Why Russian Space Images Look Different From NASA's 203
An anonymous reader writes "The Russians have published two amazing photos of Earth using their new Elektro-L satellite, in 30,000km high orbit around the equator. The quality is stunning, and they look quite different from NASA's Earth images. But why are they different? And are they better than NASA's?"
Why are they different? (Score:2)
Well, they're in Russian, for one thing.
Please don't link to Gizmodo (Score:5, Informative)
Gizmodo redirects any traffic to their localized versions. For example, I'm in Brazil and if I follow the link provided in the summary, they redirect me to http://www.gizmodo.com.br/#!5787176/this-is-the-moon-and-the-earth-like-you-have-never-seen-them-before -- that doesn't exist and goes to the front page of the localized version.
Note that I both my OS and browser are in English. I even made sure that my "preferred language for displaying pages" are only English. I guess they do the redirection based on IP only, and find that quite rude.
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Same here, except I get the German version. German Gizmodo is -- hard to believe but true -- even worse than Gizmodo. I am talking mild nausea from looking at the frontpage for more than a few seconds. I might sue.
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Unfortunately you'd need to be in the USA for that.
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And yes, I also think it is annoying.
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Yeah I'm in Canada, but my PC regional setting is set to JP, and I get the japanese edition? Ah ... what the fuck? Screw this, the submitter should be launched into LEO for doing this. And Gizmodo should be launched into the sun.
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same here with gizmodo fr, but there are links just under the top banner for several other versions. I clicked "US", got redirected to the us front page, then re-clicked the link in TFS and got the article.
I think this link: http://us.gizmodo.com/#!5787176/this-is-the-moon-and-the-earth-like-you-have-never-seen-them-before [gizmodo.com] should get you to the article no matter where you are.
Re:Please don't link to Gizmodo (Score:4, Informative)
Fixed link: http://us.gizmodo.com/#!5787176/this-is-the-moon-and-the-earth-like-you-have-never-seen-them-before [gizmodo.com].
Pages that try to detect your language and present it in-place are just retarded, whatever using Accept-Language like you suggest or based on IP (Gizmodo, Google, YouTube, ...). Landing pages that 302 you to a language edition or offer a manual choice are fine -- they don't break bookmarks or links.
Same thing here (Score:2)
Comment removed (Score:4, Informative)
GIS (Score:2)
Been working in GIS for 10 years. Yeah that's pretty standard.
Two sets of data:
1) That you use to do actual work and analysis on. It isn't pretty.
2) That you use for presentations, that is heavily edited, photo shopped/illustrator, and very pretty.
Managers and public don't want to see the stuff you do actual work on, as its fuglie as hell. They want pretty pictures they can go ohhh and ahhhh at.
Then of course they want all sorts of unreasonable requests based on that not knowing how many hours went into fud
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It was useless for its intended purpose. You don't launch land imaging satellites for the entertainment value of their output. It's a conundrum: the taxpayers would fume if you tried to get funding for a satellite designed only to snap nice pictures that had no other uses. Yet when the same taxpayer looks at the pictures, he likes and appreciates the ones that have no scientific value over those that are indeed valuable (but boring). I think that the confusion may be planted in early education, where kids a
Possibly Nasa is doctoring their images (Score:2)
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Quite the opposite really. The Russian image is mostly from the infrared actually, so the colors are necessarily false. As realistic as it seems, that's not something the naked eye can ever see. It is a really nice artistic rendering, but probably not what they use for analysis.
Whatever (Score:3)
Terrible article.. what's amazing here is that a whole mess of satellites have been launched to GEO but this is the first time anyone bothered to release photos from the altitude to the public. Isn't it glorious to see the entire Earth in one frame?!
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Dish Network has a camera on one of their satellites, and of course they have a channel showing what the camera sees.
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wtf is Dish Network? ;)
But seriously, someone should ustream that up.
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Isn't it glorious to see the entire Earth in one frame?!
Eh ... you do realize that the Earth isn't flat, right?
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Isn't it glorious to see the entire Earth in one frame?!
