Close Mars Means Close-Up Pictures
Guttata writes " space.com has posted 1 of 2 images taken by Hubble last night, dubbed the best Mars globe photo ever taken. The second image will be posted at 4 p.m. ET. Cool!"
aderuwe points to a report on the Hubble site itself. Finally, dpp writes "Space.com is reporting how astronomers using the UK Infrared Telescope (UKIRT) here at the Joint Astronomy Centre have made what are thought to be the sharpest ground-based images of Mars to date. They'll be studying the spectra of the infrared light to look for the signatures of minerals that would indicate the past presence of liquid water, which could have hosted life."
If you want a great Mars pic from last night for your wallpaper (suitable for 1024x or 1280x) today, get it here:
/ full_jpg.jpg
wget http://hubblesite.org/db/2003/22/images/a/formats
It's pretty slow loading, but wget will get it for ya.
CB
free ipod and free gmail!
"Recent studies have hinted at liquid water on the dusty planet."
presumably those studies aren't quite as recent as the one last week which found that Mars isn't watery now, and wasn't in the past:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/3173167.stm
There are some very good examples online if you search. The image stacking seems to reduce the effect of atmospheric turbulence. The effects of the air are always changing and so they tend to average out whereas your target (Mars in this case) will remain constant.
Here is a site that explains image stacking.
I think they even do this with Hubble imagery.
Another finishing trick is to snap some dark frames and subtract that out of the final image to remove effects of the image sensor itself.
--- Ban humanity.
Marco--
I know a bit about this. Basically, the idea is to correlate and overlap information from several individual exposures, while "dewarping" the variations caused by the target rotating during the scan. David Hilvert has written an open source tool that implements some basic methods for doing this kind of work; it's called ALE. Google for "Superresolution" for further information; everything that goes from the temporal domain to the spatial domain ends up using techniques like this.
--Dan
Maybe they're referring to the Cassini mission that arrives at Saturn next year? Here's a good site for basic info.
In illa quae ultra sunt
Mars and earth currently are in opposition (which is why they are so close), meaning than mars, earth and sun lie on one straight line. If you were looking at earth from mars, your eyes would hurt, because you'd be staring right at the sun behind the earth.
Alex
Heisenberg may have been here