This mosaic shows part of the Noctis Labyrinthus region, the
‘Labyrinth of the Night’, on Mars. It was composed by Bill Dunford using
scenes available in the Mars Express image archive, HRSCview.
This image was featured as space science image of the week on 25 March 2013.
ESA’s Mars Express has spent nearly ten years imaging the Red Planet,
and there are plenty of hidden treasures buried in the mission’s rich
picture archive.
HRSCview is a web interface
to the archive that offers a chance to browse and explore any region of
the Red Planet through the eyes of Mars Express with images that have
not necessarily been highlighted by formal media releases.
As Planetary Society blogger Bill Dunford
puts it: “The glamour shots of the planets that space agencies release
are always gorgeous…but sometimes it’s fun to wander out on your own.”
Indeed, Bill took a hike through the maze of valleys in the Noctis
Labyrinthus region of Mars earlier this year using HRSCview as a tour
guide, to produce this beautiful mosaic.
Noctis Labyrinthus, the ‘Labyrinth of the Night’, is on the western edge of Valles Marineris, the Grand Canyon of Mars. It was first captured by Mars Express in June 2006.
Noctis Labyrinthus is a complex tectonic region intimately linked to
uplift of the nearby Tharsis volcanic region, home to the biggest
volcano in the Solar System, Olympus Mons.
As the Tharsis bulge swelled upwards, the planet’s crust stretched,
resulting in parts of the surface fracturing along parallel fault lines,
producing sunken features known as graben.
Some of the graben in this scene are heavily eroded, with rocky debris
scattered at their bases. Younger formations are visible on the upper
surfaces, with fault lines crossing each other in different directions,
suggesting many episodes of tectonic stretching.
This scene is a composite of around half a dozen images. Bill selected
the images he was interested in from HRSCview and stitched them
together, filling in a few small gaps in the data by sampling the pixels
immediately adjacent. He also brightened the resulting picture.
If you make an expedition through the martian landscape using HRSCview
and create images like this, please share them with us via email
(scicom[@]esa.int) or Twitter (@esascience). Who knows what treasures
you may find?
Guillermo Gonzalo Sánchez Achutegui
ayabaca@gmail.com
ayabaca@hotmail.com
ayabaca@yahoo.com
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