3D (anaglyph) image of Trouvelot Crater on Mars

3D (anaglyph) image of Trouvelot Crater on Mars
3D (anaglyph) image of Trouvelot Crater on Mars
Using the nadir channel (which points vertically at the Martian surface) and one of the oblique stereo channels of the HRSC camera, 'anaglyph' images can be created. When viewed with red-blue or red-green glasses, they provide a three-dimensional view of the landscape. The high image resolution of 18 metres per pixel allows even the smallest topographical features to be visualised, such as the sediment layers of the bright, approximately 20-kilometre-long hill at the bottom of the image or individual crescent dunes in the dark dune fields.
Credit:

ESA/DLR/FU Berlin CC BY-SA 3.0 IGO

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