From Voice ~ Topics: illustration, photography

On Different Wavelengths: Cosmic Graphics

The other day, just as we were leafing through this season’s Taschen catalog, wonderful new images of Saturn from the Cassini probe popped up on MSN news. In the catalog, between two volumes devoted to butts and breasts respectively, is the Taschen edition of the Harmonia Macrocosmica by Andreas Cellarius, a colorful atlas of the heavens from 1660, with richly colored engraved plates.

I was struck by the congruence: NASA and JPL are putting together a lush atlas of the heavens too, and since the images are largely “false color”—that is infrared images converted to color ones—they are indulging in the same sort of tinting visible in the Harmonia.

In September, the Cassini probe snapped a new set of wonderful images of Saturn with the sun behind it. The images are as colorful as those in the Taschen book. But does space “really” look like that?

Space, after all, is dark, and to make neat images, one has to meld different parts of the spectrum—visible and invisible—alike. JPL’s web page explains that, “this marvelous panoramic view was created by combining a total of 165 images taken by the Cassini wide-angle camera over nearly three hours on Sept. 15, 2006. The full mosaic consists of three rows of nine wide-angle camera footprints; only a portion of the full mosaic is shown here. Color in the view was created by digitally compositing ultraviolet, infrared and clear filter images and was then adjusted to resemble natural color.”

 

“With giant Saturn hanging in the blackness and sheltering Cassini from the sun's blinding glare,” NASA explains, “the spacecraft viewed the rings as never before, revealing previously unknown faint rings and even glimpsing its home world.”

 

NASA has to sell space to stay in business, and we are basically sympathetic to their plight. I’ve long been a sucker for the colorful Saturn images JPL’s probes have been sending us. The Voyager images, in their bright blues and reds, are now iconic.

The Mars orbiter and the recent journey of the Sojourner robot to a nearby crater has produced a new set of images of the red planet as well. See “Mars as Art”, another JPL production.

NASA and JPL are in the graphics business too. They don’t try or pretend to offer “real” views, but manipulated graphics. “The Cassini spacecraft's visual and infrared mapping spectrometer sees light in wavelengths far beyond what the human eye can see. It captures an astonishing 352 wavelengths, ranging from the visible to the infrared.”

Coloring the images on each wavelength provides something like the multiple plates of a print maker.

The results are iconic images that are not “real.” Saturn is the special beneficiary of this sort of treatment, thanks to its rings. Who cannot love the colors in the Voyager probe images, from 1980. Yes, school children should be informed that the planet is not really lush blue and red. At the same time, they might learn something about the spectrum and the spectrometer, about infrared and ultraviolet, about radio telescopes and optical telescopes.

The Harmonia’s colors look unreal to us in 2006. But the book represents state-of-the-art printing and engraving for its era. It offers its own view of the cosmos—actually, two or three views of the universe. It presents the Ptolemaic or earth-centered view of the universe, but also, less extensively, the Copernican alternative. In this atlas of the stars, astrology and astronomy are still the same thing.

The constellations are rendered as figures of elaborate detail and rich modeling: not just patterns of stars but vital characters, fully fleshed archers and water bearers. The pages are hand colored in tones of pink and pumpkin, cream and spinach. The rings of orbits are depicted like giant roller coasters in the sky.

Both the Harmonia and the NASA visions of the cosmos remind us that our views of the universe are models and the models are constantly evolving. The recent debate over Pluto’s status as a planet reminds us this is true even at the level of the elementary school models of the solar system, rendered in ping-pong balls and BBs.

The cosmic geometry of Saturn, the backlit, ringed planet, is hard not to admire. NASA's images of Saturn make you forget the outer planets are dark and unfriendly places compounded of hostile compounds: gigantic frozen balls of ammonia and methane. Their moons get attention because they might be less forbidding; we might one day land there.

We are jaded now to images of Earth from orbit, and the frustrations of the shuttle and space station. But to anyone who takes time to look, those views are constantly revealing and inspiring.

The first NASA images of the moon and planets were often and rightly compared to the first photographic surveys of the American West by expeditions of the William Powell and others. They demonstrated a wonder for nature, but also a pride of ownership. So do today’s images of the solar system, in a different way. They may not ring with the music of the spheres but they do say, hey, look around the neighborhood.

About the Author: Phil Patton is the author of Dreamland: Inside the Secret World of Roswell and Area 51, Made in USA, Open Road and other books. He writes regularly for the “Design Notebook,” “Public Eye,” and automotive columns of The New York Times and is a contributing editor of I.D., Wired, and Esquire, for which he writes on design and automobiles. More can be found at www.philpatton.com.

  1. link to this comment by Joe Moran Tue Nov 28, 2006

    Really cool topic. Watched the first space shuttle "Enterprise" take off on TV back in the late 70s. And vividly remember the images from the Voyager probes (Go, Satchmo Go!). And now - those little robot cars on mars (that could be a song, too). Man! What’s next?

    I guess we really are going where no man has gone before, to quote Mr. Shatner. Ha!

    Good stuff!

    VR/

  2. link to this comment by wendy iverson Wed Nov 29, 2006

    WOW very cool
    Excellent story! Excellent graphics, really enjoyed the "Mars as Art" link. I downloaded one of the hi-res Mars terrain images as my desktop image, which I call "Mars on My Mac". Me and all my fellow space cadets agree, your article was out of this world!

  3. link to this comment by Aimee LoDuca Fri Mar 23, 2007

    I never thought of it this way; NASA has to sell space to stay in business. Therefore, are the images we view today true to nature? Are the iconic symbols of the solar system we have become so familiar with based on fact? The universe is a form of art, photographic, graphic, and illustrative. It can be interpreted many different ways, figuratively, stylistically, etc. We explore the universe as a static model or drawing on a piece of paper rather than focusing on accurately depicting its natural characteristics and colors photographically.

    Elementary school models of the solar system rendered with ping-pong balls, string and colored construction paper was my first impression of the universe. It’s ironic, viewing the universe as a static model when models are constantly evolving as well as the universe. This article opens my eyes to reality. The universe is something that to this day, we cannot define. There are so many elements of space that we have yet to explore or even discover.

  4. link to this comment by Luis Havas - Mexico Sat Sep 15, 2007

    Please! the sun illustraited in Harmonia Macrocosmica do you think - or do you know - if it was designed by Cellarius? Andre Cellarius was an designer?(Deeply sorry about my awful english)

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