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NASA
Orbiter Provides Color Views of Mars Landing Site Candidates
October 10, 2007
Layers
inside Holden Crater in the southern hemisphere of Mars, a
possible landing site for Mars Science lab, are shown in
enhanced color.
Credit:
NASA/JPL-Caltech/Univ. of Arizona
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Nili
Fossae Trough, a candidate Mars Science Lab landing site.
Credit:
NASA/JPL-Caltech/Univ. of Arizona
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Rocky
mesas of the Nilosyrtis Mensae region. This image shows a
region of science interest to which the Mars Science
Laboratory rover might drive.
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Credit:
NASA/JPL-Caltech/Univ. of Arizona
Less than a year since
beginning the prime science phase of its mission, NASA's Mars
Reconnaissance Orbiter has passed a mission-success milestone for
the amount of data returned.
The data-volume target of 26
terabytes, which was surpassed this week, is equivalent to about
5,000 CD-ROMs full and exceeds the total from all other current
and past Mars missions combined.
The biggest shares of the
data come from two of the orbiter's six science instruments: the
High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment and the Compact
Reconnaissance Imaging Spectrometer for Mars. The high-resolution
camera's team of investigators, based at the University of
Arizona, Tucson, today released 143 color images. The images
reveal features as small as a desk. They are valuable to
researchers studying possible landing sites for NASA's Mars
Science Laboratory, a mission launching in 2009 to deploy a
long-distance rover carrying sophisticated science instruments on
Mars.
The camera team is also releasing a color movie,
scrolling over one candidate Mars Science Laboratory landing site
in Nili Fossae, at 21 degrees north latitude and 74 degrees east
latitude. The animation shows a range of enhanced colors that
correspond to what Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter's imaging
spectrometer has determined to be hydrated clay minerals and
unaltered volcanic rocks.
"The clay minerals are
especially promising in the search for ancient life on Mars,"
UA Professor Alfred S. McEwen, principal investigator for the
high resolution camera, said.
The color images released
today were taken at or near about 30 proposed landing sites for
the 2009 mission. That mission's deputy project scientist, Ashwin
Vasavada of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.,
said, "Scientists planning the Mars Science Laboratory must
soon choose the one site on Mars where we can best investigate
the extent to which Mars' environment is or was capable of
supporting life -- no easy task. We've intentionally waited for
the reconnaissance from the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter to help
us zero in on those places."
The orbiter's
high-resolution camera has taken more than 3,500 huge, sharp
images released in black-and-white since it began science
operations in November 2006. The camera carries 10 red filter
detectors, two blue-green filter detectors and 10 infrared
detectors.
Beginning this week, images will be released in
color as well as black-and-white on the camera team's Web site.
The colors are false color, not the way Mars would look to human
eyes. The images are processed to maximize color differences, a
technique useful for analyzing landscapes.
"Color
data are proving very useful in interpreting geologic processes
and history on Mars," McEwen said. "The images we're
releasing today include views of some of the most interesting and
compositionally diverse areas on the planet."
The
camera team developed computer software that automatically
processes images from the different color filters into color
images. "The technical hurdle has been that the sets of
different color detectors are staggered within the camera focal
plane array, and the spacecraft isn't perfectly steady as it
operates in space," the camera's operations manager, Eric
Eliason of UA, said.
Color is a boon to geologists who
have been trying to discriminate different surface materials and
their relation to the topography, McEwen said. "Color
clearly identifies basic material distinctions like dust, sand or
rocks, light-toned layered material, and frost or ice," he
said. Color also helps geologists correlate layers in the Martian
terrain. And scientists will be able to combine data from the
high-resolution camera and the imaging spectrometer to make
detailed maps of minerals and soil types on the planet.
Source:
NASA / JPL

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