Inizio Registrati Login

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

Inizio > MARS > After One-Thousand Soles...

Ultimi arrivi - After One-Thousand Soles...
OPP-SOL1235-PIA-00937.jpg
OPP-SOL1235-PIA-00937.jpgSeries of Storms Shrouds Mars in Dust (2) - NASA/JPL/Malin Space Science Systems54 visiteThis sequence of Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO) Mars Color Imager (MARCI) daily mosaics shows some of the dust storm activity that occurred near the Mars Exploration Rover (MER) Opportunity landing site between 21 June 2007 and 18 July 2007. The Opportunity rover is located near the martian prime meridian and equator. The top and middle rows of images show the first six days of dust storm activity near the rover site as dust advanced from the west to the south and passed south of the rover over the course of a week. By the end of that first week, storm activity strengthened and continued to move east, eventually passing over nearly half of the martian southern hemisphere. Other storms spawned by this atmospheric disturbance affected the MER Spirit rover on the other side of the planet, while new storms developed, approached, and affected Opportunity. The bottom three images show dust activity over the MER Opportunity site on 3, 14, and 18 July. By 19 July, most of the martian surface was obscured by the dust lofted from these storms. As with previous large dust-raising events on Mars, once the active storms die down, many weeks to months will pass before the dust settles out and the atmosphere clears. The white circle indicates the location of the Opportunity landing site, the black gaps are caused by slewing the spacecraft east or west to image specific science targets, and north in each picture is toward the top, west is to the left.

MareKromiumLug 28, 2007
OPP-SOL1235-PIA09935-DustStorm.gif
OPP-SOL1235-PIA09935-DustStorm.gifPlanetary Dust Storm (GIF Movie)54 visiteNASA's Opportunity rover is literally seeing some of its darkest days. Both Mars Exploration Rovers have been riding out a regional dust storm for several weeks. Conditions became particularly dreary in the Meridiani Planum region where Opportunity sits, perched on the edge of "Victoria Crater."

This image is a time-lapse composite where each horizon-survey image has been compressed horizontally (but not vertically) to emphasize the sky. The relative brightness and darkness of the sky from sol to sol (over a 30-sol period beginning June 14, 2007) is depicted accurately in these images, which view roughly the same part of the plains southwest of the rover. The images are approximately true color composites, generated from calibrated radiance data files using the panoramic camera's 601-nanometer, 535-nanometer and 482-nanometer filters.

The rovers' atmospheric science team is concerned that smaller, regional dust storms could expand into a larger, globe-encircling storm. That could extend the time the sun stays obscured, challenging the capability of Opportunity's solar panels to produce enough electricity for the rover to function.

Fortunately, as of July 19, 2007, the Opportunity site is clearing slightly. When the storm ends, atmospheric scientists hope to review data from the rovers that will help them determine what sort of dust was being lifted and distributed.

The numbers across the top of the image report a measurement of atmospheric opacity, called by the Greek letter tau. The lower the number, the clearer the sky. Both Opportunity and Spirit have been recording higher tau measurements in July 2007 than they had seen any time previously in their three and a half years on Mars. The five sol numbers across the bottom correspond (left to right) to June 14, June 30, July 5, July 13 and July 15, 2007.
MareKromiumLug 25, 2007
SOL1260-2N238218747ESFAUCMP1561L0M1.jpg
SOL1260-2N238218747ESFAUCMP1561L0M1.jpgDust and fog over Gusev Crater - Sol 126060 visitenessun commentoMareKromiumLug 24, 2007
OPP-SOL1235-1P237817092EFF85W0P2689L6M1-00.jpg
OPP-SOL1235-1P237817092EFF85W0P2689L6M1-00.jpgDark Skies? Clear Skies? Where's the truth?!?101 visiteNel riquadro superiore (scurissimo, quasi nero), l'evoluzione della luminosità del Cielo di Marte nei Soles andanti dal 1205 al 1235. Nel Sol 1235, praticamente, alle 10:53 a.m. sembra notte. Però...
Però in un frame originale NASA relativo al medesimo Dark-Sol - il Sol 1235 - e da noi rielaborato in colori naturali, la situazione appare DECISAMENTE e RADICALMENTE DIVERSA!!!

Come mai?

