University College London | 2016 Apr 26
[img3="Beagle-2 landing site (Credit: Yu Tao and Jan-Peter Muller, UCL)"]https://www.ucl.ac.uk/news/news-article ... CL-SRR.jpg[/img3][hr][/hr]The surface of Mars – including the location of Beagle-2 – has been shown in unprecedented detail by UCL scientists using a revolutionary image stacking and matching technique.
Exciting pictures of the Beagle-2 lander, the ancient lakebeds discovered by NASA’s Curiosity rover, NASA’s MER-A rover tracks and Home Plate’s rocks have been released by the UCL researchers who stacked and matched images taken from orbit, to reveal objects at a resolution up to five times greater than previously achieved.
A paper describing the technique, called Super-Resolution Restoration (SRR), was published in Planetary and Space Science in February but has only recently been used to focus on specific objects on Mars. The technique could be used to search for other artifacts from past failed landings as well as identify safe landing locations for future rover missions. It will also allow scientists to explore vastly more terrain than is possible with a single rover. ...
A Novel Method for Surface Exploration: Super-Resolution Restoration of Mars Repeat-Pass Orbital Imagery - Y. Tao, J.P. Muller
- Planetary and Space Science 121:103 (Feb 2016) DOI: 10.1016/j.pss.2015.11.010