Fantastic Mars picture

Fantastic Mars picture

Author
Discussion

Pesty

Original Poster:

42,655 posts

257 months

Wednesday 7th October 2015
quotequote all

No Bend

591 posts

123 months

Wednesday 7th October 2015
quotequote all
Thats quite fantastic.

And there's a blue sky, must have enough atmosphere for it then.

Edited by No Bend on Wednesday 7th October 22:33

Pesty

Original Poster:

42,655 posts

257 months

Wednesday 7th October 2015
quotequote all
Hmmm not sure I guess they have colourised it then. I think you are right with no atmosphere no blue sky,

HarryW

15,151 posts

270 months

Wednesday 7th October 2015
quotequote all
Pesty said:
Hmmm not sure I guess they have colourised it then. I think you are right with no atmosphere no blue sky,
I though it was gravity that kept all the blue particles close to the surface, hence the appearance of a blue sky on earth, but on Mars Gravity is different and its the red particles that are held closer to the surface.

So you are right, they must have colorised the photo wrongly, what a daft mistake to make....

Eric Mc

122,077 posts

266 months

Wednesday 7th October 2015
quotequote all
Mars can show a blue tint to its sky on occasions. It's very much dependent on the nature of the particles suspended in the atmosphere and the sun angle. The sky is normally a salmon pink but with sun closer to the horizon it can turn blue.

anonymous-user

55 months

Thursday 8th October 2015
quotequote all
HarryW said:
I though it was gravity that kept all the blue particles close to the surface, hence the appearance of a blue sky on earth, but on Mars Gravity is different and its the red particles that are held closer to the surface.

So you are right, they must have colorised the photo wrongly, what a daft mistake to make....
Yeah NASA, what a bunch of idiots. hehe

The reason is in the image description.

NASA said:
The colors are adjusted so that rocks look approximately as they would if they were on Earth, to help geologists interpret the rocks. This "white balancing" to adjust for the lighting on Mars overly compensates for the absence of blue on Mars, making the sky appear light blue and sometimes giving dark, black rocks a blue cast.

Eric Mc

122,077 posts

266 months

Thursday 8th October 2015
quotequote all
The very first colour images returned by the Viking Lander in 1976 showed a blue sky. However, when they calibrated the image properly using the colour test card mounted on the lander the sky was show to be pink.