Inizio Registrati Login

Elenco album Ultimi arrivi Ultimi commenti Più viste Più votate Preferiti Cerca

Inizio > MARS > Mars in JPEG2000

Ultimi commenti - Mars in JPEG2000
ESP_023024_1010-GB-PCF-LXTT-IPF-Possible_Paleo-Lake-01.jpg
ESP_023024_1010-GB-PCF-LXTT-IPF-Possible_Paleo-Lake-01.jpgPossible Paleo-Lake near the South Pole of Mars (EDM; Absolute Natural Colors - credits for the Research, additional process. and color.: Drr Gianluigi Barca and Paolo C. Fienga/Lunar Explorer Italia/Italian Planetary Foundation)114 visiteThis Surface Feature, now pictured by the NASA - Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, but already known to Planetary Researchers (since it had already been photographed by the NASA - Mars Global Surveyor Orbiter a few years ago - see the MGS-MOC Image identified by the serial n. M09-01354), it is certainly very intriguing and highly suggestive. The NASA People, however, called this Surface Feature (that, in our humble opinion, as IPF, looks like a frozen Lake and it is also well characterized by the presence, on its Eastern Side, of a long line of almost perfectly lined-up and unusually-looking - "oblong" - Impact Craters) "Smooth South Polar Region".
This Surface Feature (as you will better see in the next few days, when we shall show you its smallest details) is (or "looks", if you prefer) very peculiar, and that is a fact that can hardly be disputed. Said that, we, as IPF, expected that NASA told us something more about this Smooth South Polar Region. We honestly thought that NASA would (and should) have showed us soon enough this intriguing Surface Feature from other visual angles, maybe (if possible) from a lower altitude, certainly during other seasons/periods of the Martian Year and, last but not least, under different Illumination Geometries, but...Nothing happened. Not a word of explanation was ever said or written (as far as we know) and not an "official" comment whatsoever was ever released.
Now, in the light of the aformentioned considerations, we decided to draw to your attention - through our Daily APOD - this "Smooth South Polar Region" and ask you a couple of simple questions: what do you really think or believe that this Surface Feature could be representing? Do you think that it could actually be the frozen remnant of an ancient (and once much bigger) Martian Lake or it is just a flat area surrounded by the typical Polar Terrain? If you wish to express your opinion, please write us at Alphacentauri@intercom.it . The most interesting and well substantiated ideas and theories that we hope to receive, shall be published here (giving to the Writer/s all the due credits), as additional comments to other (VERY detailed) orbital views of this very same Smooth South Polar Region. Thanks, as usual, for you interest and support!

Dr Paolo C. Fienga/LXTT/IPF

Mars Local Time: 14:56 (Early Afternoon)
Coord. (centered): 78,638° South Lat. and 68,111° East Long.
Spacecraft altitude: 248,0 Km (such as about 154,008 miles)
Original image scale range: 49,6 cm/pixel (with 2 x 2 binning) so objects ~ 1 mt and 49 cm across are resolved
Map projected scale: 50 cm/pixel
Map projection: POLAR STEREOGRAPHIC
Emission Angle: 4,5°
Sun-Martian Surface-MRO Spacecraft (or Phase) Angle: 67,9°
Solar Incidence Angle: 65° (meaning that the Sun was about 25° above the Local Horizon at the time the picture was taken)
Solar Longitude: 317,2° (Northern Winter - Southern Summer)
Credits: NASA/JPL/University of Arizona
Additional process. and coloring: Lunar Explorer Italia

