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Explaining the Mars Photo Colorization

TaddyPorter writes "I've seen stories going around the 'net in regards to NASA editing photos of mars. Mainly, the sundial used for calibration showed different colors than the dial on mars. While a wide range of explanations were taking shape, the Pancam Payload Element Lead for the mission, Jim Bell of Cornell University, was kind of enough to explain the color differences."

32 of 210 comments (clear)

  1. Dont trust this man, he's part of the conspiracy!! by Flounder · · Score: 4, Funny
    They're really colorizing the pictures from Mars to hide the proof of aliens!!

    Actually, now it makes alot of sense. But that still won't stop the conspiracy kooks from claiming otherwise.

    --

    No boom today. Boom tomorrow. There's always a boom tomorrow. - Cmdr. Susan Ivanova

  2. Secret NASA photos. by Black+Parrot · · Score: 3, Funny


    Supposedly they have a picture of Martians humping Beagle2, but they edited it to look like a plain stewn with rocks.

    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  3. If blue=pink, then green=?? by earplug · · Score: 5, Funny

    If blue appears pink on Mars, what is the real color of the little green guys?

    1. Re:If blue=pink, then green=?? by jumbo008 · · Score: 3, Funny

      If blue appears pink on Mars, what is the real color of the little green guys?

      It's gotta be yellow, why else won't the little bastards show themselves?

  4. Filters vs Bayer by cflorio · · Score: 5, Informative
    Of Course the colors don't look life like. They are taking multiple exposures with different filters for the colors.

    They could have used a Foveon Sensor if they didn't want Bayer interpolation.

    1. Re:Filters vs Bayer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Look, all I want to know is what my eye would see if I were standing on Mars. Can't someone just cut through all this BS "science" and tell me that?

  5. Re:Dont trust this man, he's part of the conspirac by Yo+Grark · · Score: 4, Funny

    I don't trust him.

    His website was taken down immediatly after slashdot posted this.

    His "truth" couldn't stand up to the slashdoting scrutiny!

    Yo Grark

    --
    Canadian Bred with American Buttering
  6. In conclusion: by CaptainAlbert · · Score: 4, Insightful

    From end of article (yes, I skipped straight there... :))

    There is simply no point in adding on their site "caution these images are not 100% precisely actual colors" when no digital image is really 'actual colors'.

    Quite. In fact, I'd go as far as to say that NASA expected most of the people who were scrutinising these pictures to have some experience with astronomical imaging, where almost nothing is "true" colour in that sense.

    Personally, I'm in favour of as much rebalancing as it takes to make the images pretty. If they don't make full use of my eye's ability to perceive them, then what was the point of spending all that money obtaining them in the first place? So long as the raw originals are available too, who cares?

    --
    These sigs are more interesting tha
    1. Re:In conclusion: by Kombat · · Score: 3, Informative

      By your same logic, subliminal messages in movies should be allowed

      Subliminal messages in movies are allowed. There's no law against it.

      The only reasons they don't do it is because a) it doesn't work, and b) when audiences find out the theater is trying to brainwash them, they tend to stop going to movies. Negative publicity, you know.

      --
      Like woodworking? Build your own picture frames.
    2. Re:In conclusion: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      This just in: most of the images from Hubble are also colorized, apparently because some people took offense to not being able to see in the infrared. Additionally there appears to be a hint of the same fiasco at many radio telescopes.

  7. Digicams and colors by mwburden · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I have a Sonly Clie' PDA with a digicam built in, and it can be used to demonstrate how digicams "see" color differently, especially in the near-infrared range.

    If you go into the camera application and aim the Clie' at an infrared remote control (like a TV or stereo remote), and hit one of the buttons on the remote, the PDA camera will pick up the infrared and actually display it visibly!

    1. Re:Digicams and colors by mks113 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      All CCDs are particularly sensitive in the IR range.
      Video Cameras and digital cameras have to filter out this sensitivity to get true colour.

      Sony uses this IR sensitivity in their "Nightshot" feature on vidcams. Instead of filtering out the IR component, they use it. It throws off the colour rendition but uses ambient and generated IR to show stuff at night.

      I was at a lodge in Kenya just after dusk, and was told that there was a leopard in at a baited tree across the river. It was too dark for me to make it out, so I set up my camera on a tripod, and quickly had a crowd around the LCD watching a very clear picture of the leopard!

      And I discovered years ago that a CCD vidcam will show the light from a remote. I've used it quite a few times to verify that a remote is actually working.

