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Risultati della ricerca nelle immagini - "Effects"
PSP_004000_0945_RED_abrowse-00.jpg
PSP_004000_0945_RED_abrowse-00.jpgChangings... (CTX Frame - credits: NASA/JPL/University of Arizona)91 visiteHiRISE is monitoring the Residual Carbon Dioxide Cap on (or near) the South Pole of Mars to see how it changes over time.
Some of this Terrain contains many Pits, earning it the nickname "Swiss Cheese Terrain". One of our monitoring spots is over what looks like a deranged "Happy Face". If you look closely, you'll see many changes since the first HiRISE image, PSP_004000_0945, was acquired in 2007. The news is that the Pits have grown larger. When this Pit growth was first discovered, it was suggested to be an indication of climate change on Mars. However, we now suspect that the CO2 that sublimates from the Pit Walls recondenses on the nearby surfaces, so there is no net change in the total amount of frozen CO2.

Acquisition date: December, 30th, 2010
Mars Local Time (M.L.T.): 18:03 (Late Afternoon)
Latitude (centered): 85,7° South
Longitude (East): 6,5°
Spacecraft Altitude (or Range to Target Site): 247,6 km (154,8 miles)
Original image scale range: 24,8 cm/pixel (with 1 x 1 binning) so objects ~74 cm across are resolved
Map Projected Scale: 25 cm/pixel
Map Projection: POLAR STEREOGRAPHIC
Emission Angle: 0,2°
Phase Angle: 78,9°
Solar Incidence Angle: 79° (with the Sun about 11° above the Local Horizon)
Solar Longitude: 207,7° (Northern Autumn)
MareKromium
PSP_004000_0945_RED_abrowse-01.jpg
PSP_004000_0945_RED_abrowse-01.jpgChangings... (EDM - credits: NASA/JPL/University of Arizona)96 visitenessun commentoMareKromium
South_Polar_Regions-SPRC.jpg
South_Polar_Regions-SPRC.jpgSublimation at the South Polar Residual Cap (Absolute Natural Colors; credits: Dr Paolo C. Fienga - Lunexit Team)98 visiteCaption NASA:"This MGS-MOC image shows a portion of the South Polar Residual Cap where the effects of Sublimation are apparent.
Over extended periods of time, Sublimation "eats" away at the smoother appearing material (largely composed of frozen CO2), darkening the Scarps and creating the irregularly shaped depressions that are present throughout much of the scene".

Location near: 87,1° South Lat. and 69,3° West Long.
Image width: ~3 Km (~1,9 miles)
Illumination from: upper left
Season: Southern Summer
MareKromium
ZZ-ZZ-ZZ-ZZ-ZZ-ZZ-ZZ-ZZ-ZZ-ZZ-ZZ-ZZ-APOLLO 12 AS 12-46-6769 HR.jpg
ZZ-ZZ-ZZ-ZZ-ZZ-ZZ-ZZ-ZZ-ZZ-ZZ-ZZ-ZZ-APOLLO 12 AS 12-46-6769 HR.jpgAS 12-46-6769 (HR) - Blue Flare or reflections?128 visiteUna nuova (piccola-piccola) "Blue Flare" illumina il cielo al di sopra del Surveyor Crater? No.
In questo frame, la Blue Flare è solo un'illusione. Anzi, ad essere precisi, essa è la porzione terminale di un photoartifact ricorrente nelle immagini Up-Sun (controluce) che viene comunemente identificato come "effetto prismatico". Un effetto prismatico che diventa ancora più accattivante - ma ingannevole! - a causa della sfuocatura della fotografia.

Caption originale:"116:27:03 MT - Rightward of 6768. Frame from Pete's 8 o'clock pan showing the deep shadow on the eastern wall of Surveyor Crater and, as indicated in a detail, the sunlit solar panels of Surveyor III. Compare with the corresponding frames from Pete's 12 o'clock pan, AS 12-46-6741, and his 4 o'clock pan, AS12-46-6746. Note that Pete mistakenly took these pans at 15-foot focus rather than 74-foot focus".
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