Honey, I Shrunk the Face...!
By Richard C. Hoagland But in fact, a second generation, reduced-resolution copy
of the original Mars Surveyor "Mars Orbiter Camera" Cydonia photograph!
Inevitably, each individual CCD element in such an array
possesses slightly varying sensitivity compared to its neighboring elements,
across the width of the detector. Thus, any image produced by the "line-scan
CCD array" will inevitably display a series of irregularly-spaced, vertical
bright and dark lines -- like scratches on an old print of "Casablanca"
-- stretching the length of the entire image at right angles to the scan
(below).
![]() Normally, these vertical irregularities are removed from the final image by appropriate computer processing; however, in "raw" or incompletely processed images, these "lines" can serve as unique "detector fingerprints" of that particular CCD array; no two line-scan cameras will imprint the same spacing, intensity, or number of such lines on any of its images. Thus, like matching bullet markings in a murder investigation through a "ballistics test," comparing lines on various CCD line-scan camera images can uniquely determine crucial aspects of those images -- including which camera took which image. The idea of using this intrinsic "flaw" in line-scan CCD
cameras specifically to check on the current Cydonia photography, came
to our attention during a recent Art Bell show; we were engaged in a discussion
of the execrable photometric quality of the "raw" (and later, "enhanced")
versions of the Cydonia imagery, when it occurred to me that the CCD imperfections
inevitably present in CCD line-scan cameras could be used as a means of
verifying the ultimate source of all images taken with the Mars Surveyor
camera.
The next day a listener (Fred Hoddick), acting on our conversation about these "CCD idiosyncracies" (as applied to Dr. Malin's camera), began a serious investigation of the earlier Mars Surveyor imagery archived on Dr. Malin's Website [link to Malin's Website]. His results, sent to Enterprise for verification, can only be described as "startling." Fred Hoddick discovered that, indeed, Dr. Malin's Narrow-Angle Mars Orbiter Camera imprints a unique "line-scan fingerprint"on every Mars Surveyor photograph; one such image he investigated -- "MOC568174924.8003" -- was acquired by the Mars Surveyor spacecraft on orbit 80: a close-up section of the spectacular "Vallis Marineris,' the so-called "Grand Canyon of Mars." In comparing the "line-scan signature" visible in narrow-angle image "8003" with the pattern of faint lines seen in the "raw" version of the MGS Cydonia image "22003" (see close-up comparisons, below), Hoddick indeed made a major, startling discovery-- That the spatial dimensions of the Mars Surveyor image of Cydonia released by JPL are only half of what should have been acquired!
![]() By following the green lines in the diagram and the "image slice" comparisons with earlier MGS frame "8003" (above), it can easily be seen that the final display-resolution of the so-called "raw" Cydonia image "22003" is only half what should have been acquired; the documentation supplied with Dr. Malin's camera (see above) clearly states that the full resolution of a Narrow-Angle frame is supposed to be-- 2048 picture elements wide. When this blatant spatial "image tampering" is added to the extremely limited grey scale presented in the same MGS "raw" image (see graphic, right) -- which demonstrates that only about 42 grey values are represented out of a possible 256 -- the result is an extremely "noisy" imaging enhancement (right-hand strip). Because of the "morning light" aspect of this MGS Cydonia photography (as compared to the "late afternoon" lighting of the original Viking Cydonia images), this reduced number of grey levels further distorts the "raw" Mars Surveyor Cydonia image ... without a great deal of effort, effectively eliminating meaningful comparisons with the previous Viking data. This comparison is further hampered by NASA's choice of the spacecraft imaging angle -- oblique -- as opposed to Viking's overhead "frontal" view (below).