This picture (which is a cropped and NON-Map Projected NASA - Original Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter CTX b/w frame, identified by the serial n. ESP_023024_1010) has been additionally processed and then colorized in Absolute Natural Colors (such as the colors that a human eye would actually perceive if someone were onboard the NASA - Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter and then looked down, towards the Surface of Mars), by using an original technique created - and, in time, dramatically improved - by the Lunar Explorer Italia Team.
21 commentiMareKromium02/25/13 at 20:30Omomoto: GNiente, convesso anche a mettermi a testa in gi?....
ESP_023024_1010-GB-PCF-LXTT-IPF-Possible_Paleo-Lake-01.jpg
ESP_023024_1010-GB-PCF-LXTT-IPF-Possible_Paleo-Lake-01.jpgPossible Paleo-Lake near the South Pole of Mars (EDM; Absolute Natural Colors - credits for the Research, additional process. and color.: Drr Gianluigi Barca and Paolo C. Fienga/Lunar Explorer Italia/Italian Planetary Foundation)114 visiteThis Surface Feature, now pictured by the NASA - Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, but already known to Planetary Researchers (since it had already been photographed by the NASA - Mars Global Surveyor Orbiter a few years ago - see the MGS-MOC Image identified by the serial n. M09-01354), it is certainly very intriguing and highly suggestive. The NASA People, however, called this Surface Feature (that, in our humble opinion, as IPF, looks like a frozen Lake and it is also well characterized by the presence, on its Eastern Side, of a long line of almost perfectly lined-up and unusually-looking - "oblong" - Impact Craters) "Smooth South Polar Region".
This Surface Feature (as you will better see in the next few days, when we shall show you its smallest details) is (or "looks", if you prefer) very peculiar, and that is a fact that can hardly be disputed. Said that, we, as IPF, expected that NASA told us something more about this Smooth South Polar Region. We honestly thought that NASA would (and should) have showed us soon enough this intriguing Surface Feature from other visual angles, maybe (if possible) from a lower altitude, certainly during other seasons/periods of the Martian Year and, last but not least, under different Illumination Geometries, but...Nothing happened. Not a word of explanation was ever said or written (as far as we know) and not an "official" comment whatsoever was ever released.
Now, in the light of the aformentioned considerations, we decided to draw to your attention - through our Daily APOD - this "Smooth South Polar Region" and ask you a couple of simple questions: what do you really think or believe that this Surface Feature could be representing? Do you think that it could actually be the frozen remnant of an ancient (and once much bigger) Martian Lake or it is just a flat area surrounded by the typical Polar Terrain? If you wish to express your opinion, please write us at Alphacentauri@intercom.it . The most interesting and well substantiated ideas and theories that we hope to receive, shall be published here (giving to the Writer/s all the due credits), as additional comments to other (VERY detailed) orbital views of this very same Smooth South Polar Region. Thanks, as usual, for you interest and support!

Dr Paolo C. Fienga/LXTT/IPF

Mars Local Time: 14:56 (Early Afternoon)
Coord. (centered): 78,638° South Lat. and 68,111° East Long.
Spacecraft altitude: 248,0 Km (such as about 154,008 miles)
Original image scale range: 49,6 cm/pixel (with 2 x 2 binning) so objects ~ 1 mt and 49 cm across are resolved
Map projected scale: 50 cm/pixel
Map projection: POLAR STEREOGRAPHIC
Emission Angle: 4,5°
Sun-Martian Surface-MRO Spacecraft (or Phase) Angle: 67,9°
Solar Incidence Angle: 65° (meaning that the Sun was about 25° above the Local Horizon at the time the picture was taken)
Solar Longitude: 317,2° (Northern Winter - Southern Summer)
Credits: NASA/JPL/University of Arizona
Additional process. and coloring: Lunar Explorer Italia

