Archive of Viking Lander 1 and 2 Raw Images Edward A. Guinness Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences McDonnell Center for the Space Sciences Washington University St. Louis, Missouri 63130 1. Introduction The two Viking Lander spacecraft were the first spacecraft to operate successfully for an extended period of time on the surface of Mars. Both spacecraft operated from 1976 through April 1980 and Viking Lander 1 (VL1) continued to operate until November 1982. In 1981, Viking Lander 1 was renamed the Thomas A. Mutch Memorial Station in honor of Tim Mutch, Lander Imaging Team Leader and later NASA Associate Administrator for Space Sciences. Tim Mutch was killed in a climbing accident in 1980. With respect, the Mutch Memorial Station will be referred to as VL1 throughout most of this document to be consistent with other documentation and labels in this archive. The primary scientific objective of the lander mission was to test for the presence of life on Mars. Secondary objectives were embodied in the seismology, meteorology, inorganic chemical analysis, imaging, magnetic, and physical properties investigations. Among the instruments aboard the landers was an imaging system that consisted of two identical cameras. These cameras operated throughout the mission and returned nearly 6585 images. This archive includes the raw (also known Experiment Data Record [EDR]) version of all available images returned from Mars by the Viking Lander imaging systems. This raw image dataset is the primary record of lander image data as it was received on Earth. raw images were originally distributed to lander imaging team members and to the National Space Science Data Center (NSSDC, now known as NSSDCA) as photoproducts and digitally on 9-track magnetic tapes. The images in this archive have not been processed in any form other than generating PDS4 labels to the existing PDS3 versions of the image files. This archive also includes documentation about the imaging system and radiometric and geometric calibration of the image data; browse versions of the raw images; and metadata about the images in a format suitable for loading into spreadsheet or data base management programs. This document is an edited version of the PDS3 VOLINFO.TXT and provides the primary documentation of the raw image archive. Included in this document are sections on the Viking Mission, the Viking Lander spacecraft, and the lander imaging system. These sections are similar to the information found in separate files of the document collection. There are also sections on the processes used for generating the original raw images, and PDS image file structure and the major types of imaging sequences. Additional documentation in other files within the document collection. 2. Viking Mission The Viking Mission consisted of four spacecraft: two identical orbiters and two identical landers [Soffen, 1977]. The landers were attached to the orbiters during cruise to Mars. After orbit insertion around Mars and landing site selection, the landers separated from the orbiters for descent to the surface and a soft landing. The primary scientific objective of the mission was to search for life on Mars. Other science questions addressed by the mission were the composition and physical properties of the atmosphere, the distribution of atmospheric water vapor, global and local meteorology, the composition and physical properties of the surface, nature of Mars seismicity, and gravity field of Mars. The combined orbiter and lander spacecraft supported thirteen science investigations. The orbiters had three mapping experiments (imaging, infrared thermal mapper, and water vapor mapper). An atmospheric investigation was conducted during lander descent to the surface. The landers had eight scientific experiments (see section 3). In addition, a series of radio science investigations were done using both the lander and orbiter radio systems [Snyder, 1977; Snyder and Moroz, 1992]. The Viking 1 and 2 spacecraft were launched on August 20 and September 9, 1975, respectively, and the cruise to Mars phase lasted 10 to 11 months. Below is a table showing major events of the mission. Orbiter 1 Lander 1 Orbiter 2 Lander 2 Launch 8/20/75 8/20/75 9/09/75 9/09/75 Orbit Insertion 6/19/76 6/19/76 8/07/76 8/07/76 Landing 7/20/76 9/03/76 Transmissions End 8/07/80 11/13/82 7/25/78 4/11/80 Viking Lander 1 (VL1) landed at 22.480 degrees N latitude and 47.968 degrees W longitude planetographic [Kieffer et al., 1992; Michael, 1979] in the western portion of Chryse Planitia, which is a region of smooth plains and impact craters. Viking Lander 2 (VL2) landed at 47.967 degrees N latitude and 225.737 degrees W longitude planetographic [Kieffer et al., 1992; Michael, 1979] about 200 km west of the Crater Mie in Utopia Planitia, which consists of plains with broad swales and bulges [Moore et al., 1987]. Note these locations are based on data available at the time of the Viking mission. The four spacecraft operated independently after lander