Eh ... you do realize that the Earth isn't flat, right?
Um...you do realise that if the Earth was flat, you'd still only see half of it? ;-)
1st and I hope last time on gizmodo (Score:5, Interesting)
But, to the subject: Isn't it fairly obvious why the russian image looks better? Look: compare the NASA image: http://visibleearth.nasa.gov/view_rec.php?id=2429 [nasa.gov] to the russian one: http://www.russianspaceweb.com/images/spacecraft/application/weather/elektro/earth_disk1_1.jpg [russianspaceweb.com] One obvious difference - in the NASA image, clouds have no shadow, in the russian one they do. That makes the NASA image look flat, and the russian one jump out in 3D. Why that is, I'm not sure.
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Re:1st and I hope last time on gizmodo (Score:4, Insightful)
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(go left from panama, you'll hit a cloud with w hole, and a bit further left, another cloud with a hole. These two clouds and the region around them are pixel copies of each other. That was pointed to in a comment on gizmodo)
Panama? I only see an image of Africa and Asia. Is there a link to this image of the Americas?
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Panama? I only see an image of Africa and Asia.
See?! That proves it's photoshopped, They even forgot to put in parts of America.
Re:1st and I hope last time on gizmodo (Score:5, Insightful)
Yeah, that site is a mess if you are using NoScript. I normally will allow the site itself and see if that will fix it but it did not. So rather than allowing the 5+ data-mining addresses to operate I just will do without.
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I had to pull up the DOM Inspector, locate the stupid window in the code and delete it to view the page properly.
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I had to pull up the DOM Inspector, locate the stupid window in the code and delete it to view the page properly.
I just right-clicked the picture and opened it in a new tab.
In a Nutshell: (Score:3)
Beauty is subjective, but the Russian version seems to have 3 key things going for it:
1. It's taken with the sun at the side instead of behind the craft, making for deeper cloud shadows.
2. The NASA image was probably taken through different color/wavelength filters (as described in TFA) and the clouds and/or the craft move a bit between filter changes, blurring the clouds in the re-combined images. The Russian one used a camera that works more like commercial cameras: different sub-pixels for different colo
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They are just different visualizations of reality (Score:5, Funny)
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Ummm... but that doesn't mean that the US images are any better or worse than the russian images.
Take, for example, what appears to be a Cal Tech prank that seems to have made it into NASA's photo-of-the-day, back when CASSINI was sending pics of Titan.
http://csma31.csm.jmu.edu/physics/rudmin/titan/titan.htm [jmu.edu]
Now, the author may be right -- it wouldn't seem that Titan could have an atmospheric-style plume, with strong wind shears at 10000 feet, now, would it? But right or wrong, my point will still hold.
Poi
In post-Soviet Russia... (Score:2)
"the Russian images are not better or worse than their images. They are just different visualizations of reality based on different data sets"
and this sums up nearly everything ever.
In post-Soviet Russia, satellite data and image visualizes you.
tl;dr (Score:5, Informative)
summaries should summarize, not tease. (Score:5, Informative)
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This.
Fire the editors.
Stop linking to Gizmodo! (Score:2, Informative)
These clowns can't produce reliable URLs. Don't reward them with links.
The image [russianspaceweb.com].
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I was actually interested in the article, but when I tried to read it, I got the most godawful pile of junk I have seen posing as a web page for many days. Completely unreadable without allowing scripting, and allowing their scripts doesnt improve things. Presumably it would become readable if I were to whitelist the very long list of sites it is drawing scripts from, but this is ridiculous. Screw Gizmodo.
aral sea (Score:2)
One word... (Score:3)
If you fool me once, then fool me again.... (Score:3, Funny)
Resolution is just resolution... (Score:3)
Even if you have a sharp 12-24 megapixel image, it can always use some sharpening when it's downsized for the web. If you don't sharpen after downsizing, photographs still look great but not as crisp as they could.
(And yes, if you sharpen the full size image and then downsize, the downsizing obliterates the sharpening done at full size.)