This picture (which is a cropped and NON-Map Projected NASA - Original Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter CTX b/w frame, identified by the serial n. ESP_023024_1010) has been additionally processed and then colorized in Absolute Natural Colors (such as the colors that a human eye would actually perceive if someone were onboard the NASA - Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter and then looked down, towards the Surface of Mars), by using an original technique created - and, in time, dramatically improved - by the Lunar Explorer Italia Team.
21 commentiMareKromium02/25/13 at 18:06paolocf1963: Concavissimo Omo! Guarda le ombre: la luce viene d...
ESP_023024_1010-GB-PCF-LXTT-IPF-Possible_Paleo-Lake-01.jpg
ESP_023024_1010-GB-PCF-LXTT-IPF-Possible_Paleo-Lake-01.jpgPossible Paleo-Lake near the South Pole of Mars (EDM; Absolute Natural Colors - credits for the Research, additional process. and color.: Drr Gianluigi Barca and Paolo C. Fienga/Lunar Explorer Italia/Italian Planetary Foundation)114 visiteThis Surface Feature, now pictured by the NASA - Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, but already known to Planetary Researchers (since it had already been photographed by the NASA - Mars Global Surveyor Orbiter a few years ago - see the MGS-MOC Image identified by the serial n. M09-01354), it is certainly very intriguing and highly suggestive. The NASA People, however, called this Surface Feature (that, in our humble opinion, as IPF, looks like a frozen Lake and it is also well characterized by the presence, on its Eastern Side, of a long line of almost perfectly lined-up and unusually-looking - "oblong" - Impact Craters) "Smooth South Polar Region".
This Surface Feature (as you will better see in the next few days, when we shall show you its smallest details) is (or "looks", if you prefer) very peculiar, and that is a fact that can hardly be disputed. Said that, we, as IPF, expected that NASA told us something more about this Smooth South Polar Region. We honestly thought that NASA would (and should) have showed us soon enough this intriguing Surface Feature from other visual angles, maybe (if possible) from a lower altitude, certainly during other seasons/periods of the Martian Year and, last but not least, under different Illumination Geometries, but...Nothing happened. Not a word of explanation was ever said or written (as far as we know) and not an "official" comment whatsoever was ever released.
Now, in the light of the aformentioned considerations, we decided to draw to your attention - through our Daily APOD - this "Smooth South Polar Region" and ask you a couple of simple questions: what do you really think or believe that this Surface Feature could be representing? Do you think that it could actually be the frozen remnant of an ancient (and once much bigger) Martian Lake or it is just a flat area surrounded by the typical Polar Terrain? If you wish to express your opinion, please write us at Alphacentauri@intercom.it . The most interesting and well substantiated ideas and theories that we hope to receive, shall be published here (giving to the Writer/s all the due credits), as additional comments to other (VERY detailed) orbital views of this very same Smooth South Polar Region. Thanks, as usual, for you interest and support!

Dr Paolo C. Fienga/LXTT/IPF

Mars Local Time: 14:56 (Early Afternoon)
Coord. (centered): 78,638° South Lat. and 68,111° East Long.
Spacecraft altitude: 248,0 Km (such as about 154,008 miles)
Original image scale range: 49,6 cm/pixel (with 2 x 2 binning) so objects ~ 1 mt and 49 cm across are resolved
Map projected scale: 50 cm/pixel
Map projection: POLAR STEREOGRAPHIC
Emission Angle: 4,5°
Sun-Martian Surface-MRO Spacecraft (or Phase) Angle: 67,9°
Solar Incidence Angle: 65° (meaning that the Sun was about 25° above the Local Horizon at the time the picture was taken)
Solar Longitude: 317,2° (Northern Winter - Southern Summer)
Credits: NASA/JPL/University of Arizona
Additional process. and coloring: Lunar Explorer Italia

This picture (which is a cropped and NON-Map Projected NASA - Original Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter CTX b/w frame, identified by the serial n. ESP_023024_1010) has been additionally processed and then colorized in Absolute Natural Colors (such as the colors that a human eye would actually perceive if someone were onboard the NASA - Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter and then looked down, towards the Surface of Mars), by using an original technique created - and, in time, dramatically improved - by the Lunar Explorer Italia Team.
21 commentiMareKromium02/25/13 at 17:16Omomoto: io ho il solito problema...concavo o convesso?
ESP_023024_1010-GB-PCF-LXTT-IPF-Possible_Paleo-Lake-01.jpg
ESP_023024_1010-GB-PCF-LXTT-IPF-Possible_Paleo-Lake-01.jpgPossible Paleo-Lake near the South Pole of Mars (EDM; Absolute Natural Colors - credits for the Research, additional process. and color.: Drr Gianluigi Barca and Paolo C. Fienga/Lunar Explorer Italia/Italian Planetary Foundation)114 visiteThis Surface Feature, now pictured by the NASA - Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, but already known to Planetary Researchers (since it had already been photographed by the NASA - Mars Global Surveyor Orbiter a few years ago - see the MGS-MOC Image identified by the serial n. M09-01354), it is certainly very intriguing and highly suggestive. The NASA People, however, called this Surface Feature (that, in our humble opinion, as IPF, looks like a frozen Lake and it is also well characterized by the presence, on its Eastern Side, of a long line of almost perfectly lined-up and unusually-looking - "oblong" - Impact Craters) "Smooth South Polar Region".
This Surface Feature (as you will better see in the next few days, when we shall show you its smallest details) is (or "looks", if you prefer) very peculiar, and that is a fact that can hardly be disputed. Said that, we, as IPF, expected that NASA told us something more about this Smooth South Polar Region. We honestly thought that NASA would (and should) have showed us soon enough this intriguing Surface Feature from other visual angles, maybe (if possible) from a lower altitude, certainly during other seasons/periods of the Martian Year and, last but not least, under different Illumination Geometries, but...Nothing happened. Not a word of explanation was ever said or written (as far as we know) and not an "official" comment whatsoever was ever released.
Now, in the light of the aformentioned considerations, we decided to draw to your attention - through our Daily APOD - this "Smooth South Polar Region" and ask you a couple of simple questions: what do you really think or believe that this Surface Feature could be representing? Do you think that it could actually be the frozen remnant of an ancient (and once much bigger) Martian Lake or it is just a flat area surrounded by the typical Polar Terrain? If you wish to express your opinion, please write us at Alphacentauri@intercom.it . The most interesting and well substantiated ideas and theories that we hope to receive, shall be published here (giving to the Writer/s all the due credits), as additional comments to other (VERY detailed) orbital views of this very same Smooth South Polar Region. Thanks, as usual, for you interest and support!

