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VIMS
VIMS ¶
Cassini VIMS (Visible and Infrared Mapping System) ¶
Instrument Overview ¶
VIMS (also known as the Visible and Infrared Mapping System) maps the color properties of the atmospheres of Saturn and Titan, the surfaces of the moons, and the rings in order to study their composition and structure.
See: The Cassini Mission
Technical Details ¶
VIMS consists of two camera instruments, a "pushbroom" mapping spectrometer that studies visible light (VIMS-VIS) and a "whiskbroom" mapping spectrometer for infrared light (VIMS-IR).
VIMS "image cubes" contain information on 352 different wavelengths of light from ultraviolet to the mid-infrared. The visible channel produces multispectral images spanning the spectral range 0.3-1.05 micrometers over 96 spectral bands. The infrared channel covers the wavelength range 0.85-5.1 micrometers over 256 spectral bands.
This is much higher spectral resolution than the Imaging Science Subsytem ISS , but the spatial resolution of VIMS is approximately 100 times lower than the resolution of ISS.
References & Related Resources ¶
- Building
- Writing Tests
- Test Data
- Start Contributing
- Public Release Process
- Continuous Integration
- Updating Application Documentation
- Deprecating Functionality
- LTS Release Process and Support
- RFC1 - Documentation Delivery
- RFC2 - ISIS3 Release Policy
- RFC3 - SPICE Modularization
- RFC3 - Impact on Application Users
- RFC4 - Migration of ISIS Data to GitHub - Updated Information 2020-03-16
- RFC5 - Remove old LRO LOLA/GRAIL SPK files
- RFC6 - BLOB Redesign
- Introduction to ISIS
- Locating and Ingesting Image Data
- ISIS Cube Format
- Understanding Bit Types
- Core Base and Multiplier
- Special Pixels
- FAQ