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Published January 2019 | Published
Journal Article Open

An Instrument Anomaly in the Mars Exploration Rover Pancam 1,009‐nm Filter (R7): Characterization, Simulation, Correction, and Preliminary Verification

Abstract

During pre‐flight calibration of the panoramic camera (Pancam) instrument on board the Mars Exploration Rovers MER A (Spirit) and MER B (Opportunity), a discrepancy was noted between 11‐band spectra extracted from Pancam images of the camera's radiometric calibration target and reflectance spectra obtained with a spectrometer. This discrepancy was observed in the longest‐wavelength filter of the camera (the longpass R7 filter with system λ_(eff) = 1,009 nm) and consisted of a reduction in contrast between bright and dark regions. Here we describe and characterize this effect. We propose that the effect arises because long‐wavelength photons close to the silicon band‐gap at 1,100 nm are allowed through the R7 filter, pass through the bulk charge‐coupled device, scatter from the backside, pass through the charge‐coupled device again, and are registered in a pixel other than the pixel through which they originally entered. Based on this hypothesis we develop a model capable of accurately simulating the effect, and correct for it. We present preliminary results from testing this correction on preflight, as well as in‐flight, images. The effect is small, but in some specific cases in small regions of high contrast, the effect is significant. In in‐flight images of Martian terrain we observed the signal in dark shadows to be artificially inflated by up to ∼ 33% and analysis of early‐mission calibration target images indicated that the reduced contrast due to the artifact is equivalent to >100 DN (full well = 4095 DN) for a hypothetical perfectly dark pixel.

Additional Information

© 2018 The Authors. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution‐NonCommercial‐NoDerivs License, which permits use and distribution in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, the use is non‐commercial and no modifications or adaptations are made. Received 12 SEP 2018; Accepted 13 DEC 2018; Accepted article online 19 DEC 2018; Published online 25 JAN 2019. This work was funded by the Danish Council for Independent Research in the Natural Sciences, grant 4002–00292, by the Carlsberg Foundation, grant CF16–0981, and by the NASA Mars Exploration Program and Mars Data Analysis Program. The data forming the foundation of this work are the radiance‐ and reflectance‐calibrated images from the Pancams on the two Mars Exploration Rovers. These images are available through NASA's Planetary Data System at the geosciences node hosted by Washington University in St. Louis (http://pds-geosciences.wustl.edu/). Preflight calibration images and derived data products, such as corrected images as well as code used in the analysis, are available by direct communication with the first author (simonejj@nbi.ku.dk). We would be happy to work with any interested parties to provide corrected R7 images for analysis. When the algorithm is fully verified, work will be put into archiving corrected R7 images.

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Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 20, 2023