Dr Paolo C. Fienga/LXTT/IPF

Mars Local Time: 14:56 (Early Afternoon)
Coord. (centered): 78,638° South Lat. and 68,111° East Long.
Spacecraft altitude: 248,0 Km (such as about 154,008 miles)
Original image scale range: 49,6 cm/pixel (with 2 x 2 binning) so objects ~ 1 mt and 49 cm across are resolved
Map projected scale: 50 cm/pixel
Map projection: POLAR STEREOGRAPHIC
Emission Angle: 4,5°
Sun-Martian Surface-MRO Spacecraft (or Phase) Angle: 67,9°
Solar Incidence Angle: 65° (meaning that the Sun was about 25° above the Local Horizon at the time the picture was taken)
Solar Longitude: 317,2° (Northern Winter - Southern Summer)
Credits: NASA/JPL/University of Arizona
Additional process. and coloring: Lunar Explorer Italia

This picture (which is a cropped and NON-Map Projected NASA - Original Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter CTX b/w frame, identified by the serial n. ESP_023024_1010) has been additionally processed and then colorized in Absolute Natural Colors (such as the colors that a human eye would actually perceive if someone were onboard the NASA - Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter and then looked down, towards the Surface of Mars), by using an original technique created - and, in time, dramatically improved - by the Lunar Explorer Italia Team.
21 commentiMareKromium02/24/13 at 12:09MareKromium: Ci st?, Andrea, ci st?: sul lato Dx, infatti, c...
ESP_023024_1010-GB-PCF-LXTT-IPF-Possible_Paleo-Lake-01.jpg
ESP_023024_1010-GB-PCF-LXTT-IPF-Possible_Paleo-Lake-01.jpgPossible Paleo-Lake near the South Pole of Mars (EDM; Absolute Natural Colors - credits for the Research, additional process. and color.: Drr Gianluigi Barca and Paolo C. Fienga/Lunar Explorer Italia/Italian Planetary Foundation)114 visiteThis Surface Feature, now pictured by the NASA - Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, but already known to Planetary Researchers (since it had already been photographed by the NASA - Mars Global Surveyor Orbiter a few years ago - see the MGS-MOC Image identified by the serial n. M09-01354), it is certainly very intriguing and highly suggestive. The NASA People, however, called this Surface Feature (that, in our humble opinion, as IPF, looks like a frozen Lake and it is also well characterized by the presence, on its Eastern Side, of a long line of almost perfectly lined-up and unusually-looking - "oblong" - Impact Craters) "Smooth South Polar Region".
This Surface Feature (as you will better see in the next few days, when we shall show you its smallest details) is (or "looks", if you prefer) very peculiar, and that is a fact that can hardly be disputed. Said that, we, as IPF, expected that NASA told us something more about this Smooth South Polar Region. We honestly thought that NASA would (and should) have showed us soon enough this intriguing Surface Feature from other visual angles, maybe (if possible) from a lower altitude, certainly during other seasons/periods of the Martian Year and, last but not least, under different Illumination Geometries, but...Nothing happened. Not a word of explanation was ever said or written (as far as we know) and not an "official" comment whatsoever was ever released.
Now, in the light of the aformentioned considerations, we decided to draw to your attention - through our Daily APOD - this "Smooth South Polar Region" and ask you a couple of simple questions: what do you really think or believe that this Surface Feature could be representing? Do you think that it could actually be the frozen remnant of an ancient (and once much bigger) Martian Lake or it is just a flat area surrounded by the typical Polar Terrain? If you wish to express your opinion, please write us at Alphacentauri@intercom.it . The most interesting and well substantiated ideas and theories that we hope to receive, shall be published here (giving to the Writer/s all the due credits), as additional comments to other (VERY detailed) orbital views of this very same Smooth South Polar Region. Thanks, as usual, for you interest and support!

