1)
Notice that the extinct volcanos on Mars appear to be almost exactly on the oppostite end of the planet from major impact events, with the larger crater resulting in larger, more numerous volcanos.
It's almost like the impact event is what caused the pressure that forced magma to the surface on the other side of the planet.
A nice new spin... (Score:1)
Sounds Interesting (Score:1)