The View from the Top of Husband Hill 184
chriscrick writes "After 14 months of climbing, the Mars rover Spirit has reached the summit of Husband Hill, 269 feet above the edge of the Martian plain. The panoramic view from the top is spectacular. According to lead scientist Steve Squyres, 'What field geologists typically do - and Spirit is a robotic field geologist - is you climb to the top of the nearest hill and take a look around so you get the lay of the land and figure out where you want to go.'"
Everything you ever wanted to know about Spirit... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Everything you ever wanted to know about Spirit (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Everything you ever wanted to know about Spirit (Score:2)
Re:Everything you ever wanted to know about Spirit (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Everything you ever wanted to know about Spirit (Score:5, Funny)
All you need to do is go up to Spirit and retrieve the CD in the left front hubcap.
BTW: while you are doing this, NASA would be grateful if you could bring back a few kilograms of assorted mars rock.
Re:Everything you ever wanted to know about Spirit (Score:2, Insightful)
That's what encyclopedias are, they're brief summaries. Otherwise they'd be 300m thick.
Re:Everything you ever wanted to know about Spirit (Score:2)
Re:Everything you ever wanted to know about Spirit (Score:2)
interseting (Score:4, Funny)
Beautiful Imagery (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Beautiful Imagery (Score:5, Informative)
Or is that not what you meant.
Re:Beautiful Imagery (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Beautiful Imagery (Score:1)
Re:Beautiful Imagery (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Beautiful Imagery (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Beautiful Imagery (Score:3, Interesting)
BTW, the CCDs are Canadian.
Re:Beautiful Imagery (Score:5, Informative)
The Pancam, the highest resolution cameras, have 1024x2048 pixel CCDs.
Re:Beautiful Imagery (Score:3, Interesting)
BTW: Units gives me about 0.000224MPH. I'm using a start time of Jan 3/2004 (Yeah, and that's average time (including coffee breaks) not top speed.
Re:Beautiful Imagery (Score:5, Funny)
I'm too shocked to make a proper grammar Nazi rant here.
Re:Beautiful Imagery (Score:1)
Re:Beautiful Imagery (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Beautiful Imagery (Score:2)
Full 360 picture (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Full 360 picture (Score:1)
Re:Full 360 picture (Score:4, Informative)
I don't see a colour 360.
Re:Full 360 picture (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Full 360 picture (Score:5, Funny)
Rumour has it the FEMA director was last spotted there.
Re:Full 360 picture (Score:2)
I wonder how common they are in that area...
Re:Full 360 picture (Score:2)
Re:Full 360 picture (Score:4, Interesting)
Parking lots and a water tower (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Parking lots and a water tower (Score:2)
The shadows are pointing in difference directions! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:The shadows are pointing in difference directio (Score:2)
Re:The shadows are pointing in difference directio (Score:2, Funny)
Surely he could've at the least found some carbon-based life...
[Lameness filter is lame.]
(Actually, no, I guess it's not. If I hadn't been sarcastic in my post, I guess it would've done a good job of stomping out a lame Bush-is-evil whine.)
Well if nothing else (Score:2)
Why must it look so normal? (Score:3, Insightful)
But no matter how many times I look at these pictures (and others before them), part of me is always surprised to see red sand and rocky dunes that remind me of PEI and a dusky orange sky that looks just like that above any major city on a cloudy night.
Re:Why must it look so normal? (Score:2)
But its an interesting point.... they're 'pretty pictures,' but yeah, if these were B&W, a lot of people would had a had time knowing if this was a desert somewhere or another planet.
Science fiction, I think is to blame; always trying to make the fantastic (another planet with the possibility of LIFE that evolved totally separately from our own?) seem more fantastic (weird, semi-gravity defying spirey
Re:Why must it look so normal? (Score:2)
Re:Why must it look so normal? (Score:5, Informative)
Both Mars rovers have cameras which are sensitive from the near-IR to the UV. The greyscale images are taken by putting a bandpass filter over the lens, and usually they'll take the same shot with 3-7 different filters.
Three of the filters correspond to roughly the same frequencies that the receptors in your eyes are sensitive to. So they can approximate what it would look like in person by assigning the three images taken using those filters to the R, G, and B channels in a digital image.
There is a bit more processing involved. Human eyes are more sensitive to green than red or blue, so the additional processing is probably to take that into account.
But anyway, the short answer is that generally the Mars images are as "true" in terms of colour as what you'd get with a colour digital camera here, setting aside that the three channels are taken at slightly different times.
There are a few exceptions, in that I believe sometimes they may substitute the nearest infrared band for red. If you have to pick one or the other, near IR is useful because it scatters less in an atmosphere.
Other NASA images (like from the Hubble) are made the same way, they just assign completely different spectra to the three channels (assuming they're using an RGB model, which isn't a given). For example, maybe they'll assign radio waves to the red channel, IR to green, and X-rays to blue. Again, they're not *inventing* colours, even though it's not what you'd see with your own eyes. It's like pitch-shifting bat squeeks down into the audible range so humans can hear them.
it doesn't work that way (Score:2)
Chances are that if you were on Mars at a time when both the sky and the ground filled with red dust and no man-made objects in view, things would look fairly neutral to you, with parts of the scenery even looking greenish or bluish.