separation. The orbiters served as communication relay stations to transfer data from lander to orbiter, and then on to Earth, but data were also transferred directly from the lander to Earth. Each spacecraft operated for a number of years and long after their primary missions were completed. Viking Orbiter 2 (VO2) was the first of the four spacecraft to end its mission. It developed a leak in its propulsion system and lost its attitude control gas. VO2 was turned off after 706 orbits around Mars. Viking Orbiter 1 (VO1) consumed the last of its attitude control gas and was turned off after 1485 orbits around Mars. VL2 operated on the surface for 1281 Mars days and was turned off when its batteries failed. VL1 operated the longest of the four Viking spacecraft. It returned data for nearly 6.5 Earth years (2252 Mars days or over 3 Mars years). Its mission ended when communications with the spacecraft were lost [Arvidson et al., 1983]. 3. Viking Lander Spacecraft The Viking Landers were identical to each other and had the same instrument packages. The main lander structure was a hexagonal prism body that housed the spacecraft computers, tape recorder, batteries, several science instruments, and controls for the surface sampler, thermal system, and data handling system. The spacecraft body was supported above the surface by three legs, each with a saucer-shaped footpad. The legs were arranged in a triangle pattern with two at the front of the lander and one at the rear. Mounted to the sides of the spacecraft were three terminal descent engines, two propellant tanks, and the extendible surface sampler arm with a collector head and backhoe [Moore et al., 1987]. Also mounted on the spacecraft body were two cameras, two radioisotope thermoelectric generators (RTG) with covers, sample entry ports for the biology, organic chemistry and inorganic chemistry instruments, the seismometer, the meteorology boom, a magnifying mirror, a magnet, and three imaging reference test charts. The spacecraft had three antennas for communications; a high-gain S-band antenna (large dish antenna), a low-gain S-band antenna, and a UHF antenna. The two S-band antennas were used to communicate with Earth, whereas the UHF antenna communicated with the orbiters. Each lander was about 1.5 m across. Nominal clearance between the spacecraft body and the surface was about 22 cm. After landing the spacecraft mass was about 610 kg. Power for the spacecraft was supplied by rechargeable batteries; the batteries were recharged by the two RTGs. Excess heat from the RTGs was used to heat the instruments and control systems in the spacecraft body [Soffen, 1977]. Lander science investigations employed seven instruments in addition to the cameras. The meteorology instrument was mounted on a mast and was capable of measuring atmospheric temperature, pressure, wind speed, and wind direction. Each lander had a three-axis, short-period seismometer to measure Mars seismic activity. The seismometer on VL1 failed to deploy and no data were returned, while the one on VL2 operated as planned. An X-ray fluorescence spectrometer (XRFS) measured the inorganic elemental composition of soils at the landing sites. A gas chromatograph mass spectrometer (GCMS) measured the composition of the atmosphere and searched for organic compounds in the soils. The biology investigation consisted of three experiments (and instruments) to search for biological metabolism, growth, or photosynthesis: carbon assimilation, labeled release of carbon-14, and gas exchange. The physical properties investigation used information from many lander operations, such as sampling activities, digging trenches, pushing rocks, forming soil piles, and footpad penetration during landing to characterize the properties of rocks and soils at the landing sites. The magnetic properties investigation employed two magnets on the backhoe of the sampler collector head and one magnet array on the center reference test chart on the lander body [Hargraves et al., 1979]. The reference test charts mounted on the lander also contained two patches coated with paint that degraded when exposed to ultraviolet radiation. Finally, lander communication systems were used for radio science experiments [Snyder and Moroz, 1992]. The lander mission can be divided into a number of periods (mission phases) in terms of activity level and the types of observations. The table below lists the lander mission phases and their dates. Snyder [1979] provides a narrative of the activities for most of these mission phases. The time frames for these mission phases apply to both Viking Landers. Mission Phase Start End Primary Mission 7/20/76 11/15/76 Extended Mission 11/15/76 5/31/78 Continuation Mission 5/25/78 2/26/79 Interim Period 2/26/79 7/19/79 Survey Mission 7/19/79 8/07/80 Completion Mission 8/07/80 11/19/82 The Primary Mission began with VL1 landing and continued until the solar conjunction in November, 1976. The Primary Mission had a high-level of activity and was highlighted by