    2. Re:Digicams and colors by Keebler71 · · Score: 3, Funny
      Lepoards? Dude, don't you know they can be used to see through womens' clothes?

      Leopards.... I'd expect more from a /. user....

      --
      "It takes considerable knowledge just to realize the extent of your own ignorance." - Thomas Sowell
  8. Conspiracy theorists by Eric+S+Rayrnond · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The bizarre claims of conspiracy theorists just go on and on. If you go to their websites you can read more than any brain can handle. I have read literally dozens of things that ``prove'' the moon landings were faked, for example, and each one is rather easily shown to be wrong by anyone with experience in such things.

    I think the problem here is twofold: we tend to want to believe (or at least listen to) conspiracy theories, particularly to do with space. Also, the evidence is presented in such a way that, if you are unfamiliar with the odd nature of the vacuum of space and of space travel, it sounds reasonable.

    --
    >>esr>>
    1. Re:Conspiracy theorists by Simon+Hibbs · · Score: 4, Interesting

      >I have read literally dozens of things that ``prove'' the moon landings were faked, for
      >example, and each one is rather easily shown to be wrong by anyone with experience in such things.

      My favourites are the 'pictures of alien moon bases'. Many of these prove to be blowups of astronomical JPG files. The compression algorithm used in the JPG format introduces artificial distortions in the details of images, so it's not surprising they find all sorts of weird looking shapes when they magnify the pictures.

      Simon Hibbs

    2. Re:Conspiracy theorists by fredrikj · · Score: 5, Funny

      Well, if you zoom in even further, you'll find that everything is made up of tiny squares of different colors. The odd thing about it is that they are COMPLETELY square, as if the moon was built from Lego bricks or something. Clearly there is something going on here.

  9. Great explanation, but why... by darkstream · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...doesn't NASA throw the public a bone? This color correction controversy pops up everytime a probe successfully lands on Mars and sends pictures back. One would think that they would have a standard RGB style camera for publicity shots. Chances are they can only afford to put on cameras practical for the mission, but I still believe a better solution could be provided. It probably just wasn't important to them... ;) Perhaps next time a camera could be included that features lens that provide scentific data and that can double as a publicist for NASA - spitting out RGB standard images that require no color correction.

    --
    Fun with Inkwell | www.coo
    1. Re:Great explanation, but why... by 1u3hr · · Score: 4, Informative

      Here's a page on The Colors of Mars written by Don Davis, a "Space Artist and Animator" before the current beat up, which explains all the problems involved in trying to get a "true" colour image. He has examples of what he thinks a man on the spot might see. Elsewhere on his site he covers other planets and nebulae.

  10. Mirror by earplug · · Score: 5, Informative
  11. Mirror! by vidnet · · Score: 4, Informative
  12. Bitmapped horizon by l0wland · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Can anyone explain to me why the horizon of the hi-res images is bitmapped ? (beware, pic in link is 12MB in size)

    Aside of the odd colors, I found this one of the most interesting anomalies in the pictures so far.

    --

    "Honey, I feel a certain distance between us..." "Really? A 31ms ping ain't that bad..."
    1. Re:Bitmapped horizon by l0wland · · Score: 3, Interesting
      That's just an artifact of the JPEG compression that was used on the images.

      That's what I thought too, until I tried to reproduce that. Try it with Photoshop or another photo-editing app, you will not be able to get a sharp pixelated line like that when using JPEG-compression.

      That should read as: At least I couldn't :-)

      --

      "Honey, I feel a certain distance between us..." "Really? A 31ms ping ain't that bad..."
    2. Re:Bitmapped horizon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      If you look at one of the earlier panoramas (e.g., in grey or the partial ones in colour), it is pretty obvious why -- with the sun present, the range of brightness in the image is extreme, and it is difficult to get reasonable contrast from the ground unless you ignore the sky and over-stretch the contrast until the sky is almost white. It is worse when trying to make an image from a series of differently-exposed tiles. Because the sky is not the most interesting part of the image, and it just takes up extra space in the file, I think they just selected it, cropped it out, and set it to an even shade so it would compress well and not look messy with lots of seams between tiles.

      I'm sure they will make some more full-res colour panoramas that include the sky eventually.

  13. Article text by epsalon · · Score: 5, Informative

    TOP STORY: NASA Is Not Altering Mars Colors.

