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Ultimi arrivi - After One-Thousand Soles...
OPP-SOL3019-GB-LXTT-IPF.jpg
OPP-SOL3019-GB-LXTT-IPF.jpgLooking Around... - Sol 3019 (RAW Natural Colors; credits for the additional process. and color.: Dr Gianluigi Barca - Lunexit Team)70 visitenessun commentoMareKromiumLug 29, 2012
OPP-SOL2998-EB-MF-LXTT-IPF-2.jpg
OPP-SOL2998-EB-MF-LXTT-IPF-2.jpgBright Sun, Dark Sky - Sol 2998 (Natural Colors; credits for the additional process. and color.: Elisabetta Bonora and Marco Faccin - Lunar Explorer Italia/Italian Planetary Foundation)115 visiteWe said that in the past and we have to say it again: how many times have we already read (here, there and everywhere...), that the Martian Sky should be "Blue" (actually, "Light Blue", according to the "Raleigh Scattering" Model)? Certainly a thousand times (at least!) and, well, maybe some time ago, the question could have made some sense.
But now, after so many Natural and Absolute Colorizations of the NASA - MER Spirit and Opportunity's Original b/w Frames, how could we keep doubting? Color, brightness, nuances of the Martian Sky... Let's see if we can make a little step forward, once in a while...
Among many other things (and forgetting the color of the Martian Sky for a moment), the NASA People often told us that the Sky of Mars is "bright" and we wish to say that, perhaps, at certain Latitudes and during certain times of the Martian Year (as well as at certain - and given - daytime hours), such a statement could even be reasonable.

Said that, we honestly believe that, first of all, the Martian Sky is not particularly bright at all. In fact, we believe that the Martian Sky should really (if not extremely) be dark.
Second, we believe that the Sun, even though its diameter is over one-third smaller than the one which we can see from Earth, shines VERY brightly over the Martian Landscapes: especially, we think, starting from the late morning hours (let's say 09:00/09:30 Mars Local Solar Time) and until, probably (and during the Martian Summer), 16:00 or 17:00 (always Mars Local Solar Time).
Furthermore, and according to what we have speculated in the past, the portion of the Sky visible near the Martian Horizon, should slightly be brighter than the rest of the Sky. In other words: if you were on Mars, near the Rover and looking at the Horizon of Meridiani Planum, you should see a relatively bright (lower portion of the) Sky that, the more you rise your look, the darker it will get.

Talking about the color of the Martian Sky, instead, since (and of course...) we haven't been on Mars (yet!) we cannot be one-hundred-percent certain of anything but, after so many years of studying and processing images from the Red Planet, it seems to us quite reasonable and believable to say that the Martian Sky is NOT blue, nor light-blue at all.
The Martian Sky, most likely, can show itself in quite a few different colors, but its "natural" one, should be a light-orange. Near the Sun, probably, the NASA People are correct when they say that it should be kind of pale-blue and white; but most of it - in any case and for most part of the day - is and should (almost) always be of a light white/orange color (we repeat: near the horizon), and then (as we look over and above the horizon itself), of an orange/yellowish color that the more we look towards the Zenith (or the Nadir), the darker it should get.
It is also possible that the Martian Sky might show - at certain conditions - some yellow and pink nuances: this depending on the specific time of the day that we consider, as well as on the Atmospheric Opacity - or TAU - existing at that time, on the Martian Season and on the given Martian Latitude.

In this beautiful frame, processed in Natural Colors, we can see that the Sky near the Horizon is actually (yet quite dimly) bright, while the rest of the visible Sky is dark. Almost black (we should say that its color looks like a VERY dark orange, which tends to the brown). But the Sun, that is shining (relatively) high in the Sky, is VERY bright! So bright that the Martian Paving where NASA - MER Opportunity is rolling on, appears, to the Electronic Eyes of the Rover, of a bright and sharp white color, with some light-blueish nuances (these nuances being probably caused by the blue cristals that seem to be dispersed all over the place).

In the end, and just to draw some conclusions, the Martian Sky, in our opinion - as IPF (and no matter what we often see - or think to see... - in the frames that come to us from the Red Planet) -, is usually dark (VERY dark during the Late Fall and through the entire Martian Winter), but the Sun (except during the massive Sand Storms that, sometimes, darken the whole Planet) always shines very bright, particularly during the months corresponding to the Late Spring and Summer of the Red Planet. But a bright Sun, in our opinion, does not mean AT ALL a bright Daytime Sky! And please, forgive us, if, one day, we might be proven wrong...