No wonder Dan Rather, after one look Monday afternoon,
pronounced it "just another hill ... case closed!" Michael Malin's response to the posting of our "mysteriously reduced-resolution" discovery came quickly:
Nice try, Michael -- but no cigar. After Malin's "response," I spoke with Dr. Thomas Van Flandern, former Head of the Celestial Mechanics Branch of the U.S. Naval Observatory, and a world authority on orbital mechanics. He confirmed my own impressions regarding NASA's main difficulties in its attempted "targeted Mars observations": that the primary navigation problem in securing Mars Surveyor re-imaging of Cydonia (as well as that of Vikings 1&2, and Mars Pathfinder) was "cross-track" (east/west) error, not uncertainties in "downtrack" (north/ south) spacecraft positioning. This was due to the MGS discovery (during the attempted rephotography of Viking) of east/west errors in the map positioning of Mars' "prime meridian" of up to 10 miles! Thus, to extend the downrange "footprint" of Surveyor's imaging, from slightly under 7 miles to 26 miles, in an ostensible effort to guarantee successfully re-imaging "the Face" -- but at the cost of cutting the surface resolution in the Camera in half -- simply doesn't make sense; by NASA's own acknowledgments, the primary uncertainty in knowing the location of the targets was at right angles to this "increased imaging footprint." For a north/south, polar orbiting spacecraft such as MGS, increasing the "downrange" imaging would have zero effect on the (acknowledged) major cross-track (east/west) errors. (Such a strategy, however, would make sense if you wanted to decrease the odds of actually recognizing something "interesting" in your field of view ... if you succeeded.) And other "nagging inconsistencies" also remain ... If "trading off" imaging resolution for a larger photographic footprint was a deliberate pre-Cydonia strategy reached by the entire Project ... why didn't anyone at NASA (including Michael Malin) tell us before the Cydonia attempt?; why did they wait to offer an explanation for this "surprise" ... until after we discovered it? This pattern of grudgingly responding to "anomalous details" surrounding the Cydonia rephotography -- and only after they've been pointed out -- is not only increasingly suspicious ... it is highly uncharacteristic of prior NASA behavior as a whole; NASA used to be the one government agency which apparently loved releasing "truck loads" of details about its most arcane activities (some reporters complained, especially during Apollo, about too much detail): everything from the weight of the crawler which carried the Saturn V rocket to the launch pad ... to what the astronauts ate for breakfast ... two days before the launch! But on the rephotography of Cydonia, NASA's usually copious flood of technical detail has mysteriously dried up ... Responding to the major criticisms that greeted the first "raw" Cydonia image -- that it simply was too dark -- Dr. Malin posted on his Website (but only after we had presented our histogram analysis -- above) his own assessment, data claiming that the MGS raw image in fact "wasn't all that dark ..."; Malin attempted to compare [link to Malin's Website] the new MOC data of Cydonia with the 22 year-old Viking image histograms, insisting that in truth "the MOC data actually have more grey levels than the Viking images ..." There is only one small problem with Dr. Malin's analysis-- In order to support his claim, Malin had to compare "apples and oranges": the raw "high-sun angle" MOC "morning light" image (22003) to the raw "low-sun angle" 35 A series of Cydonia images from Viking. And the sun-angle difference between the Viking imagery he used and Mars Surveyor's image ... is almost a factor of three lower..! The Viking image Malin chose to highlight (35A70) was taken just before local "Martian sunset" -- with long shadows (~10 degrees), of an intrinsically dark, relatively contrastless scene; in stark contrast (pun intended ...), the raw Mars Surveyor Cydonia "strip image" was taken at about 10:00AM "local Cydonia time" -- with a sun-angle comparable to the high-sun angle (~30 degrees) of the 70A series of raw Viking frames ... which (although he published a revealing histogram from 70A13) Dr. Malin for some reason conspiciously chose not to focus on ... The difference is literally "night and
day!"
Just look! Another of the "Malin explanations" for why the Mars Surveyor image is so dark was "Martian weather." After initially
writing"... fortuitously, the area imaged was relatively clear," he
then immediately contradicted himself by also stating "the low contrast
of the raw MOC high resolution image ... suggests haze or fog over much
of the area." The second problem with MOC 22003, given this wide-angle confirmation of at least some haze over Cydonia that morning, is the fact that the 2048 Narrow Angle Camera CCD detectors (see Camera graphic -- above) have a spectral (color) sensitivity from about 5000 Angstroms (green light) to below 9000 Angstroms (in the infrared). Infrared radiation effectively cuts through haze-- So ...
