Title: A History of Mars Exploration
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2Topics
- A History of Mars Exploration
- HiRISE
- The Peoples Camera
3A History of Mars Observations
- From the beginning of human history through 1609,
Mars was a red light in the sky that did not
twinkle - Image Credit Conjunction of Moon, Venus and
Mars - Dec 1 2002 - Stuart Heggie - http//www.astrofoto.ca/stuartheggie/index.html
- http//www.astrofoto.ca/stuartheggie/ltpb_photos/M
oon_Venus_Mars_Dec_1_2002.html
4A History of Mars Observations
- In 1609, Galileo Galilei became perhaps the first
person to systematically turn a new toy - the
telescope - to the sky, and to Mars. - Image Credit Drawing of Mars from Galileo's Il
Saggiatore (1623), reproduced from Volume 6, page
361 of the National Edition. - http//moro.imss.fi.it/lettura/LetturaWEB.DLL?VOL
6VOLPAG361
5A History of Mars Observations
- From 1609 through 1965, telescopes became
increasingly powerful - First maps, drawings, photographs
- Image Credit Map of Mars by Giovanni
Schiaparelli (1888) Wikipedia - http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ImageKarte_Mars_Schi
aparelli_MKL1888.png
6A History of Mars Observations
- From 1609 through 1965, telescopes (continued)
- Mars Canal Craze
- Image Credit Percival Lowell observing Mars
from the observer's chair of the 61-centimeter
(24-inch) refracting telescope in the observatory
he established in Flagstaff, Arizona (USA).,
Wikipedia - http//commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/ImagePercival_L
owell-observing_Mars_from_the_Lowell_Observatory.j
pg
7A History of Mars Observations
- From 1609 through 1965, telescopes (continued)
- Photographs
- Image Credit Mars from Mt. Wilson Observatory
Robert Leighton (1956), from Dr. Jim Bells
ground-based images of Mars webpage at Cornell - http//marswatch.tn.cornell.edu/mars_groundbased.h
tml
8A History of Mars Observations
- Mars up close! From 1965 through 1997 the first
spacecraft and landers - July 14 and 15, 1965 - Mariner 4
- Image Credit First close-up image of Mars, from
the Mariner 4 spacecraft, NASA/NSSDC - http//nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/imgcat/html/object_page
/m04_01d.html
9A History of Mars Observations
- From 1965 through 1997 the first spacecraft and
landers (continued) - July 14 and 15, 1965 - Mariner 4
- Image Credit First picture clearly showing
craters on Mars, NASA/NSSDC - http//nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/imgcat/html/object_page
/m04_07b.html
10A History of Mars Observations
- From 1965 through 1997 the first spacecraft and
landers (continued) - June 1976 - August 1980 - Viking 1 and 2 Orbiters
and Landers - Image Credit Color mosaic of Olympus Mons on
Mars, NASA/NSSDC - http//nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/imgcat/html/object_page
/vo1_mh20n133.html
11A History of Mars Observations
- From 1965 through 1997 the first spacecraft and
landers (continued) - June 1976 - August 1980 - Viking 1 and 2 Orbiters
and Landers - Image Credit Parana Valles drainage system in
Margaritifer Sinus, Mars, NASA/NSSDC - http//nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/imgcat/html/object_page
/vo1_084a47.html
12A History of Mars Observations
- From 1965 through 1997 the first spacecraft and
landers (continued) - June 1976 - August 1980 - Viking 1 and 2 Orbiters
and Landers - Image Credit First Color Image of Utopia
Planitia on Mars, NASA/NSSDC - http//nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/imgcat/html/object_page
/vl2_p17686.html
13A History of Mars Observations
- And then years - from 1980 through 1996 - of no
visits to Mars - Failed missions
- Dry, dead Mars leaves the public imagination,
except for the Face
14A History of Mars Observations
- From 1997 through 2006 the first rovers and
higher resolution orbiters - July 04, 1997 - Pathfinder and Sojourner
- Image Credit Mars Pathfinder lander on sol 39,
NASA/NSSDC - http//nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/planetary/marspath_imag
es.html
15A History of Mars Observations
- 2004 through present (!) - MER Opportunity and
Spirit - Image Credit Dust Devils Whip By Spirit, Sol
1120, NASA/JPL-Caltech/Cornell - http//marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/gallery/press/spiri