It's only... (Score:2)
Obligatory moon hoax post (Score:2)
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Explain to me one thing: how did Louis Armstrong play golf on the moon where there's NO AIR?
That's easy, the tricky bit was playing his trumpet
That was a long article... (Score:2)
...with a lot of facts but no explanation.
The Russian images look more realistic because of the sense of perspective induced by the reflection of the sun of the globe. The Russian color schemes also look more alien, which catches your eye a bit more than the NASA (regular) color scheme, which we are used to seeing.
That is why near IR images of earth objects are so intriguing as well. It's a picture of an everyday object, but it just looks different!
Are there any "real" images? (Score:2)
With "real" I mean images with colors like a human would see from above there. Or at least like pictures taken with a good DSLR camera.
I really like to view the beautiful images they generate from data like the one Hubble delivers, but I am also interested in seeing how the things in space would look to a human eye.
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Well, we do have the photos taken by the Apollo astronauts. Those were taken using color film on a Hasselblad, which is technically a medium-format SLR, and the quality is pretty darn amazing.
It's flat! (Score:2)
The earth is actually quite flat. Russia hires different artists to create their space "photography" than NASA. It's a conspiracy to keep us from realizing that the earth is really the center of the universe and that all of the objects in space move around us.
What is with this "us -vs- them" thing? (Score:2)
Let me sum up the article, minus the propaganda: Russia has launched a new satellite that takes infrared pictures of earth. The Russian space agency is using those to produce false color images. They look really cool, and it is a big success.
Unfortunately, the tone of the article is "OMG! Did the Russians do something better than us Americans! It cannot be! But don't worry citizens: the American government can explain it away! Their camera is really only as good as our cameras, but they are post-proce
'Better' is subjective. Scientific data is not. (Score:2)
What looks 'better' varies by person, but in general anything goes when making an image beautiful to the eye. The Russians are using more infrared bands than most NASA images do, and their images have a lower sun angle. Both of these bring out details in the imagery.
If you want to see more images taken in infrared bands, take a look at the Earth as Art exhibit hosted by the USGS. [usgs.gov] (NASA is credited on some of them because it was involved with the satellites. And for full disclosure, I should mention that
Because they're both fake! (Score:2)
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Yep, just takes me to the home page.
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Re:borked link (Score:5, Informative)
Gizmodo always does that. The links all revert to their home page like the fucken inbred assholes that they are.
Remove the "#!" part.
http://gizmodo.com/5787176/this-is-the-moon-and-the-earth-like-you-have-never-seen-them-before [gizmodo.com]
Re:borked link (Score:5, Informative)
Thank god the old site is still there and works even better:
http://ca.gizmodo.com/5787176/this-is-the-moon-and-the-earth-like-you-have-never-seen-them-before [gizmodo.com]
(the ca. prefix is applicable to all Gawker sites, couldn't live without it)
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thank you
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Thanks! Nice find.
I still wish sites in general would realise that my browser handles large image files a lot better than their pathetic popups. They got it right for the second image, probably by mistake :)
So... (Score:2)
...why in three fuck's name doesn't our trusty editor check even that?
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Still tries to reroute me to the gizmodo.de front page.
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Gizmodo decided that their content looking a particular way was more important than working without javascript. They're probably right, I block their ads too, so I'd be less than worthless to them even if I was willing to let them run code in my browser.
Re:borked link (Score:5, Informative)
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It's definitely borked still if you're on an iPhone. Goes to m. then fails to find the link. Also trying to localize. What a godawful mess of site disfunction.
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I got the article on my iPad, although it took ages to load because it loaded a set of unrelated images along the top before displaying the actual content. Similar problem on the full version of the site on a slow connection: all the crap in the side bar has to load before the actual article will appear. Then there are all the links that just go to their own site, making the off-site source link hard to find.
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It is borked. If you are in Japan, you will be sent to the JP version where there is no article. In future it would be nice to link directly to the US page. Shitty gizmodo design. Seriously.