You can think of human eyes having an auto white-balance built in, although it works rather differently from what is being used in
Re:it doesn't work that way (Score:2)
This is part of the problem with 'true color' rendering: in some sense 'color' really only exists in the mind of the beholder. There is more to color than just red, green, and blue in the proper proportions.
Re:it doesn't work that way (Score:2)
The gp post was technically accurate about how the pictures were constructed. But the general topic was about what Mars would look like, and it would probably look even more "normal" than the NASA pictures suggest.
A quick color correction in the Gimp (reduce red curve, increase blue curve) yields a landscape with a fairly neutral sky, a slightly reddish sand, and neutral-to-cool rocks--something that lo
Re:it doesn't work that way (Score:2)
Re:it doesn't work that way (Score:2)
Re:Why must it look so normal? (Score:2)
They seem to do this more often lately, perhaps to trim costs. You can tell if they use infrared (IR) instead because you see red streaks between some of the solar panel tiles. Some of the wiring between the tiles appearently reflects heavier in IR.
They claim they can come pretty close to the actual
Re:Why must it look so normal? (Score:2)
Interesting. They have that colour swatch thing on the sundial as well, but it's not as easy to use as I thought it would be.
Something else I noticed is that Mars is apparently much more uniform across wide bands of the spectrum than Earth. I had downloaded a bunch of the rover imagery to experiment with false colour systems
Re:Why must it look so normal? (Score:2)
PEI recent population: 135,294 [citypopulation.de]
*looks puzzled*
Re:Why must it look so normal? (Score:2)
PEI recent population: 135,294
*looks puzzled*
Note that the parent post said "more than one human... not sheep.
=P
Re:Why must it look so normal? (Score:2)
Context is everything. Open your eyes and be amazed at what you might see.
Re:Why must it look so normal? (Score:2)
Re:Why must it look so normal? (Score:4, Interesting)
It's wishful thinking, perhaps. but looking at the photograph and I imagine a place that once housed life. It might be the birthplace of life in our system and the seed planet for life on earth.
A dead planet once alive. Conservation of information.... the entire evolutionary record of that planet is in those rocks, that dirt. It's suffocatingly exciting.
And at once harrowing. It has no magnetic field to speak of. It must have had some form of one due to the clear volcanic/geological activity. What happened to it? When will the same thing happen here? If there was life there, did they just run out of time?
There are finite strictures on the amount of time ones birth planet remains hospitable to you. And if you don't figure out how to get off, how to survive in space and thrive, maybe you're doomed to die with your planet.
Some theories abound about why we haven't seen sign of intelligent life. my favorite espouses the notion that civilizations get wiped out by their own technology. What if the stricture is planetary? What if we don't see any intelligent signs because no species could survive the life cycle of their own planets?
It puts any interest in a next-gen ipod or the new google beta in perspective.
It's a great photograph. It fills me with that little kid feeling.... the one whe you look up a the sky and it feels like there's something there looking down at you, waiting for you to discover it.
Depressing (Score:2)
I get all philosophical at 2 am in the morning I guess... Seeing a picture from Mars makes me think how big the universe is and how short our lifetimes are. Then it all of the sudden seems somehow too trite and silly to worry whether
Re:Depressing (Score:2)
Re:Why must it look so normal? (Score:2)
Consider the oldest artifacts indicating anything remotely human are only a few tens of thousands of years old.
Re:Why must it look so normal? (Score:2)
Re:Why must it look so normal? (Score:2)
there's a lot of information there just waiting to be unearthed.
Re:Why must it look so normal? (Score:2)
finding fossils inside rocks is somewhat different from archaeology.
what kind of traces of intelligent civilizations would be left after a hundred million years? after a billion?
we can recall life _billions_ of years back on earth. recalling _intelligent civilizations_ is much harder.
Re:Why must it look so normal? (Score:2)
Re:Why must it look so normal? (Score:2)
the point was, if a civilization existed billions of years ago, would there be any way of detecting it?
it's also entirely possible that even if life on mars existed billions of years ago, nothing detectable may be left today.
Re:Why must it look so normal? (Score:2)
Conservation of information means that information is there, what is at question is merely our ability to glean said information.
So the question at hand isn't whether or not there exists a way of detecting it, but whether or not such means are within our grasp.
The existence of life in any iteration is sufficiently exciting to me and worthy of further exploration.