All this notwithstanding, we are left with a growing suspicion: that this first Mars Surveyor, extremely poor quality, Cydonia image ... might not in fact be all that "raw"... One of the main problems with accepting NASA's assertion that it is, is the growing litany of "ad hoc" explanations NASA has offered after the fact for increasing numbers of technical discrepancies we have discovered and documented with this image -- such as Dr. Malin's somewhat tortured description (above) for why "lossless compression" wasn't used this time within his camera, because of a possible loss of between "7 and 15% of the data ..." But, instead, a certain, 400% reduction in total surface resolution was somehow deemed "acceptable." What, prey tell, is the relationship between applying a "lossless" compression algorithm in the camera on-board Mars Surveyor ... and experiencing an overall spacraft "communications loss?"; how does reducing image resolution (as a substitute for this on-board "lossless" data compression) thereby reduce those "losses within the communication system [that] occasionally create black bands ..?" And doesn't reducing overall data acquisition by a certain 400 percent (the effect of the 4-to-1 pixel averaging described by Dr. Malin!) seem a disproportionate response to a potential communications problem which might result in losing a mere " 7-15%?"
(Incidentally, I presume these pesky MGS "communications losses" are in the transmission of the imaging data to Earth, not some internal spacecraft problem between systems. If that is, indeed, the case, in every previous planetary mission I have ever known, losses in telemetry to Earth have been made up by either redundant error-correcting codes, or, by simply retransmitting the same data a second time. And, even if the problem is internal, with no other data in the camera buffer for April 5 except the Cydonia image, why couldn't Dr. Malin simply have retransmitted the same image later ... thus making up for any losses in the first transmission? As far back as I can remember, such redundant procedures have been standard on all previous NASA planetary missions.) And finally, there is the little matter of the "corrected caption" on JPL's own Website.
CYDONIA PHOTO CAPTION
as stated on: Mon 04/06/98 10:30 AM PDT Image dimensions: 1024 X 19200 pixels, 4.42 km X 82.94 km This was a typographical error for which we appologize [sic]. Actual image dimensions: 1024 X 9600 pixels, 4.42 km X 41.5 km Somehow, it's hard to imagine anyone typing "19200" in place of "9600" -- even in a government contracted typing pool at JPL. But--
If the original transmitted imaging resolution from Dr. Malin's camera was 2048 pixels across, subsequently "downsized" on Earth to 1024, then the corresponding "downtrack" dimension would have been precisely 19200 pixels -- exactly what the original NASA caption read ... exactly consistent with our discovery that "MOC 22003" is somehow missing 400 percent of its expected resolution. The only question remaining: was the resolution deliberately "traded off" at Mars in Dr. Malin's camera (as he claims), or was it quietly reduced in the production of a second generation copy -- the impossibly bad "raw" image we were given Monday -- of the original, high-quality 2048 X 19200 image ... here on Earth? Several hours after the JPL release of the "raw" Cydonia MGS image, and several additional hours after the release of the "enhanced" ("Catbox") version that the media all took one look at ... and totally dismissed-- A new Cydonia image suddenly appeared on all the NASA Websites -- termed the "TJP Enhancement". Presented by a NASA geologist officially attached to the Mars Pathfinder mission, this enhancement by Tim Parker was a staggering improvement over JPL's first "high-pass filter" version. Unfortunately, by the time Mr. Parker's partially rectified, grey-scale corrected version -- confirming a startling "face-like" image at Cydonia -- was posted on NASA's official Websites all around the world.... no one in the media was listening (or, apparently, even watching NASA's Websites). Where did this remarkable "new" Cydonia image come from? Was it merely another "enhancement" of the previous "raw" image released that morning (as Parker insisted in his own "enhancement notes" accompanying the image) ... or, was it drawn from data much closer to what Mars Surveyor actually transmitted back to earth? We may never know. Which only underscores the point I've been attempting to illustrate all week: That, without appropriate and meticulous documentation of the entire process -- from taking the photographs at Mars, to receiving, enhancing and displaying them back here on Earth -- no one can make a scientific assessment of what's waiting at Cydonia ... In terms of Mars Surveyor, judging from our experience this week, we are still "light years" from gaining access to such crucial, verifiable documentation. So far, unlike any other area of Science, on the subject of potential Life on Mars we're simply being asked by NASA (and its contractors) "take our word ..." When I was at CBS, covering Apollo, a correspondent in our unit once wise-cracked in frustration that, " NASA' simply means Never A Straight Answer ..." I guess it still applies. |