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No, the link is fine, it`s Gizmodo itself that's borked. Ever since that nonsensical redesign, the whole site is one giant mess of AJAX.
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No, the site is supposed to look like that now.
Fixed link (Score:2)
Fixed link: http://us.gizmodo.com/#!5787176/this-is-the-moon-and-the-earth-like-you-have-never-seen-them-before [gizmodo.com]
The reason it's broken is that they redirect you to your country's/mobile platform's special web site when you omit the "us.". If you're in the US and using a desktop web browser you wouldn't notice.
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Gizmodo is borked in general - at least for me. I like the content, but the site is damned near unusable - keeps logging me out, switches articles when I side-scroll (WTF!!! Some people actually use the side-scroll function on their mouse for scrolling FROM SIDE TO SIDE), and auto-refreshes to new articles when I'm still reading the old ones.
FF4 with NoScript turned off for all domains listed on Giz... what a I doing wrong?
Re:borked link (Score:4, Informative)
Actually it is faulty the 1st time you click the link
After it sets its cookies it works fine ...
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or Canada
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No, it's not just him. Those idiots keep rerouting me to the gizmodo.de front page, where I can't see TFA.
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Same here. Was same, I mean. Go to the Gizmodo's main page once and click on the "US" link (upper right corner) to switch your country. Then the link from /. summary should work.
P.S. Old Gizmodo's design was ugly. New design - plain horrible. Web 2.0 WTF.
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Works only if you allow cookies, which will not happen.
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No, it's no just him. For me, it keeps rerouting to the font page of gizmodo.de, TFA is not there.
Please, can someone post a link that works from Germany?
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LOL, at least it's the same language or is the Brazilian Portuguese already different enough that you don't understand each other?
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it's web 3.0, ADS take priority over content (Score:2)
And yes, another datapoint for borked in FF4 unless you let them run javascript on your browser.
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Some NASA guy just explained that the Russian images are no worse and no better than NASA's images; they're just looking at the earth in different ways. There's no hint of blame anywhere (and indeed, there's nothing to be blamed for).
Re:So they are blaming the russians? (Score:2)
Of course there is blame!
They pretend to show the Earth is round and lookit the Moon, round is too!
Nah, they just want to discredit God-fearing Americans who know the Earth is flat(*) because the Good Book says it so!
(*) I don't know that the Bible says the Earth is flat or not, but having been used to prove just about anything, I might as well postulate that it says it is flat.
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What are you talking about? Her vagina is totally blurred out.
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Uh no... We had 2 megabit (down) satellite internet (i.e., from earth station, to satellite and to the other side of the world) in 1998.
From satellite down is only one transmission - from sky to ground.
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For those who don't know why: http://www.russianspaceweb.com/elektro.html [russianspaceweb.com]
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I was even tolerant of their new layout. It still hasn't grown on me, but I can live with it.
However, their incessant sucking of Steve Job's iCock, the fact that half their recent articles could fit inside a tweet, and even less professionalism than Slashdot's editors, means that Gizmodo is on my ignore list. I'll still get gamer news from Kotaku, and still rea
My irony meter just exploded (Score:2)
Gawker media should be summarily banned.
For those who don't know why http://yro.slashdot.org/story/10/12/12/2234252/Gawker-Source-Code-and-Databases-Compromised [slashdot.org]
The exact same thing happened to Slashdot some years back. Database stolen, and it turned out Slashcode was storing user passwords cleartext at the time.
And you owe me a new irony meter.
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The slashdot thing was pretty bad, yeah, but at the time such a compromise was not nearly as ridiculous as it is to have one now.
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Security breaches? Gawker sites should be banned for their deranged site design, for the good of the entire internet.
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Look at the Nile Delta. In every picture I've seen, including Google Earth, it is green. In the Russian photo, it is rust brown. I'm not sure how or why they did this.
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Missed this bit, eh :)
The difference between them is that Elektro-L uses three bands in reflected light—red and two near infrared bands—while NASA's GOES doesn't have the near-infrared.
[John]
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I used firebug to delete that div without turning javascript on.