Guest wrote:geckzilla wrote:Does anyone have any idea what "reconstructed-color" means? Does that mean it was essentially guessed at based on the texture and known color properties of other objects?
I'd also like to know how they arrived at the colors used.
A detailed description of the cameras and filters can be found
here. Since I don't think Rosetta has a built-in subject palette to compare colors, a set of images using a suitable set of filters must be used to create RGB reconstruction. Varying degrees of true color reproduction are affected by filter characteristics(wavelength, bandwidth), and how they are combined. I didn't see a specific press release for this image that describes the filters and image combination algorithm.
Regarding the cameras, the article states:
There are two overlapping filter wheels on each camera. For true-color NAC images, look for RGB combinations made with images ending with 12/13/14 or 82/83/84.
And specifically for narrow band filter use:
The combination of narrowband filters that is closest to the RGB combinations in the narrow-angle camera is OI/NH2/CN (17/15/14), but proceed with caution.
Edit:
As a separate example of
Mars Viking Lander color reproduction:
The Viking cameras have six spectrally narrow band detectors, three in the visible and three in the near infrared. The use of all six channels has been shown (Huck et al., 1977) to provide the most accurate color rendition. Because many of the images in our study had not been taken in six channels, three component color reconstruction was used. The three components correspond approximately to Blue, Green, and Red. The color reconstruction of these images was performed in a "radiometric" sense, meaning that the components were each linearly amplified to effect an equal average sensitivity over the spectral bandpass. Therefore, the reconstructed triplet, while possessing the same general color characteristics, is not intended to be an exact photometric reproduction of the actual sense as perceived by a human observer.