by rclay » Tue Jul 03, 2007 4:49 pm
I love the APOD and visit every single day for inspiration and information. But one request or suggestion keeps coming up im my mind, so here it is:
Would it be possible to add a small legend to the images, or add a phrase in the text, that gives a human scale when the image is of a land feature? For example, how high are the walls at Victoria in the "ramp" picture? Am I looking at a cliff 100 feet high, or a wall 20 feet high? Is the ramp leading into the crater 10 feet wide, or 100 feet wide?
This information would be very helpful because it would enable viewers to better imagine the realities of the scene. If I could visualize a mark on the wall that is, say, the size of an average human height, then suddently the significance or difficulty of the setting becomes much more accessible, and therefore, more interesting.
I hope my idea hasn't been expressed in too wordy a manner -- I just want to know what I'm looking at relative to a person standing in that scene -- would they see a mountain or a molehill? Since I'll never be able to stand on Mars myself, it would be pretty cool to at least imagine how it would appear to me, if I could. Thanks!
I love the APOD and visit every single day for inspiration and information. But one request or suggestion keeps coming up im my mind, so here it is:
Would it be possible to add a small legend to the images, or add a phrase in the text, that gives a human scale when the image is of a land feature? For example, how high are the walls at Victoria in the "ramp" picture? Am I looking at a cliff 100 feet high, or a wall 20 feet high? Is the ramp leading into the crater 10 feet wide, or 100 feet wide?
This information would be very helpful because it would enable viewers to better imagine the realities of the scene. If I could visualize a mark on the wall that is, say, the size of an average human height, then suddently the significance or difficulty of the setting becomes much more accessible, and therefore, more interesting.
I hope my idea hasn't been expressed in too wordy a manner -- I just want to know what I'm looking at relative to a person standing in that scene -- would they see a mountain or a molehill? Since I'll never be able to stand on Mars myself, it would be pretty cool to at least imagine how it would appear to me, if I could. Thanks!