the collection and analysis of soil samples and characterization of the landing site and atmosphere. The Extended Mission began after the solar conjunction with a lower activity level due to a smaller staff. However, the Extended Mission provided an opportunity to monitor the surface of Mars through a complete Mars year and to perform a variety of experiments that were not possible during the Primary Mission. During the Extended Mission, additional soil samples were collected for biological and chemical analyses. Three deep holes (ranging from 8 to 23 cm in depth) were dug at both landing sites. The physical properties investigation executed many experiments with the surface sampler system [Moore et al., 1987]. The imaging experiment studied the surface and atmosphere through the cycle of Mars seasons. During the first Mars winter of the Extended Mission, VL2 was programmed to operate in an automatic manner designed to allow the spacecraft to survive the cold winter temperatures and still return data (mainly imaging, meteorology, and seismology data). VL1 continued to operate normally during the winter due to its more equatorial location. VL2 returned to full operation after the winter passed. A major limitation was placed on VL2 when a portion of its communication system failed in the Extended Mission, leaving VL2 with no direct downlink to Earth. At the end of the Extended Mission, all lander instruments were turned off except for imaging, meteorology, and XRFS. These three instruments continued to operate during the Continuation Mission in a fully automated manner. Observation sequences collected data on a 37 sol (Mars day) cycle that repeated throughout the Continuation Mission. There was an Interim Period after the Continuation Mission ended where communications with the Viking spacecraft were severely limited because of Voyager encounters with Jupiter. During the Interim Period, imaging and meteorology data were collected and returned when possible. A final VL2 surface sampler sequence was conducted during this period as an engineering test in the cold temperatures of mid winter. The final phases of the lander mission were the Survey and Completion Missions. The plan was to collect image and meteorology data for as long as possible. For VL2 this meant for as long as VO1 provided a relay link because VL2 no longer had a direct downlink capability. Relay opportunities with VO1 occurred every seven weeks during the Survey Mission. VL2 was finally turned off after its batteries could no longer hold a charge. VL1 operated in a cyclic and automatic mode by returning data about once a week with the image sequences repeating every 37 Mars days. The VL1 high-gain antenna was programmed to track the Earth until December, 1994. However, communications with the Mutch Memorial Station (VL1) were lost in November, 1982 after a command sequence uplink, and thus, ended the Viking Lander mission [Arvidson et al., 1983]. 4. Lander Camera System The Viking Lander camera design was very different from vidicon framing or CCD array cameras. The lander camera was a facsimile camera with a single, stationary photosensor array (PSA), and azimuth and elevation scanning mechanisms. A lander image was generated by scanning the scene in two directions (elevation and azimuth) to focus light onto the photosensor array. The Viking Lander cameras were built by Itek Corp. A number of published papers described the characteristics and performance of the lander cameras. The scientific rationale and early design of the cameras were described in Mutch et al. [1972] and a detailed description of the flight cameras was given in Huck et al. [1975b]. Huck and Wall [1976] discussed image quality and Patterson et al. [1977] described camera performance during the Primary Mission. A summary of the information from these papers is given here as a high-level description of the camera and its operating modes. Each camera was bolted to the top of the lander body. The camera had a lower stationary section containing electronics and an upper section that rotated in azimuth (i.e., around a vertical axis). The other prominent exterior component was a post assembly that protected the camera window from the Mars environment when the camera was not in use. Major internal camera components were two fused silica windows, a mirror, elevation and azimuth rotation assemblies, a lens, the photosensor array, electronics, and pinlights for calibration. The overall camera height was 55.6 cm. The lower assembly diameter was 25.6 cm and the upper assembly diameter was 14.4 cm. The mass of the camera was 7.26 kg. Below is a table that lists the serial numbers of the cameras and photosensor arrays as they were assigned to the flight cameras [Huck et al., 1975a]. Camera Serial Number PSA Serial Number Viking 1, camera 1 FC-1B M017 Viking 1, camera 2 FC-2A M020 Viking 2, camera 1 FC-3A M015 Viking 2, camera 2 SPARE M019 The camera had several features to deal with possible dust abrasion or obscuration. When the camera