Dr Paolo C. Fienga/LXTT/IPF

Mars Local Time: 14:56 (Early Afternoon)
Coord. (centered): 78,638° South Lat. and 68,111° East Long.
Spacecraft altitude: 248,0 Km (such as about 154,008 miles)
Original image scale range: 49,6 cm/pixel (with 2 x 2 binning) so objects ~ 1 mt and 49 cm across are resolved
Map projected scale: 50 cm/pixel
Map projection: POLAR STEREOGRAPHIC
Emission Angle: 4,5°
Sun-Martian Surface-MRO Spacecraft (or Phase) Angle: 67,9°
Solar Incidence Angle: 65° (meaning that the Sun was about 25° above the Local Horizon at the time the picture was taken)
Solar Longitude: 317,2° (Northern Winter - Southern Summer)
Credits: NASA/JPL/University of Arizona
Additional process. and coloring: Lunar Explorer Italia

This picture (which is a cropped and NON-Map Projected NASA - Original Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter CTX b/w frame, identified by the serial n. ESP_023024_1010) has been additionally processed and then colorized in Absolute Natural Colors (such as the colors that a human eye would actually perceive if someone were onboard the NASA - Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter and then looked down, towards the Surface of Mars), by using an original technique created - and, in time, dramatically improved - by the Lunar Explorer Italia Team.
21 commentiMareKromium02/24/13 at 11:43AndreaGG: quando l'ho vista mi ha dato l'impressione...
ESP_023024_1010-GB-PCF-LXTT-IPF-Possible_Paleo-Lake-01.jpg
ESP_023024_1010-GB-PCF-LXTT-IPF-Possible_Paleo-Lake-01.jpgPossible Paleo-Lake near the South Pole of Mars (EDM; Absolute Natural Colors - credits for the Research, additional process. and color.: Drr Gianluigi Barca and Paolo C. Fienga/Lunar Explorer Italia/Italian Planetary Foundation)114 visiteThis Surface Feature, now pictured by the NASA - Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, but already known to Planetary Researchers (since it had already been photographed by the NASA - Mars Global Surveyor Orbiter a few years ago - see the MGS-MOC Image identified by the serial n. M09-01354), it is certainly very intriguing and highly suggestive. The NASA People, however, called this Surface Feature (that, in our humble opinion, as IPF, looks like a frozen Lake and it is also well characterized by the presence, on its Eastern Side, of a long line of almost perfectly lined-up and unusually-looking - "oblong" - Impact Craters) "Smooth South Polar Region".
This Surface Feature (as you will better see in the next few days, when we shall show you its smallest details) is (or "looks", if you prefer) very peculiar, and that is a fact that can hardly be disputed. Said that, we, as IPF, expected that NASA told us something more about this Smooth South Polar Region. We honestly thought that NASA would (and should) have showed us soon enough this intriguing Surface Feature from other visual angles, maybe (if possible) from a lower altitude, certainly during other seasons/periods of the Martian Year and, last but not least, under different Illumination Geometries, but...Nothing happened. Not a word of explanation was ever said or written (as far as we know) and not an "official" comment whatsoever was ever released.
Now, in the light of the aformentioned considerations, we decided to draw to your attention - through our Daily APOD - this "Smooth South Polar Region" and ask you a couple of simple questions: what do you really think or believe that this Surface Feature could be representing? Do you think that it could actually be the frozen remnant of an ancient (and once much bigger) Martian Lake or it is just a flat area surrounded by the typical Polar Terrain? If you wish to express your opinion, please write us at Alphacentauri@intercom.it . The most interesting and well substantiated ideas and theories that we hope to receive, shall be published here (giving to the Writer/s all the due credits), as additional comments to other (VERY detailed) orbital views of this very same Smooth South Polar Region. Thanks, as usual, for you interest and support!

