4.5 Article

Mars Exploration Rover Athena Panoramic Camera (Pancam) investigation

Journal

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-PLANETS
Volume 108, Issue E12, Pages -

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2003JE002070

Keywords

Mars; multispectral imaging; space missions; Mars; Exploration Rover

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The Panoramic Camera (Pancam) investigation is part of the Athena science payload launched to Mars in 2003 on NASA's twin Mars Exploration Rover ( MER) missions. The scientific goals of the Pancam investigation are to assess the high-resolution morphology, topography, and geologic context of each MER landing site, to obtain color images to constrain the mineralogic, photometric, and physical properties of surface materials, and to determine dust and aerosol opacity and physical properties from direct imaging of the Sun and sky. Pancam also provides mission support measurements for the rovers, including Sun-finding for rover navigation, hazard identification and digital terrain modeling to help guide long-term rover traverse decisions, high-resolution imaging to help guide the selection of in situ sampling targets, and acquisition of education and public outreach products. The Pancam optical, mechanical, and electronics design were optimized to achieve these science and mission support goals. Pancam is a multispectral, stereoscopic, panoramic imaging system consisting of two digital cameras mounted on a mast 1.5 m above the Martian surface. The mast allows Pancam to image the full 360degrees in azimuth and +/- 90degrees in elevation. Each Pancam camera utilizes a 1024 x 1024 active imaging area frame transfer CCD detector array. The Pancam optics have an effective focal length of 43 mm and a focal ratio of f/20, yielding an instantaneous field of view of 0.27 mrad/pixel and a field of view of 16degrees x 16degrees. Each rover's two Pancam eyes'' are separated by 30 cm and have a 1degrees toe-in to provide adequate stereo parallax. Each eye also includes a small eight position filter wheel to allow surface mineralogic studies, multispectral sky imaging, and direct Sun imaging in the 400 - 1100 nm wavelength region. Pancam was designed and calibrated to operate within specifications on Mars at temperatures from - 55degrees to + 5degreesC. An onboard calibration target and fiducial marks provide the capability to validate the radiometric and geometric calibration on Mars.

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