This is the first panoramic view by Viking 1 from the surface of Mars. The out of focus spacecraft component toward left center is the housing for the Viking sample arm, which is not yet deployed. Parallel lines in the sky are an artifact and are not real features. However, the change of brightness from horizon towards zenith and towards the right (west) is accurately reflected in this picture, taken in late Martian afternoon. At the horizon to the left is a plateau-like prominence much brighter than the foreground material between the rocks. The horizon features are approximately three kilometers (1.8 miles) away. At left is a collection of fine-grained material reminiscent of sand dunes. The dark sinuous markings in left foreground are of unknown origin. Some unidentified shapes can be perceived on the hilly eminence at the horizon towards the right. A horizontal cloud stratum can be made out halfway from the horizon to the top of the picture. At left is seen the low gain antenna for receipt of commands from the Earth. The projections on or near the horizon may represent the rims distant impact craters. In right foreground are color charts for Lander camera calibration, a mirror for the Viking magnetic properties experiment and part of a grid on the top of the Lander body. At upper right is the high gain dish antenna for direct communication between landed spacecraft and Earth. Toward the right edge is an array of smooth fine-grained material which shows some hint of ripple structure and may be the beginning of a large dune field off to the right of the picture, which joins with dunes seen at the top left in this 300° panoramic view. Some of the rocks appear to be undercut on one side and partially buried by drifting sand on the other. In the NASA Viking image archive more information can be found at Viking Lander Image 12A002.SUR.
I used the original 12a002.sur image from the NASA Viking image archive, converted it to .png and manually removed the noise. Except for the conversion, this was done in Adobe Photoshop CS2. The original file by NASA is in the public domain, and so is this new one.
Другие версии
I created this image as a replacement for the now deleted image Vl1.jpg. This file was created by NASA, but there was some noise on the right side of the image. Using the original picture from the Lander archive resulted in a higher quality image.
Лицензирование
Public domainPublic domainfalsefalse
Автор этого произведения, Van der Hoorn из английский Википедия, передаёт его в общественное достояние. Это разрешение действует по всему миру. В некоторых странах это не может быть возможно юридически, в таком случае: Van der Hoorn предоставляет любому право использовать данное произведение в любых целях, без каких-либо условий, если только такие условия не требуются по закону.Public domainPublic domainfalsefalse
The image is based on an original image from NASA to which the following copyright statement is applicable:
На веб-сайте NASA размещено большое число изображений Советского/Российского космического агентства и других неамериканских космических агентств. Они вовсе не обязательно находятся в общественном достоянии.
Материалы, основанные на данных
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Совместный проект SOHO (ESA & NASA) предполагает, что все материалы, созданные их зондом, защищены авторским правом и требуют разрешения для коммерческого необразовательного использования. [2]
== Summary == {{Information |Description = Original Caption Released with NASA Image: First panoramic view by Viking 1 from the surface of Mars. The out of focus spacecraft component toward left center is the housing for the Viking sample arm, which is no