... I am sure you've seen some of these shots. The satellite Rosetta has taken close-ups of the comet 67P / Churyumov–Gerasimenko. If you treat some of the latest ones with brightness / contrast, you can even see some jets! I guess there is more to come ...
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Rosetta: a ten year's journey to a comet
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... photos now look even more dramatic. The first one is taken off the web, the second (three of four) I manipulated a bit, as I would use false colour to visualize effects in my research.Last edited by amzamz; 13-02-2015, 17:40.
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Originally posted by amzamz View Post... photos now look even more dramatic. The first one is taken off the web, the second (three of four) I manipulated a bit, as I would use false colour to visualize effects in my research.Attached FilesScott
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Space Imaging Technology
Originally posted by amzamz View Post... photos now look even more dramatic. The first one is taken off the web, the second (three of four) I manipulated a bit, as I would use false colour to visualize effects in my research.
http://rammb.cira.colostate.edu/proj...agery_Data.pdfScott
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Originally posted by IVR007 View PostInteresting, Scott! Some aspects of the image processing reminds me of one of my activities: (intravital) fluorescence imaging.
Please tell me more about what you image. The biological nature of your business sounds much more interesting than the aerospace programs I worked on for 41 years!Scott
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Have you heard also about the New Horizons project? It was launched in 2006 towards Pluto, and will be finally arriving this summer, July to be precise:
http://pluto.jhuapl.edu/index.php
That's a long damn way away! But eager to see first-ever photos of this planet. Yes, to me it's still a planet.
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