was not in use, the upper assembly was rotated so that the window was behind the post assembly to prevent exposure to dust. Mounted in the post was a nozzle for releasing carbon dioxide gas to blow dust off the window. In addition, the outer window, known as the contamination cover, was designed to move out of the optical path if it became abraded or dust coated. The contamination cover window was hinged and spring loaded so that it could be moved aside by rotating the camera behind the post with enough force to release the spring lever. During the Extended Mission the contamination cover windows of camera 1 on lander 1 and camera 2 on lander 2 were opened. One drawback of the contamination cover window was that its frame caused a vignetting effect at elevation angles above 25 degrees. [Patterson et al., 1977]. Light entered the camera through the windows, reflected off the mirror toward the lens, passed through the lens, and was sensed by one of the photodiodes. The light generated a voltage in the selected photodiode that was digitized by an analog-to-digital (A/D) converter. Below the lens was a black shutter that could be closed to sample photodiode dark current and to perform internal radiometric calibration. Between the lens and photosensor array was a light baffle to minimize internal reflections. The lens had a 0.95 cm aperture diameter and 5.37 cm focal length. For details on the transmittance and reflectivity of the optical components, see the documentation and data in the to directory. Mechanical scanning was done by rotating the mirror around a horizontal axis to scan each vertical line in an image. The entire upper camera assembly rotated around a vertical axis to scan successive vertical lines. Image data were collected while the mirror rotated upward through the elevation range in 512 steps (i.e., pixels were sampled from the bottom of the image to the top). The mirror rapidly rotated down to the start position while the camera turned in azimuth for the next scan. The mirror could rotate from 60 degrees below a plane perpendicular to the azimuth rotation axis to 40 degrees above it for a total range of 100 degrees. The camera could rotate 342.5 degrees in azimuth with the range limited by the post assembly. Image commands specified both a start and stop azimuth so that the widths of images varied from image to image. On receiving a command to acquire an image, the camera first rotated to a preset azimuth and then rotated to the start azimuth. The camera stepped in azimuth after each vertical scan until the stop azimuth was reached. The sequence ended by the camera moving back to the preset azimuth position and then to the park position with the window behind the post. The preset position at the beginning and end of the sequence prevented the camera from turning through mechanical stops. Internal radiometric calibration could be done by closing the shutter while the camera was in the preset position either before or after the image data were acquired. The camera had two scanning rates so that data could be collected at 250 or 16,000 bits/sec. The photosensor array consisted of 12 silicon photodiodes (or diodes) sensitive to light between 0.4 and 1.1 micrometers. The diodes were arranged in a 2x6 array. There were four broad-band, high-resolution (0.04 degree angular resolution) diodes, known as BB1, BB2, BB3, and BB4. The distance between the lens and each high-resolution diode was different to vary the in-focus distance of each diode. In-focus distances were 1.9, 3.7, 4.5, and 13.3 meters for BB1, BB2, BB3, an BB4, respectively. There was a low-resolution (0.12 degree angular resolution), broad-band diode known as the SURVEY diode. There were also six narrow band, low-resolution diodes for color (BLUE, GREEN, and RED) and infrared (IR1, IR2, and IR3) images. The narrow bandwidth was generated by covering diodes with a set of interference filters, chosen to survive the spacecraft sterilization process. The interference filters had significant out-of-band leaks. Also, the infrared filters were known to degrade due to neutron radiation from the lander RTGs [Patterson et al., 1977]. The twelfth diode was also a low- resolution diode covered by a red filter for imaging the Sun. The in-focus distance for the low-resolution diodes was about 3.7 meters. Diodes in the camera generated a voltage proportional to incoming radiance. Each diode, except for the SUN diode, had an amplifier to enhance the voltage signal. The SUN diode did not need an amplifier because of the strong signal when directly viewing the Sun. Voltage from the amplifier was digitized as a 6- bit number in an A/D converter that also performed automatic dark current subtraction. Dark current was sampled after every line in slow scan mode and after every 64th line in rapid scan mode. The A/D converter had 6 gains and 32 offsets so that the full dynamic range of the diode output could be stored in 6- bits. Gain defined the voltage range sampled and its resolution. Low gain (high