Posted on 05/22/2009 12:15:06 PM PDT by MyTwoCopperCoins
What you are looking at here is the very first image ever taken of the surface of Mars. It was acquired by NASA's Mariner 4 using a television camera, and rendered using crayons. Look closer:
After Mariner 3 failed to take images because of a hardware problem, Mariner 4 became NASA's next big hope to get images of the Red Planet. There were going to be ten Mariner missions, but they wanted these badly.
The spacecraft did its first flyby on July 15, 1965, at 00:18:36 UT. It took 21 pictures alternating green and red filters, which were saved to tape. Then, the probe went behind the planet and the signal was lost. Scientist at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, waited impatiently, listening to static as Mariner 4 travelled fearless across the dark side of Mars.
At 03:13:04 UT signal was reacquired. All systems were nominal, cruise mode was re-established, and transmission of the images started 8.5 hours later. It lasted until August 3.
The people at the JPL were so excited to receive the images that they couldn't wait for them to be processed by the lab's imager. As the first picture was beamed down as a stream of 8-bit numberseach point indicating a brightness pointthey thought of a quick way to get an image straight away: Print the numbers indicating brightness in paper strips, put them together, and color them with pastel crayons.
I don't know about you, but I like the crayon version better than the actual image. [Images from the Data+Art exhibit at the Pasadena Museum of California Art, co-curated by Dan Goods]
LBJ and Lady Bird were so proud they taped it to the refrigerator door in the White House kitchen.
There is something really sweet about these crazy people.
Shades of Richard Hoagland
Buildings, and towers, and bridges on Mars, I see them, all drawn in with crayons. I see them! (see enterprisemission.com if you haven’t looked at his site, it’s a trip to explore)
NASA cutting another corner.
Took them a while to build the moon set for the fake moon landing, they didn’t have anything for Mars so resorted to crayons.
Well, I couldn’t make heads or tails of his site, but he should switch emphasis over to Photoshop tutorials—there’s some pretty nice work there!
It takes some digging, reading and listening to Hoagland’s semi-insane theories. He did point out an interesting “fossil” on Mars from a Rover picture a couple of years ago. I agree, some good graphics too.
lol.. never heard this before
This First Image from the Hubble Never Made TV
At least it isn’t pictures of Klingons surrounding Uranus!
I always liked the one with the hula-hoop around it!
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