Antoniadi Crater - False Color

Scaled Image

Image Credit: NASA/JPL/ASU

About this image

The THEMIS VIS camera contains 5 filters. The data from different filters can be combined in multiple ways to create a false color image. These false color images may reveal subtle variations of the surface not easily identified in a single band image. Today's false color image shows part of the floor of Antoniadi Crater. Located north of Syrtis Major Planum, Antoniadi Crater is 401km in diameter (249 miles). Antoniadi Crater is one of the largest non-basin forming impact craters on Mars.

The THEMIS VIS camera is capable of capturing color images of the Martian surface using five different color filters. In this mode of operation, the spatial resolution and coverage of the image must be reduced to accommodate the additional data volume produced from using multiple filters. To make a color image, three of the five filter images (each in grayscale) are selected. Each is contrast enhanced and then converted to a red, green, or blue intensity image. These three images are then combined to produce a full color, single image. Because the THEMIS color filters don't span the full range of colors seen by the human eye, a color THEMIS image does not represent true color. Also, because each single-filter image is contrast enhanced before inclusion in the three-color image, the apparent color variation of the scene is exaggerated. Nevertheless, the color variation that does appear is representative of some change in color, however subtle, in the actual scene. Note that the long edges of THEMIS color images typically contain color artifacts that do not represent surface variation.

Please see the THEMIS Data Citation Note for details on crediting THEMIS images. 

Context

18.3858
60.3663
103632
2025-04-25 08:22
Tue, 2025-09-02
VIS
256 pixels (18 km)
3792 pixels (276 km)
0.072822 km/pixel
0.0735555 km/pixel

Downloads

PNG | JPEG (high res) | JPEG (reduced res) | PDF | TIFF