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The Planetary Society BlogBy Emily LakdawallaHigh tau for Spirit and OpportunityJul. 30, 2007 | 10:26 PDT | 17:26 UTC
Over the weekend I fiddled with the "tau" images that Mars Exploration Rover Pancam lead Jim Bell gave me, and I produced a couple of different ways to visualize the darkness of the rovers' skies. Typically, the rovers turn to find the Sun, cover their Pancam eyes with dark solar filters (like welders' glasses), and take photos, several times a day. These photos, when calibrated, provide a direct measurement of how much sunlight is getting through Mars' atmosphere to the rovers. The opacity of the atmosphere is referred to by the Greek letter tau (τ). Atmospheric opacity increases exponentially with increasing tau. So here are two animations, one for Spirit and one for Opportunity, covering pretty much the same time period. Opportunity's skies get darker faster than Spirit's skies do, and the opacity is also more variable. Spirit now has skies as dark as Opportunity's. For several sols, Opportunity wasn't able to muster enough power to take any tau measurements at all, so I substituted in images with an "X" to indicate that.
Here's a different way of looking at the same data:
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