Dr Paolo C. Fienga/LXTT/IPF

Mars Local Time: 14:56 (Early Afternoon)
Coord. (centered): 78,638° South Lat. and 68,111° East Long.
Spacecraft altitude: 248,0 Km (such as about 154,008 miles)
Original image scale range: 49,6 cm/pixel (with 2 x 2 binning) so objects ~ 1 mt and 49 cm across are resolved
Map projected scale: 50 cm/pixel
Map projection: POLAR STEREOGRAPHIC
Emission Angle: 4,5°
Sun-Martian Surface-MRO Spacecraft (or Phase) Angle: 67,9°
Solar Incidence Angle: 65° (meaning that the Sun was about 25° above the Local Horizon at the time the picture was taken)
Solar Longitude: 317,2° (Northern Winter - Southern Summer)
Credits: NASA/JPL/University of Arizona
Additional process. and coloring: Lunar Explorer Italia

This picture (which is a cropped and NON-Map Projected NASA - Original Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter CTX b/w frame, identified by the serial n. ESP_023024_1010) has been additionally processed and then colorized in Absolute Natural Colors (such as the colors that a human eye would actually perceive if someone were onboard the NASA - Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter and then looked down, towards the Surface of Mars), by using an original technique created - and, in time, dramatically improved - by the Lunar Explorer Italia Team.
21 commentiMareKromium02/24/13 at 10:54MareKromium: Cari Amici e Compagni di Viaggio,

questa immag...
Northern_Regions-Utopia_Planitia-Dust_Storm_and_Clouds-PIA15959.jpg
Northern_Regions-Utopia_Planitia-Dust_Storm_and_Clouds-PIA15959.jpgDust Storm over Utopia Planitia144 visiteThis close-up image of a Dust Storm on Mars was acquired by the Mars Color Imager instrument onboard NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter on Nov. 7, 2007, around 15:00 Local Time on Mars. Scientists working with NASA's Curiosity Rover, which is set to land on Mars on Aug. 5 PDT (Aug. 6 EDT), are monitoring Mars each day for similar small Storms that could either drift over the Landing Site or stir up dust that moves as haze over the Site.
This image is centered on Utopia Planitia (53,6° North Latitude and 147,9° East Longitude), along the North Seasonal Polar Cap Edge as it is in late Northern Winter.
When NASA's Curiosity Rover lands on Mars, it will be late Southern Winter. Scientists are looking at similar small storms that form near the South Seasonal Polar Cap Edge. The Dust Storm pictured here was short-lived, lasting less than 24 hours. The image also shows the Seasonal North Polar Cap (at the top of the frame) and gravity-wave Water-Ice Clouds coming off of Mie Crater, just South of the Storm.
Gravity-Wave Clouds, also called "Lee-Wave Clouds", are Clouds that result from changes in Atmospheric Pressure, Temperature and height because of "Vertical Displacement", such as when Wind blows over a Mountain or a (huge) Crater Wall.

The projection of the image is Polar Stereographic and the image has a resolution of about 0,6 miles (1 Km) per pixel. North is indicated with an arrow in this image. The white scale bar is 93 miles (approx. 150 kilometers).
14 commentiMareKromium08/20/12 at 08:49Alby56: Condoglianze Ivana, mio padre non c'? pi? dal ...
Northern_Regions-Utopia_Planitia-Dust_Storm_and_Clouds-PIA15959.jpg
Northern_Regions-Utopia_Planitia-Dust_Storm_and_Clouds-PIA15959.jpgDust Storm over Utopia Planitia144 visiteThis close-up image of a Dust Storm on Mars was acquired by the Mars Color Imager instrument onboard NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter on Nov. 7, 2007, around 15:00 Local Time on Mars. Scientists working with NASA's Curiosity Rover, which is set to land on Mars on Aug. 5 PDT (Aug. 6 EDT), are monitoring Mars each day for similar small Storms that could either drift over the Landing Site or stir up dust that moves as haze over the Site.
This image is centered on Utopia Planitia (53,6° North Latitude and 147,9° East Longitude), along the North Seasonal Polar Cap Edge as it is in late Northern Winter.
When NASA's Curiosity Rover lands on Mars, it will be late Southern Winter. Scientists are looking at similar small storms that form near the South Seasonal Polar Cap Edge. The Dust Storm pictured here was short-lived, lasting less than 24 hours. The image also shows the Seasonal North Polar Cap (at the top of the frame) and gravity-wave Water-Ice Clouds coming off of Mie Crater, just South of the Storm.
Gravity-Wave Clouds, also called "Lee-Wave Clouds", are Clouds that result from changes in Atmospheric Pressure, Temperature and height because of "Vertical Displacement", such as when Wind blows over a Mountain or a (huge) Crater Wall.

