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Is there any explanation for the blue sky of Mars shown in this video of photos transmitted by the Chinese rover?

Zhurong Rover is driving on Mars sending back new images (Chinese Tianwen-1 mission) - May 22, 2021

Zhurong Rover is driving on Mars sending back new images (Chinese Tianwen-1 mission) - May 22, 2021

uhoh
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azot
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3 Answers3

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Despite my comments about the sky not always being red, I think there is a simpler explanation.

This video was made by a "content" company on a monetized YouTube channel. The screenshot is simply a colorized version of a black and white image

Note that the notes below the video do not provide the source of the images. You can't check the source of their data, they offer it only in the form they want you to see.

from the "Front Obstacle Avoidance Cam B" shown later between about 00:39 and 00:43 in the video.

enter image description here



Edit: The original color analysis I had here is not conclusive as @Ruslan points out so I'll replace it. It's still viewable in the edit history. Instead, while not conclusive I'll compare a cropped bit of Ruslan's suggested PIA19070 with a cropped bit of the (likely) colorized image screenshot from the video.

cropped from PIA19070

cropped from video

Don't trust random monetized channels!

uhoh
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    What scatterplots would you expect from a faithfully-colored image? The one from NASA with blue sky also has two-part scatterplots: https://i.stack.imgur.com/XVwb7.png. Though, it seems it's also been manipulated to not-quite-real colors: "The color has been approximately white-balanced to resemble how the scene would appear under daytime lighting conditions on Earth". – Ruslan May 23 '21 at 09:12
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    @Ruslan the suspicious thing is not so much that the scatterplot is “two-part”, but that it's two pretty straight lines both pointing to (0,0). (Plus some noise and clipping.) In the scatterplots you show, both of the regions are more irregular / cloud-shaped, which is more characteristic of actual physical light scattering around. – leftaroundabout May 24 '21 at 16:08
  • @Ruslan that's a really good point and after seeing your results, mine don't really look very convincing. So I'll delete them (still viewable in edit history) and replace with a simple comparison of a bit of PIA19070 with the screenshot. It's not meant to be convincing by it's own. The key part of the answer is that the black and white image from Obstacle Avoidance Camera B at 00:41 is the same as the colorized image shown at the beginning of the video. Thanks for your comment and analysis! – uhoh May 24 '21 at 19:38
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    A spec sheet stating that that camera is b/w would be conclusive (maaaybe the youtuber had secret access to the original color image). But were it a color camera, it's hardly likely that image-conscious China would degrade its images to b/w before publishing them. – Camille Goudeseune May 24 '21 at 22:17
  • @CamilleGoudeseune yes. The navigation cameras on all NASA rovers are b/w as far as I know, and the first step in any image processing software looking for features like edges and borders (where does a shadow begin/end, what things are rocks) is to convert any color image to b/w first. Later, edges defined by color contrast can have different uses of course. There certainly may be some publicly accessible writeup in Chinese, but I think it may require some substantial effort or language skills to find it. – uhoh May 24 '21 at 22:24
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    @CamilleGoudeseune There are some good avenues to pursue in answer(s) to Where can I find access to information provided by CNSA and Chinese scientists and reputable science authors? Knock yourself out! :-) – uhoh May 24 '21 at 22:25
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Why wouldn't the sky appear that way? The sky color has little to do with the color of the land. It is to do with scattering of light by particles in the air as we are looking away from the planet. Think about it, why isn't the Earth's sky green here in the Northwest where there is endless forest? Read the NASA article below for why the sky is "blue". When we see the planet Mars from a distance, then it is reflected light from the surface of the planet which is predominately red, and we are viewing towards the planet. Similarly, the Earth likes blue.

Reference Del Genio, Anthony D. (2003) Why is the sky blue? NASA. https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/why-is-the-sky-blue/

WhoShock
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    What color is the sky on Mars?. It's all relative. Is it about the wavelengths of light detected or the limitations of the physiology of the human eye? – Fred May 25 '21 at 09:34
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    The sky is blue because of Rayleigh Scattering, which happens to a degree relative to the thickness of the atmosphere. Given that Mars's atmosphere is much thinner than Earth's we would expect that effect to be much less pronounced – Kevin May 25 '21 at 19:38
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The sky of Mars is blue like the one of Earth. The ESA picture you can admire below the text shows unequivocally that the sky of the Red Planet is much like the one above the Sahara desert.

Mars' thin atmosphere. (ESA/DLR/FU Berlin/J. Cowart/CC BY-SA 3.0 IGO) Mars' thin atmosphere. (ESA/DLR/FU Berlin/J. Cowart/CC BY-SA 3.0 IGO)

azot
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