Hum Posted July 26, 2010 Share Posted July 26, 2010 A camera from NASA's Mars Odyssey spacecraft captured nearly 21,000 images using its Thermal Emission Imaging System, or THEMIS, a multi-band infrared camera. The images were stitched into the new Mars map, which was posted online by researchers at Arizona State University's Mars Space Flight Facility in Tempe, Ariz. Mars Odyssey's THEMIS observations began eight years ago, and since then, Mars Space Flight Facility researchers worked together with NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, Calif., to compile the images, patching them together to create the giant Martian map. "We've tied the images to the cartographic control grid provided by the U.S. Geological Survey, which also modeled the THEMIS camera's optics," said Philip Christensen, principal investigator for THEMIS and director of the Mars Space Flight Facility, in a statement. "This approach lets us remove all instrument distortion, so features on the ground are correctly located to within a few pixels and provide the best global map of Mars to date." Users can pan around the mosaic of images, and at full zoom, can view the smallest surface details, which appear 330 feet (100 meters) wide. Previous areas of Mars have been mapped at higher resolution, but this new map provides the most accurate view so far of the entire planet, researchers said. The European Space Agency's Mars Express satellite just buzzed past the barren Phobos, the largest of Mars's tiny moons. Here's what the cameras captured. Viewers with large bandwidth, powerful computers and software capable of processing images in the gigabyte range can also download the full-resolution map in sections. The new map of Mars released by the Arizona State University's Mars Space Flight Facility can be seen in its entirety by clicking here. more Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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