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The Planetary Society WeblogBy Emily LakdawallaWhite Rock through the ages: Mariner 9, 1972Feb. 8, 2008 | 13:31 PST | 21:31 UTC
While conversing with Ken Edgett about the smiley face on Mars he remarked to me how different Mars looks at different pixel scales, and in particular that there is a transition somewhere in the neighborhood of six to seven meters per pixel. At lower resolutions, Mars looks "Viking-like," and at higher resolutions it looks different, what he calls "MOC scale." I thought it would be interesting to take a look at one feature and see how our view of it has changed with each mission. That has evolved into a gargantuan project as I dig through all these data sets. There is just so much data from Mars; researchers have hardly scratched the surface.
Mariner 9 was the first Mars orbiter, arriving there on November 13, 1971. After waiting out a planet-encircling dust storm, it proceeded to photo-map the entire planet, returning our first complete look at Mars' diverse geology. It had two television cameras, one wide-angle and one narrow-angle. The black dots you see on the image below are reseaux, which were permanent marks on the faceplate of the camera. These markings were intended to allow the Mariner 9 camera team to correct for geometric distortion intrinsic to the camera; many other '60s and '70s-era spacecraft cameras, notably the Voyagers, also had reseau markings.
Mariner 9 is one of the more challenging data sets to work with because it's just so old. However, everything you need to access it, find images, view them, and convert them to more familiar formats is readily available online. First of all, the data itself can be found by browsing the data volumes at the PDS Imaging Node, and you can learn a little bit about the data at the National Space Science Data Center. To figure out what's what and to try to track down images of specific areas, you can download this spreadsheet (XLS format, zipped, 7.5 MB) containing an index to all the images. The images are all in a format that won't be familiar to most of you, but like most spacecraft data you can convert a folder full of images to PNG format using my favorite amateur-produced software, Björn Jónsson's IMG2PNG. However, if you're only working with a couple of images, I'd recommend a different amateur-produced piece of software for converting the images, Piotr Masek's MarinerView, because MarinerView can be used to correct the Mariner 9 images (one at a time) for the little white specks of noise that are spattered across every one. I'm slowly working on tracking down images of "White Rock" taken by every mission. First Mariner 9, then the Viking orbiters, then Mars Global Surveyor's MOC, then Mars Odyssey THEMIS, then Mars Express HRSC, and, finally, I should be able to produce Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter views from three different instruments: HiRISE, CTX, and CRISM. Stay tuned for further installments. |
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