The projection of the image is Polar Stereographic and the image has a resolution of about 0,6 miles (1 Km) per pixel. North is indicated with an arrow in this image. The white scale bar is 93 miles (approx. 150 kilometers).
14 commentiMareKromium08/19/12 at 09:17cicas65: Condoglianze anche da parte mia.
Northern_Regions-Utopia_Planitia-Dust_Storm_and_Clouds-PIA15959.jpg
Northern_Regions-Utopia_Planitia-Dust_Storm_and_Clouds-PIA15959.jpgDust Storm over Utopia Planitia144 visiteThis close-up image of a Dust Storm on Mars was acquired by the Mars Color Imager instrument onboard NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter on Nov. 7, 2007, around 15:00 Local Time on Mars. Scientists working with NASA's Curiosity Rover, which is set to land on Mars on Aug. 5 PDT (Aug. 6 EDT), are monitoring Mars each day for similar small Storms that could either drift over the Landing Site or stir up dust that moves as haze over the Site.
This image is centered on Utopia Planitia (53,6° North Latitude and 147,9° East Longitude), along the North Seasonal Polar Cap Edge as it is in late Northern Winter.
When NASA's Curiosity Rover lands on Mars, it will be late Southern Winter. Scientists are looking at similar small storms that form near the South Seasonal Polar Cap Edge. The Dust Storm pictured here was short-lived, lasting less than 24 hours. The image also shows the Seasonal North Polar Cap (at the top of the frame) and gravity-wave Water-Ice Clouds coming off of Mie Crater, just South of the Storm.
Gravity-Wave Clouds, also called "Lee-Wave Clouds", are Clouds that result from changes in Atmospheric Pressure, Temperature and height because of "Vertical Displacement", such as when Wind blows over a Mountain or a (huge) Crater Wall.

The projection of the image is Polar Stereographic and the image has a resolution of about 0,6 miles (1 Km) per pixel. North is indicated with an arrow in this image. The white scale bar is 93 miles (approx. 150 kilometers).
14 commentiMareKromium08/14/12 at 13:34AndreaGG: le mie più sentite condoglianze Ivana!
Northern_Regions-Utopia_Planitia-Dust_Storm_and_Clouds-PIA15959.jpg
Northern_Regions-Utopia_Planitia-Dust_Storm_and_Clouds-PIA15959.jpgDust Storm over Utopia Planitia144 visiteThis close-up image of a Dust Storm on Mars was acquired by the Mars Color Imager instrument onboard NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter on Nov. 7, 2007, around 15:00 Local Time on Mars. Scientists working with NASA's Curiosity Rover, which is set to land on Mars on Aug. 5 PDT (Aug. 6 EDT), are monitoring Mars each day for similar small Storms that could either drift over the Landing Site or stir up dust that moves as haze over the Site.
This image is centered on Utopia Planitia (53,6° North Latitude and 147,9° East Longitude), along the North Seasonal Polar Cap Edge as it is in late Northern Winter.
When NASA's Curiosity Rover lands on Mars, it will be late Southern Winter. Scientists are looking at similar small storms that form near the South Seasonal Polar Cap Edge. The Dust Storm pictured here was short-lived, lasting less than 24 hours. The image also shows the Seasonal North Polar Cap (at the top of the frame) and gravity-wave Water-Ice Clouds coming off of Mie Crater, just South of the Storm.
Gravity-Wave Clouds, also called "Lee-Wave Clouds", are Clouds that result from changes in Atmospheric Pressure, Temperature and height because of "Vertical Displacement", such as when Wind blows over a Mountain or a (huge) Crater Wall.

