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World-Wide Web Tools for Locating Planetary ImagesThe explosive growth of the World-Wide Web (WWW) in the past year has made it feasible to provide interactive graphical tools to assist scientists in locating planetary images. The highest available resolution images of any site of interest can be quickly found on a map or plot, and, if online, displayed immediately on nearly any computer equipped with a color screen, an Internet connection, and any of the free WWW browsers. The same tools may also be of interest to educators, students, and the general public. Image finding tools have been implemented covering most of the solar system: Earth, Mars, and the moons and planets imaged by Voyager. The Mars image-finder, which plots the footprints of all the high-resolution Viking Orbiter images and can be used to display any that are available online, also contains a complete scrollable atlas and hypertext gazetteer to help locating areas. The Earth image-finder is linked to thousands of Shuttle images stored at NASA/JSC, and displays them as red dots on a globe. The Voyager image-finder plots images as dots, by longitude and apparent target size, linked to online images. The locator (URL) for the top-level page is http: //ic-www.arc.nasa.gov/ic/projects/bayes-group/Atlas/. Through the efforts of the Planetary Data System and other organizations, hundreds of thousands of planetary images are now available on CD-ROM, and many of these have been made available on the WWW. However, locating images of a desired site is still problematic, in practice. For example, many scientists studying Mars use digital image maps, which are one third the resolution of Viking Orbiter survey images. When they douse Viking Orbiter images, they often work with photographically printed hardcopies, which lack the flexibility of digital images: magnification, contrast stretching, and other basic image-processing techniques offered by off-the-shelf software. From the perspective of someone working on an experimental image processing technique for super-resolution, the discovery that potential users are often not using the highest resolution already available, nor using conventional image processing techniques, was surprising. This motivated the present work.
Document ID
20020016484
Acquisition Source
Ames Research Center
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Kanefsky, Bob
(RECOM Technologies, Inc. Moffett Field, CA United States)
Deiss, Ron
Date Acquired
August 20, 2013
Publication Date
January 1, 1995
Subject Category
Lunar And Planetary Science And Exploration
Meeting Information
Meeting: 26th Annual Lunar and Planetary Science Conference
Location: Houston, TX
Country: United States
Start Date: March 13, 1995
End Date: March 17, 1995
Funding Number(s)
PROJECT: RTOP 233-03-05
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.

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