    Posted by: Kano
    On: Sun January, 18 2004 @ 03:34 GMT
    This article is a brief summarised explanation of how the PanCam on the Mars Spirit Rover operates, in relation to the strange appearance of the calibration sundial in some pictures. The question was first raised by ATS member AArchAngel, and has been discussed at length in this AboveTopSecret forum thread and ATSNN story:
    thread

    Mars Spirit Rover Picture analysis.

    In this thread I will attempt to summarise my posts to the larger thread.

    What are you talking about?

    Ok, the initial alarm was raised after it was noticed that the color-calibration sundial mounted on the rover, looked quite markedly different in the Mars-Panorama shots compared to its regular appearance.

    Immediately wide-ranging theories began to pop up. At this stage I knew very little of the particulars of the PanCam so I decided to go and see what the Horses mouth had to say. I sent out a swag of emails to the NASA marsrover team, the Athena Instrument team at Cornell University, and the long shot, an email to Assoc. Professor James Bell. Who is the Pancam Payload Element Lead for the mission.

    Now, getting no response from the Athena team, and an automated response from the NASA team. I was amazed and delighted to see that Dr. Bell had indeed taken the time out of his busy schedule to help explain this quirk in the panorama pictures. His email response is below:

    quote:Thanks for writing. The answer is that the color chips on the sundial have different colors in the near-infrared range of Pancam filters. For example, the blue chip is dark near 600 nm, where humans see red light, but is especially bright at 750 nm, which is used as "red" for many Pancam images. So it appears pink in RGB composites. We chose the pigments for the chips on purpose this way, so they could provide different patterns of brightnesses regardless of which filters we used. The details of the colors of the pigments are published in a paper I wrote in the December issue of the Journal of Geophysical Research (Planets), in case you want more details...

    All of us tired folks on the team are really happy that so many people around the world are following the mission and sending their support and encouragement...

    Thanks,

    Jim Bell
    Cornell U.

    Now, as far as the pink tab where the blue one should be, that email is infact the complete answer. But its not easily understandable to the layman. Below I will attempt to explain why this occurs.

    Click here to read comments or post your own.

    Displaying the first 12 replies to this news story...
    Posted by: Kano
    On: Sun January, 18 2004 @ 03:35 GMT
    Digital Cameras

    Firstly, we need to understand how the PanCam, and indeed digital photography in general works.

    Luckily for us we have our good friends at http://www.howstuffworks.com to turn to.

    How Digital Cameras Work

    It would be worthwhile to read the entire article on howstuffworks, for a fuller understanding of the processes at work. But because I know you are all busy (lazy?) I will summarise.

    Basically, the heart of a digital camera is the charge coupled device or CCD. This CCD converts light hitting it into electrical impulses, the brighter the light, the stronger the impulse. Now, CCD's are color-blind. All they do is signal how bright the light hitting them is. All well and good for black and white photography. But for color we need to do more. To get a color-picture. We need to record images via the CCD using a series of 3 filters. A Red filter, a Green filter, and a Blue filter. These are then recombined afterwards to give a color-representation of the picture. (Note, cheaper options like the Bayer filter pattern are often used in commercial digital cameras, but they use interpolation and are subsequently less accurate than 3-filter methods.

    Never True Color

    Quite a big deal has been made o

  14. red skies vs blue skies by Alien54 · · Score: 4, Insightful
    This controversy has been seen earlier on SlashDot in this story on the Blue Skies of Mars.

    The questions are, of course,

    1. if there is a tinted color light source, what would the color target display on a normal color target? What would it show via the camera with the tinted light source
    2. The sun is the same light source on mars as it is on earth, therefore it should be easy enough to take a solar spectrum and see what the degree of tinting is.
    3. With an atmosphere at 1% or less of the earth, the spectrum could nearly be the same spectrum as in a vacuum
    4. if the spectrums are essentially similar, then the color targets should be the same, say as on earth or in vacuum, given a clear day without dust and clouds, etc.
    5. Of course,there is also the matter of the end result of different photo filters getting mis interpreted. However, JPL has published some pictures with red skies, and some with blue skies, as this item from the tin foil hat crowd. This has contributed to the controversy.
    See also this earlier slashdot story on the Mars Sundials

    So it looks like this particular annoyance has been around for a while.

