See other posts from August 2010
A first look at distant hills
Posted By Emily Lakdawalla
2010/08/25 12:36 CDT
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Rover fans have been excitedly watching the hills on Opportunity's horizon grow taller and taller as Opportunity rolls toward its destination, Endeavour crater. You can do it, too -- just check the Mars Exploration Rovers raw images website a couple of times a week for new images, or do what I do, use Mike Howard's Midnight Mars Browser software to download all the latest pictures.
But now there's another way to watch the forward view. It's now been more than six months (actually closer to eight) since Opportunity's first clear view of those hills, which was at the end of January, around sol 2140, when Opportunity first pulled up to Concepción crater. Why is six months important? Because six months is how long the rover team has to calibrate and verify their data before sending it all to NASA's Planetary Data System for archiving. Once it's at the PDS, the science data is in the public domain. They archive their data in 90-sol chunks. A few days ago, the rover team sent the PDS the data covering sols 2071 to 2160, which includes the Concepción images. Here's the panoramic view of the distant hills from sol 2140. I've labeled it with the names of visible hills.

NASA / JPL / Cornell / color mosaic by Emily Lakdawalla
Opportunity horizon panorama, sol 2140
On sol 2140 (January 30, 2010), parked at the edge of Concepción crater, Opportunity got her first clear view of the rim of Endeavour crater. She is aiming toward "landfall" at Cape Tribulation, 13 kilometers away. Cape Tribulation and Cape Dromedary are both on the southwest rim of Endeavour crater, the closest part of the rim to Opportunity. The northwest rim has been eroded away. More distant hills on Endeavour's eastern rim, are much farther away than Cape Tribulation; the spot labeled "Batavia" is 30 kilometers away. Iazu is another crater beyond Endeavour, 36 kilometers away. This panorama was created from archived science data from the Planetary Data System and is composed of images captured through infrared, green, and uv/blue filters (L257).Just for comparison's sake, here is a grossly contrast-enhanced version of the view of the near-rim features in that panorama. Enhancing the contrast brings out details in the shapes of the peaks.

NASA / JPL / Cornell / color mosaic by Emily Lakdawalla
Opportunity horizon panorama, sol 2140 (contrast-enhanced horizon detail)
A first view of Endeavour's near, southwest rim (13 kilometers way) from Opportunity. The contrast has been greatly enhanced to reveal subtle features on the hills.
NASA / JPL / Cornell / color composite by Emily Lakdawalla
Near peaks on the horizon, Opportunity sol 2337
This view of Endeavour's near rim was taken by Opportunity on sol 2337. The composite is made of raw images taken through the right camera eye's infrared and ultraviolet/blue filters, with a green channel synthesized from a mix of the two.Blog Search
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