The projection of the image is Polar Stereographic and the image has a resolution of about 0,6 miles (1 Km) per pixel. North is indicated with an arrow in this image. The white scale bar is 93 miles (approx. 150 kilometers).
14 commentiMareKromium08/13/12 at 07:13Anakin: Un abbraccio anche da parte mia Ivana.
Come ripe...
Northern_Regions-Utopia_Planitia-Dust_Storm_and_Clouds-PIA15959.jpg
Northern_Regions-Utopia_Planitia-Dust_Storm_and_Clouds-PIA15959.jpgDust Storm over Utopia Planitia144 visiteThis close-up image of a Dust Storm on Mars was acquired by the Mars Color Imager instrument onboard NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter on Nov. 7, 2007, around 15:00 Local Time on Mars. Scientists working with NASA's Curiosity Rover, which is set to land on Mars on Aug. 5 PDT (Aug. 6 EDT), are monitoring Mars each day for similar small Storms that could either drift over the Landing Site or stir up dust that moves as haze over the Site.
This image is centered on Utopia Planitia (53,6° North Latitude and 147,9° East Longitude), along the North Seasonal Polar Cap Edge as it is in late Northern Winter.
When NASA's Curiosity Rover lands on Mars, it will be late Southern Winter. Scientists are looking at similar small storms that form near the South Seasonal Polar Cap Edge. The Dust Storm pictured here was short-lived, lasting less than 24 hours. The image also shows the Seasonal North Polar Cap (at the top of the frame) and gravity-wave Water-Ice Clouds coming off of Mie Crater, just South of the Storm.
Gravity-Wave Clouds, also called "Lee-Wave Clouds", are Clouds that result from changes in Atmospheric Pressure, Temperature and height because of "Vertical Displacement", such as when Wind blows over a Mountain or a (huge) Crater Wall.

The projection of the image is Polar Stereographic and the image has a resolution of about 0,6 miles (1 Km) per pixel. North is indicated with an arrow in this image. The white scale bar is 93 miles (approx. 150 kilometers).
14 commentiMareKromium08/12/12 at 20:48Ivana Tognoloni: molte grazie a tutti, anche da parte di mia madre.
Northern_Regions-Utopia_Planitia-Dust_Storm_and_Clouds-PIA15959.jpg
Northern_Regions-Utopia_Planitia-Dust_Storm_and_Clouds-PIA15959.jpgDust Storm over Utopia Planitia144 visiteThis close-up image of a Dust Storm on Mars was acquired by the Mars Color Imager instrument onboard NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter on Nov. 7, 2007, around 15:00 Local Time on Mars. Scientists working with NASA's Curiosity Rover, which is set to land on Mars on Aug. 5 PDT (Aug. 6 EDT), are monitoring Mars each day for similar small Storms that could either drift over the Landing Site or stir up dust that moves as haze over the Site.
This image is centered on Utopia Planitia (53,6° North Latitude and 147,9° East Longitude), along the North Seasonal Polar Cap Edge as it is in late Northern Winter.
When NASA's Curiosity Rover lands on Mars, it will be late Southern Winter. Scientists are looking at similar small storms that form near the South Seasonal Polar Cap Edge. The Dust Storm pictured here was short-lived, lasting less than 24 hours. The image also shows the Seasonal North Polar Cap (at the top of the frame) and gravity-wave Water-Ice Clouds coming off of Mie Crater, just South of the Storm.
Gravity-Wave Clouds, also called "Lee-Wave Clouds", are Clouds that result from changes in Atmospheric Pressure, Temperature and height because of "Vertical Displacement", such as when Wind blows over a Mountain or a (huge) Crater Wall.

The projection of the image is Polar Stereographic and the image has a resolution of about 0,6 miles (1 Km) per pixel. North is indicated with an arrow in this image. The white scale bar is 93 miles (approx. 150 kilometers).
14 commentiMareKromium08/12/12 at 14:19titanio44: un grande abbraccio all'eterno Ragazzo dagli o...
672 immagini su 56 pagina(e) 1 - 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 - 56

 
 

Powered by Coppermine Photo Gallery