Mars In 3-D

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Uploaded by on Jun 14, 2011

Mars in 3-D is a stereographic film of imagery taken by the NASA Viking 1 and 2 spacecraft from both Mars orbit and on the surface, from both lander locations, between 1976 and 1979. The original film was produced at Stanford University in 1979 using 16mm film. It is a valuable and unique historical presentation of the results of one of the United States' most important space achievements of the decade following the Apollo moon program. The film reels and related materials were eventually donated to the NASA archives at Ames Research Center in Mountain View, CA.

The twin Viking spacecraft arrived at Mars in 1976 and operated for several years. In 1979, one member of the Viking Imaging Team, Dr. Elliott Levinthal, was by then working at the Stanford Medical School developing medical imaging technology. He received support from NASA and Stanford University to produce a scientific documentary based on the 3D imagery from the spacecraft.

Each spacecraft had both an orbiter and lander component. Each lander had two cameras separated by about 0.8 meters, which when used together could produce left/right stereo images. The original purpose of this was to determine precise distances to nearby features for programming the soil scoop arm, but it also proved useful in understanding the overall geology of the surrounding landscape. It also really brings home the tremendous human and technological achievement of seeing the surface of another planet up close for the first time in human history. And although the tests for life on Mars were then deemed inconclusive, the results are still debated by scientists today, with some arguing for a positive interpretation.

For the orbital views, two images taken by the moving spacecraft from slightly different locations were used to produce the stereo images. The exaggerated 3D that this provides dramatically reveals the topography of the large-scale surface features. The film also includes more conventional stereo images of the Viking test lander taken at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, and some non-stereo scenes of the narrator on-screen.

In 1979, CCRMA was the leading center in the world for developing the use of computers for musical synthesis and composition (and arguably remains so). Dr. Levinthal approached Professor John Chowning, then the directory of CCRMA, for help in producing a stereo soundtrack for the film. Prof. Chowning turned to two of his graduate students, myself and William Schottstaedt, and we each produced about 15 minutes of music for the 32 minute film.
Restoration Project

In 2009, CCRMA proposed a concert to honor its founder and former director, Professor John Chowning, who proposed to present the concert in a movie theater and include the Mars in 3-D film. However, using 16mm projection with the original reels was out of the question due to the degraded quality of the film and soundtrack, and difficulty using outdated 16mm stereo technology. So, with the cooperation of NASA/Ames we began an effort to find, restore and convert the film to modern Digital Cinema format and 5.1 surround audio, for presentation using current 3D cinema projection technology. Several copies of the 16mm left and right film reels, as well as the original narration audio tapes, were located at NASA Ames. These were then scanned to HD video.

The original quadraphonic surround music has been re-synthesized using a software emulator, built by Mr. Schottstaedt, that exactly reproduces the functionality of the hardware synthesizer we used in 1979. This, along with digitized copies of the original narration recordings, were used to create a new 5.1 surround audio soundtrack.
For the restoration, each reel (left and right eyes), was first processed according to the following steps: Original 4x3 aspect 16mm film scanned to uncompressed 10-bit 4:2:2 HD (1440 x 1080). Converted to Apple ProRes 422 HQ codec. Imported into Final Cut Pro 7. SmoothCam filter applied to reduce film jitter. Neat Video noise reduction plugin applied to reduce very numerous scratches, dust, and tears. Some use also of CHV Repair Collection's Dropout Eliminator plugin. FCP's Sharpen, Brightness and Contrast, and Color Corrector 3-way effects variously applied for overall color correction and image quality improvements. Dashwood Stereo3D Toolbox plugin applied for final left-right alignment and color matching.

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Science & Technology

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All Comments (15)

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  • It looks fake

  • Que video mas malo. Esta mal echo, no se ve bién

  • Awesome on my own 3D TV!!

  • @MegaSaS123

    Now you can, if you convert it with this app gbatemp.net/topic/315365-3ds-v­ideo-v01-beta/

    Greetings from another 3DS owner ;P

  • @Hynee no i am not in science and yes he is my grandpa

  • Just got done crossing my eyes for the past 1/2 hour. I need to get some 3D glasses if I want to continue seeing.

  • @KLevinthal Are you in science too, or are you joking?

  • that is my grandpa

  • stop saying shhhhhhhhh it really annoying thumbs up!

  • another tip 4 watching without glasses. the best way to do it is one eye at a time, so shut your right eye and block out the left image with your hand (bout 6'' from ur face) so ur left eye can only see the right pic, then do it so your right eye can only see the left pic, keeping your hands in place, close both your eyes for a bit to relax them, then open them both, n ur eyes should focus naturally n u should see a nice 3d pic, if it doesnt work straight away, sit further back n try again :)

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