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THEMIS FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
Last updated December 23, 2004
1) What is THEMIS?
2) What's the resolution of a THEMIS image?
3) What bands does THEMIS use?
4) Why is the 6.78 micron band listed twice?
5) What's up with the 14.88 micron band? It doesn't look like
the other bands.
6) Who built THEMIS?
7) Can THEMIS detect water or ice?
8) Can THEMIS see through dust?
9) When will the public get access to the THEMIS data?
10) What do acronyms like EDR, BTR, and RDR mean?
11) Why are you using cookies?
1) What is THEMIS?
THEMIS is a thermal emission imaging system. It contains two independent
multi-spectal imaging sub-systems: a 10-band thermal infrared imager (IR), and
a 5-band visible imager (VIS).
2) What's the resolution of THEMIS images?
The IR subsystem has a resolution of 100m/pixel.
The VIS subsystem has a resolution of 19m/pixel.
3) What bands does THEMIS use?
The IR bands used by THEMIS are centered at: 6.78 microns,
6.78 microns, 7.93 microns, 8.56 microns, 9.35 microns,10.21 microns, 11.04
microns, 11.79 microns, 12.57 microns and 14.88 microns.
The visible bands are centered at: 0.425 microns, 0.540 microns,
0.654 microns, 0.749 microns and 0.860 microns.
4) Why is the 6.78 micron band listed twice?
There are 10 different filters on THEMIS, however the first two
filters have the same spectral center.
5) What's up with the 14.88 micron band? It doesn't look
like the others.
At 14.88 microns, the atmosphere of mars is opaque, so THEMIS cannot
see the surface of the planet.
6) Who built THEMIS?
7) Can THEMIS detect water or ice?
Yes. Both water and ice are strongly absorbing in the IR wavelength
bands THEMIS uses.
8) Can THEMIS see through dust?
THEMIS can see through a small amount of atmospheric dust, but
even a thin layer of surface dust (~100um) will obscure any underlying
thermal IR signatures. Diurnal thermal conductivity can occur through
several centimeters of dust, but will only increase or decrease the
temperature of the dust on top.
9) When will the public get access to the THEMIS
data?
The THEMIS team will be releasing images to the Planetary Data System
on 3-month intervals, beginning in October, 2002.
10) What do acronyms like EDR, BTR, and RDR mean?
A glossary is available that defines many
of the most commonly used terms and acronyms.
11) Why are you using cookies?
This site uses cookies to store your preferred way to view images - bands,
basic vs. advanced tab, preferred stretch, etc. No individualized information
is placed within the cookies, and they cannot be used to track visitors in
any way. If you wish to turn off cookies for this site altogether, the
site will work fine; it just won't save any preferences for you.
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