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"Maps of Mars"

10 Comments -

1 – 10 of 10
Anonymous Garrett said...

If you want to fly around Mars, Earth, Moon, Jupiter, this program is pretty cool:

http://www.worldwindcentral.com/wiki/Main_page

Sadly, I think it only works under windows. :(

5:09 PM, February 15, 2007

Blogger Bee said...

nice post :-)

I think men should try to explore Venus...

7:23 PM, February 15, 2007

Blogger Rae Ann said...

I guess these maps completely kill that "face on Mars" thing from several years ago. ;-)

And I agree with Bee...

7:58 PM, February 15, 2007

Blogger Arun said...

At least, the future astronauts exploring Mars won't get lost!

Since presumably astronauts will precede a GPS system for Mars, how will they do this?

Will some instrument take a measurement of local features and then correlate with the map? A human could do it if they roughly knew which area of the map to look at, but they'd also need to orient themselves. Mars has too weak a magnetic field to use a compass, I suppose?

Also, there is a philosophical issue on what constitutes being lost? Is it with relation to base camp? Or is it with relation to a pickup vehicle (that might just home on where the astronauts currently are, and so they're never lost)?

:D

Just being pedantic :D

2:36 PM, February 16, 2007

Blogger stefan said...

Hi Garrett,

thank you for the link!

The ESA Mars Express site has, beside a great conventional collection of photos, a fancy
Mars Express image browser where images a marked by small flags on a rotating planet.

5:43 PM, February 16, 2007

Blogger stefan said...

Dear Bee, Rae-Ann,

yeah, but Venus is much more difficult ;-)

At least, the planet has those thick clouds that completly obscure the view of the surface. There was a mission to Venus in the early 1990s, Magellan, which produced maps of Venus from radar data.

Here is a collection of images from Magellan - also a time trip back to the beginnings of the www ;-). And there is some kind of interactive atlas.

And, I just realized that ESA has currently a space probe in orbit around Venus, called Venus Express. But if I understand that correctly, the instruments onboard cannot see down onto the surface in detail. Some photos of the Venusian clouds are here ;-)

5:45 PM, February 16, 2007

Blogger stefan said...

Dear Rae-Ann,

yes, the famous face eventually has turned out to be a not so very special hill in a region called Cydonia - see for example from the ESA website: 'Face on Mars' in Cydonia region.

The FU Berlin group has a recent news item about the face, where you can find more details

BTW, their HRSC Press Release Archive has much more photos from Mars.

5:56 PM, February 16, 2007

Blogger stefan said...

Hi Arun,


good point with the missing magnetic field. Is the atmosphere on Mars thin enough so that one can see bright stars in plain daylight? But I think that before astronauts set foot on Mars, there will be much more space probes in orbit, so perhaps they can install some kind of GPS system before?

there is a philosophical issue on what constitutes being lost?

Now, that's a deep question indeed ;-) Maybe astronauts on Mars are lost anyway?

What I had in mind, I thought they need some kind of base camp, with stationary facilities for life maintainence systems, recycling of water, air, energy supply, etc...? They better would find their way back to this base...

6:09 PM, February 16, 2007

Blogger amaragraps said...

No Martian astronomy is possible in broad daylight, but some interesting astronomy has been performed from the surface of Mars at night with the Rover Spirit.

6:52 PM, February 16, 2007

Blogger Rae Ann said...

stefan, thanks for all those great links to images!

9:45 AM, February 17, 2007

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