This frame has been colorized in Natural Colors (such as the colors that a perfect human eye would actually perceive if someone were near the NASA - MER Opportunity and then looked towards the Martian Horizon), by using an original technique created - and, in time, dramatically improved - by the Lunar Explorer Italia Team.
1 commentiMareKromiumLug 11, 2012
OPP-SOL3001-MF-EB-LXTT-IPF.jpg
OPP-SOL3001-MF-EB-LXTT-IPF.jpgCloser than ever: Particulate, Dust and, maybe, Sylvinite Cristals? - Sol 3001 (Credits for the additional process. and color.: Elisabetta Bonora and Marco Faccin - Lunar Explorer Italia/Italian Planetary Foundation)104 visitenessun commentoMareKromiumLug 11, 2012
OPP-SOL2971-1N391940652EFFBRNAP0605L0M2.jpg
OPP-SOL2971-1N391940652EFFBRNAP0605L0M2.jpgHorizon - Sol 2971 (Absolute Natural Colors; credits for the additional process. and color.: Dr Paolo C. Fienga - Lunexit Team) 92 visitenessun commentoMareKromiumLug 08, 2012
OPP-SOL2971-1N391940615EFFBRNAP0605L0M1.jpg
OPP-SOL2971-1N391940615EFFBRNAP0605L0M1.jpgHorizon - Sol 2971 (Absolute Natural Colors; credits for the additional process. and color.: Dr Paolo C. Fienga - Lunexit Team) 88 visitenessun commentoMareKromiumLug 08, 2012
OPP-SOL2927-2928-MF-EB-LXTT-IPF.jpg
OPP-SOL2927-2928-MF-EB-LXTT-IPF.jpgThe Surface of Meridiani Planum - Sol 2927 AND 2928 (Enhanced Natural Colors; credits for the additional process. and color.: Elisabetta Bonora and Marco Faccin - Lunexit Team)117 visitenessun commento2 commentiMareKromiumMag 20, 2012
OPP-SOL2929-MF-EB-LXTT-IPF.jpg
OPP-SOL2929-MF-EB-LXTT-IPF.jpgThe Surface of Meridiani Planum - Sol 2929 (Absolute Natural Colors; credits for the additional process. and color.: Elisabetta Bonora and Marco Faccin - Lunexit Team)97 visitenessun commentoMareKromiumMag 20, 2012
OPP-SOL2924-MIC-B-MF-EB-LXTT-IPF.jpg
OPP-SOL2924-MIC-B-MF-EB-LXTT-IPF.jpgMicroscopic View - Sol 2924 (Natural Colors; credits for the additional process. and color.: Elisabetta Bonora and Marco Faccin - Lunexit Team) 91 visitenessun commentoMareKromiumMag 20, 2012
OPP-SOL2939-MF-EB-LXTT-IPF.jpg
OPP-SOL2939-MF-EB-LXTT-IPF.jpgColors - Sol 2939 (Natural Colors; credits for the additional process. and color.: Elisabetta Bonora and Marco Faccin - Lunexit Team) 118 visitenessun commento9 commentiMareKromiumMag 20, 2012
OPP-SOL2955-MF-EB-LXTT.jpg
OPP-SOL2955-MF-EB-LXTT.jpgMellow Yellow Vision.... - Sol 2955 (Natural Colors; credits for the additional process. and color.: Elisabetta Bonora and Marco Faccin - Lunexit Team) 92 visitenessun commentoMareKromiumMag 20, 2012
OPP-SOL2940-MF-EB-LXTT-IPF.jpg
OPP-SOL2940-MF-EB-LXTT-IPF.jpgWorking at Meridiani Planum - Sol 2940 (Enhanced Natural Colors; credits for the additional process. and color.: Elisabetta Bonora and Marco Faccin - Lunexit Team)112 visitenessun commentoMareKromiumMag 20, 2012
OPP-SOL2910-2912-EB-MF-LXTT-IPF.jpg
OPP-SOL2910-2912-EB-MF-LXTT-IPF.jpgSemi-buried Rocky Outcrop at "Greeley Haven" - Sol 2910 (Enhanced and Darkened Natural Colors; credits for the additional process. and color.: Elisabetta Bonora and Marco Faccin - Lunexit Team)110 visitenessun commentoMareKromiumApr 18, 2012
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