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- The "venus.zip" contains a compressed animated "rotating globe" of
- Venus based on the topography (surface elevation) data collected
- by NASA's Magellan mission. The animation is in FLI format and consists
- of 72 frames of 200x200 pixels every 5 degrees around the planet's equator.
- The surface elevation is color coded so that the highest elevations
- appear bright, while the lowest appear dark. The colors approximate
- the colors actually seen on the surface by the Soviet Venera landers.
- The venus.zip file was compressed with PKZIP. The frames were created
- by re-projecting the sinusoidal "browse" image of surface topography from
- the GxDR CD-ROM of Magellan's data from Cycle 1. Some data from Cycle 2 is
- included in this browse image to partly fill gap in Cycle 1 coverage caused
- by Superior Conjunction. The dark areas represent regions not yet
- mapped at the time the CD-ROM was made.
-
- The "venus.bmp" file is a Windows "bitmap" file which can be used with the
- Windows version of "After Dark" with the "Globe" module to create a
- rotating, drifting Venus globe similar to the Macintosh version.
-
- There are 2 different versions of the animation for the Macintosh:
- "venus.cpt" is in Macbinary, while "venus.hqx" has been "binhexed" so that
- it can be transferred as a text file. Both versions have been compressed
- with Compact Pro. The color scheme on the Macintosh versions is different
- than that on the DOS version. Rather than using the same color lookup
- table used on the previous JPL computer flyovers, a 32-color table from
- the "NIH Image" was used, which was shifted "down" by one step to make the
- background black. The result is to show a "blue planet" which, although not
- typical of Venus surface colors, seemed to capture the range of topography
- well. The surface elevation has been color coded, with red representing the
- highest elevation and blue the lowest. The Macintosh version consists of
- 72 frames of175x175 pixels, one every 5 degrees around the planet's equator.
- The frames were produced similarly to that of the DOS version.
-
- The Macintosh files contains a compressed copy of a PICS "stack" which
- can be used with either "NIH Image" or with the "After Dark" screen
- saver module "PICS Player". The Macintosh files has been compressed with
- the "Compact Pro" program. The de-compressed files can be opened directly
- as a "stack" with "Image", and one can modify the size, color lookup table,
- or rate or rotation. To use it as a screen saver, select the "PICS Player"
- module in "After Dark" and then select this movie as the file to be used.
-
- The altimetry CD-ROM, like all other Magellan CD-ROMs, may be obtained from
- NASA's National Space Science Data Center at Goddard Space Flight Center
- (request@nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov).
-