    --
    "It is a greater offense to steal men's labor, than their clothes"
    1. Re:red skies vs blue skies by Alien54 · · Score: 4, Informative

      For an interesting view on how colors shift when you use filters, see this item on the Color Rendering Process, "Digichromatography"

      --
      "It is a greater offense to steal men's labor, than their clothes"
  15. Re:Coloring. by PhuCknuT · · Score: 4, Informative

    Every single image taken by the rover (raw and not even combined into color images) is available for download from the mars rover website. Check here.

  16. Once again, this link could be useful by Jugalator · · Score: 4, Informative

    Mars Climate FAQ:
    - Why isn't the Martian sky blue like the Earth's?

    That page includes images using colors-close-to-what-a-human-eye-would-see-them-as as well.

    --
    Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
  17. Re:*sigh* by aminorex · · Score: 3, Informative

    You seem not to understand the issue.

    NASA has a broad spectrum of image data from Mars.
    They could use this data to present a picture of
    Mars as it actually appears, or they could use the
    data to present a picture of Mars which does not
    represent the actual appearance. By making the
    latter choice, they misinform the public.

    In this way, they put themselves in the same class
    with persons who offer misinterpretations of image
    data from the moon landings to argue that those
    landings were hoaxed: Both publications serve to
    misinform an already woefully misinformed public.

    --
    -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
  18. You should have read the whole thing by NickFusion · · Score: 3, Informative

    The images are not recolored to "make them look pretty."

    There are two main reasons for the color shifts.

    Reason one, some of the images are taken lower in the IR spectrum, and the pigments on the sundail are desighned to react differently in that part of the spectrum.

    Reason two, all the images sent back have their individual RGB channels normalized, which is similar to using "auto levels" in photoshop.

    But the important factor is this: the sundail has a mirror which shows both the sky & the ground, and has full white & black reagions, meaning that even a normalized image will come through unscathed by color changes. These colors are then used to match colors for the rest of the images.

    Bottom line, the colors we see are as accurate as can be gleaned, not just made up to look pretty.

    (You can test this with digital camera images of your own. Run Auto Level on them (which equalizes the color channels). If there are images that full of color, but have no areas of pure white & pure black, you'll likely get some whacky colors. I have a picture of the Charles river with blue sky, green grass, and purple water)

    --
    What were you expecting?
  19. Re:Dear NASA (and your fanboys) by barawn · · Score: 3, Insightful

    As the article states - instead of throwing away wavelengths above the visible spectrum (as the human eye would do), they are instead clamped. Anything bright infra-red becomes bright visible-red. Net result - way too much red in the pictures.


    Wow, you read the article, but apparently missed the entire point! I'm impressed.

    CCDs are color blind. They take intensity maps only. Generally, they use R, G, and B filters with wavelengths as listed in the article. Many of the pictures were taken with an "R" filter that has a much longer wavelength than the usual R.

    You can't "throw away" wavelength information because you don't have any. All you have are intensity maps at 3 wavelengths. You simply do not intensity maps at the middle.

    If you want NASA to put out only near-true-color images, enjoy. I'll take all the other pictures and not worry so much, along with the rest of the normal humans. Of course, you'll also still have to deal with the fact that CCDs respond linearly to intensity and your eye is (somewhat) logarithmic, so any time you look at a bright source, everything will be completely wrong. Of course, everyone already knows this - pictures never look exactly the same as reality, unless they've been very very carefully taken with someone comparing the result to what they see with their own eyes, or in very controlled circumstances.

    Want to know what Mars really looks like to the human eye? Go there (*). Currently, there's no other "real" practical way, without building some very expensive (and very useless) piece of equipment.

    (*: You could also calculate it because you know the atmosphere and you know the input spectrum. NASA has - it's something like a yellowish-brownish-red ("butterscotch", they call it).

  20. The Blue Skies of Earth by NickFusion · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Not to do anything crazy like bring the artcle into the conversation, but the uncalibrated RGB raw data that the mars rover sends back, and the methods used to color correct it reminds me of this:

    The Russian Record

    This brilliant Russian photographer in the late 1800s/early 1900s took an amazing number of photographs, and he would photograph everything three times, with a red, blue and green filter.

    He would then use a special triple projector with the appropriate color filters to show gorgeous color images, long before the invention of color film.

    So today, we can put these images back together in Photoshop, but we have the same Mars problem, we have three color channels, but no clear idea how they relate to each other.

    Lacking a color-calibration sundial, we have to rely on our knowledge of skin tone, sky color, etc to tweak these colors. The link above has a link to the raw files in the Library of Congress, for geeks who want to recomposite some of their own.

    --
    What were you expecting?