º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Enterprise

Materials technology firm Lucideon helps put colour into perspective on mission to Mars

Colour swatches have been placed on a set of calibration devices to support the camera system on the Perseverance rover

NASA's Perseverance rover has landed on the red planet(Image: NASA/JPL-Caltech/PA Wire)

Colour standards developed by international materials technology company Lucideon are helping to ensure that the colours captured by the Perseverance mission to Mars are recorded to pinpoint accuracy.

The swatches, made in Stoke-on-Trent, have been placed on a set of calibration devices to support the Mastcam-Z camera system on the Perseverance rover which has been developed by NASA as part of its latest quest to explore the past habitability of Mars.

The devices will be used by scientists to fine-tune the signals received from the cameras, which have been engineered to zoom in, focus and take 3D pictures and video at high speed to allow detailed examination of both close and distant objects on the planet.

The colour swatches placed on a set of calibration devices to support the Mastcam-Z camera system on the Perseverance rover. (Image: Ola Jakup Joensen at the Niels Bohr Institute.)

Sean Hillman, business manager at Lucideon, has overseen the project.

He said: “This is a very special project for us. We offer these products to 50 countries around the world, but it’s the first time our work has been used for another planet.

“Much like weights, there needs to be a defining guide, a standard to follow, and for the Mars mission the colours have been developed to set the cameras to.

“The illumination of the sun through the dusty atmosphere on Mars can affect the colours and it’s important that the equipment can be calibrated against standard swatches for absolute accuracy."