Re:Why must it look so normal? (Score:2)
i mean really, do you expect eg notes scribbled on parchment to be recognizable after a billion years? it's hard enough gleaning information from artifacts just a few thousand years old. what kind of things would a civilization have to build to survive a billion? seems to me the safest place to store data longterm would be inside a small moon placed in orbit, since geological
wonderful shot (Score:1)
Re:wonderful shot (Score:2)
Re:wonderful shot (Score:2)
The Official High-Res + Wide Angle Image (Score:5, Informative)
From the catalog [nasa.gov] page
This approximate true-color panorama was taken by NASA's Spirit rover after it successfully trekked to the top of "Husband Hill," in the "Columbia Hills" of Gusev Crater. The "little rover that could" spent the last 14 months climbing the hills in both the forward and reverse directions to reduce wear on its wheels.
This breathtaking view from the summit reveals previously hidden southern terrain called "Inner Basin"(center), where team members hope to direct Spirit in the future. The rover left tracks to the left point toward the west, the direction Spirit arrived from. The peaks of "McCool Hill" and "Ramon Hill," both in the "Columbia Hills," can be seen just to the left and behind Inner Basin.
The mosaic is made up of images taken by the rover's panoramic camera over a period of three days (sols 583 to 585, or August 24 to 26, 2005). It spans about 240 degrees in azimuth, and was acquired using 51 different camera pointings and three camera filters (750, 530 and 480 nanometers). Image-to-image seams have been eliminated from the sky portion of the mosaic to better simulate what a person standing on Mars would see.
Re:The Official High-Res + Wide Angle Image (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:The Official High-Res + Wide Angle Image (Score:4, Interesting)
Better plan (Score:2)
The rovers have done well, no doubt. But lets get some boots on the ground.
People AND Rovers - no geologist required (Score:2)
Humans AND mass produced rovers.
One guy in a hut with a crate of baked beans drives hundreds of rovers around and sends back daily uploads.
Problems with the rover wheels? walk out there and fix it. no problem. Rover flips over? walk out there and right it.No problem.
Guy in he hut is hit by solar flare, meteorite, runs out of oxygen and dies? Ground control takes over the rovers and runs them remotely until they die. No problem.
I'd volunteer to be the guy if you want. I mean, it's not like t
Re:People AND Rovers - no geologist required (Score:3, Interesting)
Accidental finds are why you send humans (Score:2)
As Humans can roam over a far vaster distance, it makes the probably of many happy accidents far higher than what you can get with even a fleet of rovers. Furthermore, you almost never get "Accidental" finds with rovers since every foot moved is carefully calculated and orchestrated. We did get lucky with the rovers we had but mow much luckier might we have been with humans there?
Furthermore, consider the cost of the rovers. Say you could get it down to 200 mill
5-10 billion (Score:2)
Summer trip? (Score:3, Funny)
summer trip image [johnmanko.com]
.
Re:Summer trip? (Score:2)
Surface Composition (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Surface Composition (Score:4, Funny)
Roving Mars by Steve Squyres (Score:4, Informative)
Unfortunately.. (Score:2, Funny)
martian city (Score:2)
ehhhhh....yawn..... (Score:2, Funny)
Mars? (Score:2)
You ain't seen nothing yet (Score:5, Informative)
http://midnightmarsbrowser.blogspot.com/ [blogspot.com]
This cross-platform donationware gem fully automatically downloads the raw imagery, auto-stitches, false-colorizes,makes slideshows... And best of all: creates "virtual-reality" pannable and zoomable panorama's...
Everyone into these rovers should really check it out.
Re:You ain't seen nothing yet (Score:2)
"Get your ass to Mars" (Score:2)
See you at the party, Spirit!
Heroine vs. Husband (Score:2)
Where ARE those lost droids?! (Score:2)
I wish NASA would show us the true color of Mars (Score:2, Interesting)
http://thinkingspace.org/HillPanoramaRestored.jpg [thinkingspace.org]
Take it for what it's worth, but NASA has repeatedly admitted that they arbitrarily shift the color of the Mars shots to make them look more red. Why? Who knows. Trying not to confuse the public, I suppose, who expects the Red Planet to be not just red, but really really red.
Martian Joy (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Martian Joy (Score:2)
False color, blue skies? (Score:2)
Re:awesome view (Score:2)
Mod parent down (Score:1, Offtopic)
Re:Wow.. (Score:2)
You are here [nasa.gov]
Re:room for my crackpot theory... (Score:2)
Mars temperature is so low not only because of distance but also due to very thin atmosphere. Proper composition of the atmosphere creating enough glasshouse effect could keep it at Earth's level (and a lot of gas responsible for glasshouse effect - carbon dioxide - is deposited on ice caps of Mars.) And if you add pos
Re:room for my crackpot theory... (Score:2)
Re:room for my crackpot theory... (Score:2)
Re:room for my crackpot theory... (Score:2)
Mars is not large enough to hold an atmosphere, which is essential for holding on to heat. During the summer near the equator, temperatures can reach 60 F even with the thin atmosphere. But at night, this plummets to around -120 F because all the heat radiates off into space.
With an atmospheric composition such as ours (and if it could hold onto it), Mars would be more like a cooler version of the Earth.
Another source of heat energy we h
Re:....it's not news..... (Score:2)