This pair of images illustrates the dramatic effect that illumination and
viewing geometry (i.e., the angle at which Sunlight strikes the surface,
and the angle from which the spacecraft views the surface) has on the
appearance of terrain on Mercury. The image on the right is a frame
captured by MESSENGER’s NAC as the spacecraft was departing the planet
after its second Mercury flyby. On the left is a portion of a mosaic made
from Mariner 10 clear-filter images, obtained by that mission in 1974. The
yellow arrows point to the 90-kilometer- (56-mile-) diameter crater
Asvaghosa (named for the first century AD Indian philosopher and poet),
and the purple arrows indicate a smaller crater to the southwest. A bright
ray, prominently visible in the high-Sun MESSENGER frame, crosses both
craters. The stripe of high-reflectance material may have originated at
Kuiper crater (to the southwest PIA11355) or may come from a newly imaged
crater to the northeast (PIA11356) that has an extensive ray system. This
ray and others seen in the NAC image were mostly invisible to Mariner 10,
because low-Sun illumination emphasizes topography instead of differences
in reflectance. As another example, the curving scarp (cliff) named Santa
Maria Rupes (white arrows in the left image) is visible in the Mariner 10
image by the shadow it casts, but this rupes disappears in the MESSENGER
image when the Sun is high overhead. Images collected under both high- and
low-Sun conditions are needed for geologists to develop a complete
understanding of the features on a planetary surface. For another example
of the appearance of Mercury under contrasting lighting conditions, see
the October 11 featured image (PIA11361).
Date Acquired: October 6, 2008
Image Mission Elapsed Time (MET): 131774145
Instrument: Narrow Angle Camera (NAC) of the Mercury Dual Imaging System (MDIS)
Resolution: 550 meters/pixel (0.34 miles/pixel)
Scale: Asvaghosa crater is 90 kilometers in diameter (56 miles)
Spacecraft Altitude: 21,000 kilometers (13,000 miles)
These images are from MESSENGER, a NASA Discovery mission to conduct the
first orbital study of the innermost planet, Mercury. For information
regarding the use of images, see the MESSENGER image use policy.