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Our First Closeup Image of Mars Was a Paint-By-Numbers Pastel Drawing

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Pastel drawing of the surface of Mars

On July 15, 1965, NASA’s Mariner 4 probe flew within 6,118 miles of the surface of Mars, capturing images as it passed over the planet. The image data was transmitted back to scientists on Earth, but they didn’t have a good way to quickly render a photograph from it. They determined that the fastest way to see what Mariner 4 had seen was to print out the imaging data as a series of numbers, paste them into a grid, buy a set of pastels from a nearby art store, and do a paint-by-numbers job with the pastels on the data grid. The result (pictured above) was the first closeup representation of the surface of an extraterrestrial planet — in color, no less!

After the flyby of the planet it would take several hours for computers to process a real image. So while they were waiting, the engineers thought of different ways of taking the 1’s and 0’s from the actual data and create an image. After a few variations, it seemed most efficient to print out the digits and color over them based upon how bright each pixel was. So Mr. Grumm went to a local art store and asked for a set of chalk with different shades of gray. The art store replied that they “did not sell chalk” (as that was apparently too low for them, only convenience stores sold “chalk”), but they did have colored pastels. Richard did not want to spend a lot of time arguing with them, so he bought the pastels (actual pastels seen below), had the 1’s and 0’s printed out on ticker tape about 3in wide, and his team colored them by their brightness level (color key seen below).

Here’s a closer view of the pastels and numbers:

detail of a pastel drawing of the surface of Mars

The choice of color palette was serendipitous:

Though he used a brown/red color scheme, the thought that Mars was red did not enter his mind. He really was looking for the colors that best represented a grey scale, since that was what they were going to get anyway. It is uncanny how close his color scheme is to the actual colors of Mars. It’s as if they came right out of current images of the planet.

Compare with the photography we’re getting from Curiosity these days; we’ve come a long way in the last 60 years. (via @jenniferrrrrroberts and robin sloan)

Tags: art   astronomy   Mars   NASA   space
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smeeth1000
677 days ago
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Saskatoon
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Phone

6 Comments and 19 Shares
[*disables social networking accounts*] [*social isolation increases*] Wait, why does this ALSO feel bad?
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smeeth1000
2828 days ago
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Saskatoon
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6 public comments
emdeesee
2827 days ago
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Well, when you put it that way...
Sherman, TX
acdha
2828 days ago
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Close to home
Washington, DC
rraszews
2828 days ago
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It's so sad that we can choose our friends from the entire world based on commonalities of interests and values, rather than the old fashioned way of choosing them based on accident of geography.
Columbia, MD
MaryEllenCG
2828 days ago
But sometimes it's good, because what if you live in a super-rural area, and there aren't really any people who share your interests?
MaryEllenCG
2828 days ago
Or, on review, you were being ironic, and I misread. Oops!
Covarr
2828 days ago
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You may lose the sea of toxicity, but you also lose cat videos. Is that really a trade-off you want to make?
East Helena, MT
olliejones
2828 days ago
Did it. Never felt better. But, I have a silly meatspace cat in my house.
Lythimus
2828 days ago
@olliejones, jokes on you, you're participating in a social network.
courtwatson
2828 days ago
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Yup. 2017...
alt_text_bot
2828 days ago
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[*disables social networking accounts*] [*social isolation increases*] Wait, why does this ALSO feel bad?

Satellite view of a total eclipse

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The Japanese satellite Himawari caught yesterday's total solar eclipse as it moved across the Pacific Ocean.

Tags: Earth   Moon   Sun   space   video
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smeeth1000
3178 days ago
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Saskatoon
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digdoug
3178 days ago
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man, i wish this damn satellite was over north america! #provincial
Louisville, KY

"Where are the solar powered cars?" and other questions about Mad Max: Fury Road

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I saw Mad Max: Fury Road yesterday (enjoyed it) but have a few questions.

1. With gasoline in such short supply, I'm surprised the various groups in the movie didn't take more advantage of solar power to generate energy for electric vehicles and such. Sunshine is obviously abundant in post-apocalyptic Australia and from the looks of what was scavenged from before the nuclear war and the ingenuity on display in getting what they found to function, they should have been able to find even rudimentary solar cells and get them to work.

2. Speaking of energy scarcity, I wonder if the troop-pumping-up and opponent-intimidating function of the flamethrowing guitar player was worth all of the fuel spewed out of the end of his instrument and energy consumed by the incredible number of speakers on his rig.

3. The roads in the movie were in remarkable shape, aside from the swampland. Who was responsible for their upkeep? Even dirt roads need maintenance or they develop potholes and washboarding. And for what reason were they kept in such good condition outside of the Citadel/Gas Town/Bullet Farm area? Aside from Furiosa's Rig, the chase party, and two smallish motorcycle gangs, I saw no other vehicular traffic on the roads...and who would have been semi-regularly traveling out past the canyon anyway? To where? For what?

4. What was the political and economic arrangement between the Citadel, Gas Town, and the Bullet Farm? Did the Citadel trade their water and crops for gas and bullets? Or was Immortan Joe, as the defender of the lone source of abundant fresh water in the region, the defacto leader of all three groups? The People Eater and Bullet Farmer certainly came a'running when Joe needed help retrieving his wives. There were obviously other sources of water in the region -- how else did the biker gangs survive? -- so you'd think that Gas Town and the Bullet Farm could have teamed up to squeeze Joe into giving them a better deal or even overthrowing him. Point is, there seemed to be a surprising lack of political friction between the three groups, which seems odd in an environment of scarcity.

5. Surely land was plentiful enough that large solar stills could have generated enough fresh water for people to live on without having to rely on the Citadel for it.

Tags: economics   energy   Mad Max   movies   politics
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smeeth1000
3463 days ago
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Harsh
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steingart
3463 days ago
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someone put kotkot in a clean room/chem lab and let him to try to "fix a solar cell" and then maybe he'll STFU about "getting them to work"
Princeton, NJ
steingart
3461 days ago
Also as Einstein said (FWIU) "I know not with what weapons World War III will be fought, but World War IV will be fought with sticks and stones."

Who Owns What?

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Marvel-Characters-Movie-Studio-Ownership

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smeeth1000
3575 days ago
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Canada's degradation of pristine, intact forests leads world

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Pipeline boreal forest

The world's precious few remaining large forests are fragmenting at an alarming rate, and the amount of degradation in Canada leads the world, threatening species such as woodland caribou, a new analysis suggests.

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smeeth1000
3729 days ago
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