t/20070412a.html - Image Credit Panorama from 'Cape Verde',
NASA/JPL-Caltech/Cornell - http//marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/gallery/press/oppor
tunity/20070103a.html
16A History of Mars Observations
- Mars Odyssey, Mars Global Surveyor, Mars Express
- Image Credit Fossil Delta in Eberswalde
Crater, NASA/JPL/Malin Space Science Systems - http//barsoom.msss.com/mars_images/moc/2005/09/20
/eberswalde/
17HiRISE
- Late 1980s - Alan Delamere of Ball Aerospace
begins to plan a high resolution camera - 2001 - Delamere teams up with Dr. Alfred McEwen
from the University of Arizona to propose this
camera for the upcoming Mars Reconnaissance
Orbiter - November 9, 2001 - HiRISE camera is accepted
- Image Credit HiRISE at Mars,
NASA/JPL/University of Arizona
18MRO Mission Overview
Launch
Interplanetary Cruise
Approach and Orbit Insertion
Aug 2005
Aug 2005 - Mar 2006
Mar 2006
Capture Orbit --- Period 35 hrs Asc Node 830
pm LMST
LC-41
Atlas V-401
Aerobraking
Primary Science/Relay
Nov 2006 - Dec 2010
Mar-Sep 2006
Primary Science/Relay Orbit --- Period 112 min
Hp 255 km Ha 320 km, Frozen Ascending
Node 300 pm LMST (Sun-Sync)
Science Data Acquisition/Return
19Data Return Comparison
20Other MRO Instruments
MARCI
SHARAD
MCS
CTX
CRISM
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22HiRISE Focal Plane Assembly
- 14 CCDs (2048 x 128 pixels)
- 10 CCDs Form Red Channel (20,000 pixels)
- 2 CCDs Form Blue-Green Channel (4000 pixels)
- 2 CCDs Form NIR Channel (4000 pixels)
23- Simulated HiRISE image of Tucson, 20,000 x 60,000
pixels - Next slide HiROC at full resolution
24- HiRISE (30 cm/pixel plus false color)
2520,000 pixels
4,000 pixels
26Polar Layers and Climate History
- Analysis of HiRISE data should result in a
better understanding of the timescales involved
in the deposition of the layered deposits and
provide important information regarding the
climate history of Mars.
27Fluvial Deposits
- Delta at Eberswalde Crater
- PSP_001336_1560 - November 8, 2006.
- centered at -23.8 degrees latitude, 326.4 degrees
East longitude. - Deposits of channel emptying into lake
28Fluvial Deposits
- Delta at Eberswalde Crater
29Other Processes
- Channels on dunes in Russell Crater
- PSP_001440_1255 - November 16, 2006
- centered at -54.2 degrees latitude, 12.9 degrees
East longitude - Sand fluidized by sublimating CO2 ice during the
spring?
30HiRISE
- Can the audience even see anything I am
showing!!!???
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36Credit MSSS.com
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44The Peoples Camera
- HiRISE welcomes and encourages participation from
all scientists and the general public - Anyone may submit targets through Web-based
interface (HiWeb) - Processed images, useful for science analyses,
will be released ASAP, hopefully within weeks of
acquisition. - These will be official PDS releases!
- HiRISE teams thinks this approach will result in
the greatest possible science return - Too much data for us to research ourselves!
- We will image 1 of Mars (0.1 at full
resolution), so images must be carefully placed
to address key questions. - The dataset is huge, so we want outside help for
earlier discoveries, to influence future research
and exploration.
45The Peoples Camera
- HiRISE Products
- EDRs - Individual channels from an observation
with an attached label - ISIS .cub format - RDRs - Mosaic of all the EDRs, geometrically
mapped to Mars, with a detached label - JPEG2000
.jp2 format - Color RDRs - Same as above, but with the color
swath added to the black-and-white channels -
JPEG2000 .jp2 format - Anaglyphs
- First Planetary Data System (PDS) release in June
(1000s of EDRs, RDRs)
46The Peoples Camera
- Smaller compressed products on website (all of
these are jpeg format) - Thumbnail images
- Browse images
- Browse images with scale bar
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48The Peoples Camera
- HiRISE
- http//hirise.lpl.arizona.edu/
- New website coming soon (June 2007?)
- HiBlog
- http//hirise.lpl.arizona.edu/HiBlog/
- Ill put a link to this presentation on our blog
(large file alert! 25 MB) - HiRISE Clickworkers
- http//clickworkers.arc.nasa.gov/hirise
- Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO)
- http//mars.jpl.nasa.gov/mro/