Forse il MER Opportunity ha fatto uso di filtri "fendipolvere" (anti A.O.) per il frame che abbiamo ingrandito a colorizzato noi, oppure è stato "eccessivo" il darkening adottato per colorizzare il frame-composite NASA (evidentemente elaborato - male - "a tavolino" da qualche Addetto un pò troppo pessimista sullo stato attuale della visibilità su Marte, Regione di Meridiani Planum?).

Voi che dite?

Caption NASA:"NASA's Opportunity rover is literally seeing some of its darkest days. Both Mars Exploration Rovers have been riding out a regional dust storm for several weeks. Conditions became particularly dreary in the Meridiani Planum region where Opportunity sits, perched on the edge of "Victoria Crater."

This image is a time-lapse composite where each horizon-survey image has been compressed horizontally (but not vertically) to emphasize the sky. The relative brightness and darkness of the sky from sol to sol (over a 30-sol period beginning June 14, 2007) is depicted accurately in these images, which view roughly the same part of the plains southwest of the rover. The images are approximately true color composites, generated from calibrated radiance data files using the panoramic camera's 601-nanometer, 535-nanometer and 482-nanometer filters.

The rovers' atmospheric science team is concerned that smaller, regional dust storms could expand into a larger, globe-encircling storm. That could extend the time the sun stays obscured, challenging the capability of Opportunity's solar panels to produce enough electricity for the rover to function.

Fortunately, as of July 19, 2007, the Opportunity site is clearing slightly. When the storm ends, atmospheric scientists hope to review data from the rovers that will help them determine what sort of dust was being lifted and distributed.

The numbers across the top of the image report a measurement of atmospheric opacity, called by the Greek letter tau. The lower the number, the clearer the sky. Both Opportunity and Spirit have been recording higher tau measurements in July 2007 than they had seen any time previously in their three and a half years on Mars. The five sol numbers across the bottom correspond (left to right) to June 14, June 30, July 5, July 13 and July 15, 2007".
2 commentiMareKromiumLug 21, 2007
OPP-SOL1235-1P237817044EFF85W0P2689L4M1.jpg
OPP-SOL1235-1P237817044EFF85W0P2689L4M1.jpgThe pale Sky over Meridiani (1 - natural colors, elab. Lunexit)70 visitenessun commentoMareKromiumLug 19, 2007
OPP-SOL1235-1P237817067EFF85W0P2689L5M1.jpg
OPP-SOL1235-1P237817067EFF85W0P2689L5M1.jpgThe pale Sky over Meridiani (2 - natural colors, elab. Lunexit)76 visitenessun commentoMareKromiumLug 19, 2007
OPP-SOL1235-1P237817092EFF85W0P2689L6M1.jpg
OPP-SOL1235-1P237817092EFF85W0P2689L6M1.jpgThe pale Sky over Meridiani (3 - natural colors, elab. Lunexit)78 visitenessun commentoMareKromiumLug 19, 2007
SOL1255-2P237774685EFFAUCMP2380L6M1.jpg
SOL1255-2P237774685EFFAUCMP2380L6M1.jpgStill foggy days over Gusev... (1) - Sol 125556 visitenessun commentoMareKromiumLug 17, 2007
SOL1254-2N237599908EFFAUCMP1936R0M1.jpg
SOL1254-2N237599908EFFAUCMP1936R0M1.jpgFoggy days over Gusev Crater... - Sol 125454 visitenessun commentoMareKromiumLug 16, 2007
OPP-SOL1233-1N237644676ESF85W0P1569L0M1.jpg
OPP-SOL1233-1N237644676ESF85W0P1569L0M1.jpgVictoria's Rim with Early Morning Fog - Sol 123374 visitenessun commentoMareKromiumLug 16, 2007
OPP-SOL1233-1P237639492EFF85W0P2688L4M1.jpg
OPP-SOL1233-1P237639492EFF85W0P2688L4M1.jpgAlmost Clear Skies over Meridiani (1) - Sol 123364 visitenessun commentoMareKromiumLug 16, 2007
OPP-SOL1233-1P237639524EFF85W0P2688L5M1.jpg
OPP-SOL1233-1P237639524EFF85W0P2688L5M1.jpgAlmost Clear Skies over Meridiani (2) - Sol 123372 visitenessun commentoMareKromiumLug 16, 2007
2388 immagini su 199 pagina(e) 1 - 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 - 199

 
 

Powered by Coppermine Photo Gallery