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Posts Tagged ‘LPL’

The “Other” Face on Mars

Tuesday, April 10th, 2007

Just as a follow up to the previous posts, here’s a picture of our Department Head, modified to appear to be taken from HiRISE, put on the HiWall for an April Fool’s Joke. This image has been shrunk, but otherwise is the same as the image that appeared on the HiWall.

Drake on Mar

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April HiJinks

Monday, April 9th, 2007

On Monday morning, I started up HiPlan, our image planning and targeting tool (see this post for more about HiPlan), and this unexpected window popped up:

April HiPlan popup

My first pre-coffee reaction was to panic, but then I read it more closely and realized what day it was. ;) Turns out the HiCommander had snuck some “special” updates into a recent release of HiPlan.

The HiWall was also displaying a certain department head’s “face on Mars” all day. :)

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Clickworking

Monday, February 19th, 2007

Over at NASA Ames, the HiRISE Clickworkers program is in beta-testing. Anyone (this means you!) with a browser and a net connection can participate in the cataloging, or more precisely, keywording of HiRISE images.

This is an ambitious effort. Originally (years before HiRISE), Clickworkers was used to tag craters on Mars, helping pin down the relative ages of various regions. This time around, you identify a dozen or so possible feature types, then move on to the next image. So you have to be a little more discerning, though examples are provided.

I was just looking at the sizes of our images to date. We’re coming up on one thousand images that have been map projected. And it looks like we just recently passed the one million megapixel mark (one thousand gigapixels, or one terapixel!) in the geometrically projected ones (when rotated so that North is up, there tends to be a lot of empty pixels framing the images).

Assuming a standard screen size of 1.25 megapixels (1280×1024), that is 800,000 screenfuls. If you looked at one per second, it would take you almost ten days to view it all! But one thousand volunteers could get through it in a day, and spend 100 seconds per image, which seems reasonable. [Though of course they'll need time for sleep, etc!]

The idea of using human brain power as a sort of massively distributed computation engine (shades of The Matrix) has come a long way. Amazon’s Mechanical Turk pays volunteers for tasks such as identifying features, translating documents or answering questions. It was recently used in the search for a person (computer scientist Jim Gray) missing at sea. Volunteers viewed over a half million images, covering 3,500 square miles of ocean, though unfortunately his sailboat did not turn up.

Still, ‘crowdsourcing‘ (as Wired called it) seems like it will continue to be an efficient way to perform tasks that computers are currently very poor at. Here at the Lunar and Planetary Lab, it has also been used by Spacewatch to find Earth-approaching asteroids. So, essentially, you could help save the planet in a real-life version of the classic game Asteroids! Clickworkers also has a program where you can tag Mars Global Surveyor images, scouting interesting locations for HiRISE to target.

We can’t let the machines have all the fun!

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