gain number) covered a wide range in voltage and had low voltage resolution. The offset could be varied from a slightly negative voltage to several volts in 32 small steps. Digital values from the A/D converter could be dumped to the spacecraft tape recorder, transmitted to Earth, or transmitted to an orbiter in real-time (usually done at beginning or end of a transmission link when the bit error rate was relatively high). Each camera had two pinlights in the post assembly. Using a special command, the lights turned on and an image was acquired while viewing the pinlights. This command, known as a scan verification, monitored the mechanical scanning operation of the camera. A third pinlight with four different radiance levels was located between the dark current shutter and the photosensor array. This pinlight was used with the shutter closed for radiometric calibration of the camera. Scan verification and internal calibration sequences are further discussed in the calibration report included in the archive. Operation of Viking Lander cameras was versatile because many parameters for the image could be specified. Commands to acquire an image involved selecting the sampling mode, diode, start and stop azimuths, center elevation, gain and offset, scan rate, and specifying whether automatic dark current subtraction, internal calibration, rescan, or dusting were done. Image start time and whether the image was transmitted in real-time or sent to the tape recorder were also specified. The camera had seven sampling modes: low resolution (0.12 degree) stepping with three diodes (known as triplet mode); low resolution stepping with one diode; high resolution (0.04 degree) stepping with one diode; and four different calibration lamp intensity levels. In triplet mode, elevation scanning was repeated three times with three different diodes at every azimuth position. An unusual sampling mode effect was an elevation shift when the step size did not match the diode resolution. There was a -5.6 degree elevation shift when using a low resolution diode with high resolution stepping and a +5.6 degree shift when using a high resolution diode with low resolution stepping. These non-nominal modes were mostly used to generate high resolution color images or to better resolve the solar disk. For the triplet mode, the specified diode was the first of the three diodes, e.g., BLUE diode for a color image. Start and stop azimuths had to be multiples of 2.5 degrees. Center elevation had to be a multiple of 10 degrees. The elevation range was determined by the step size with a range of about 20 degrees for high resolution and about 60 degrees for low resolution because there were always 512 steps in an elevation scan. Rescan was done by inhibiting the azimuth rotation and repeatedly scanning in elevation. Rescan could be activated by commanding the camera to operate for a time longer than it took to scan the azimuth range of the image. 5. Raw Image Generation The original raw dataset was produced by the Viking Project and Lander Imaging Team. Levinthal et al. [1977a] explains the processing done to produce the original raw images. Initial raw processing included selecting and merging the best available data recorded at one or more DSN stations. After merging several playbacks, some imaging data were still not extracted from the telemetry stream because of noise in the data identification tags. Thus, special purpose software searched the telemetry stream to identify and extract imaging data with noisy tags. In some cases, this secondary processing greatly increased the amount of data recovered from the telemetry stream. Even with the secondary recovery, the raw data contained random noise and missing lines. Random noise was usually due to transmission errors. Missing scan lines were filled with zero valued pixels. Missing data appear as black vertical lines in the image because the primary scan direction was vertical. As noted in the previous section, the camera voltage signal was digitized on the spacecraft to a 6-bit integer number (possible values between 0 and 63). However, the maximum brightness value output from the camera was 62 due to limitations of the system. As part of the standard raw processing, the original 6-bit value was converted to an 8-bit integer number by multiplying the 6-bit values by 4. These 8-bit values are the data archived in this dataset. 6. PDS Image File Format The VL image archive was originally produced using the PDS3 archiving standards. PDS4 labels and structures have been added for this archive without changing the PDS3 file format. Each PDS3 image file has three components, the attached PDS3 label, the image histogram, and the image data. If the PDS3 label or the histogram do not completely fill a record, they are padded with zero valued bytes to maintain the fixed length records. Thus, each file object starts on a record boundary. The PDS4 label is a detached file that use XML to format the metadata. The PDS4 label lists to the byte offset to the start of each of the three components of the image file. The PDS3 label is the first object in the file. It has a "keyword=value" with each "keyword=value" pair in the label delimited by a carriage control (ASCII 13) and line feed (ASCII 10) character pair. Keyword values are either numbers with optional units in brackets, standard values, or text strings. Double quotes are used to enclose text strings for keyword values. The image histogram object is the second component in the file. The histogram consists of 256 numbers, each a 32-bit signed integer in binary format with most-significant byte first order. The value of the first item in the histogram is the number of image pixels with brightness value 0. The second item is the number of pixels with brightness value 1, and so on until the last item, which has the number of pixels with brightness value 255. The third object in the file is the image data. Each raw image contains 512 lines. The number of samples in each image varies from image to image because the start and stop azimuths could be commanded independently. Each pixel value is an 8-bit unsigned integer. 7. Radiometric and Geometric Calibration Full quantitative use of Viking Lander image data requires an understanding of the radiometric and geometric properties of the Viking Lander cameras. Raw pixel values can be converted to radiance or reflectance at the sensor using the calibration data provided with this archive. Topographic data can be extracted by using the stereoscopic capabilities of the two cameras. Radiometric and geometric properties of Viking Lander cameras are described in detail in the documents and data found in the calibration and document collections. 8. Lander Imaging Science Plan The specific intent for acquiring each image is given by the "observation_name" attribute of the PDS4 label. The major scientific objectives of the Viking Lander imaging investigation were to analyze the geology, cartography, meteorology, and biology of the landing sites [Mutch et al., 1972]. Geologic studies included characterizing the morphology of rocks, soils, and other features from texture and color, determining the size distribution of rocks, and understanding sediment transport. Cartographic studies involved mapping features at the landing sites, measuring surface topography, and determining lander location by comparing features seen in both lander and orbiter images. Meteorological investigations with Viking Lander images determined atmospheric aerosol properties (abundance, size, composition, and distribution) and searched for evidence of dust and condensate clouds. Biological studies with Viking Lander image data consisted of searching for evidence of living things [Levinthal et al., 1977b]. Arvidson et al. [1989] review the major results of the lander imaging investigations. Imaging sequences during the Primary Mission focused on: A) characterizing the surface and atmosphere at the landing sites; B) monitoring the sites for change; and C) supporting other experiments and sampling activities. Both landing sites were imaged with high-resolution diodes during both the morning and afternoon. A noon-time high-resolution set of images were also acquired at VL2. These high-resolution images have been assembled into a set of mosaics [Levinthal and Jones, 1980]. These high-resolution mosaics were the primary images used to generate systematic topographic maps [Liebes, 1982]. The scene at both sites was also imaged in color at noon-time, and selected areas were imaged with the three infrared diodes. Furthermore, a portion of the scenes was imaged in the high-resolution color mode (low resolution color diodes with high- resolution stepping). Several types of image sequences were acquired for atmospheric studies. The sun diode was used to determine atmospheric optical depth [Colburn et al., 1988]. Aerosol distribution was analyzed from sky images in a color rescan mode at dawn and dusk (twilight rescan images). Another atmospheric sequence, known as a sky brightness sequence, acquired images of the sky at different azimuths from the Sun. Scan verification and internal calibration images were periodically acquired to monitor the health of the cameras. Several sequences were acquired to search for variable features using rescan images and by repeatedly imaging the same areas. Images were also obtained to study the photometry of surface materials. Image sequences supported several other lander investigations. Images were taken of the sample delivery ports of the Biology, GCMS, and XRFS experiments to check whether the ports opened after landing and to support sample collection. Sampling sites were imaged before and after sampling, including color and stereo images, to support the planning and collection of samples. Magnets on the lander and surface sampler backhoe were imaged periodically for the magnetic properties investigation. Images of spacecraft parts, trenches, and surface sampling activities were taken for the physical properties team. Problems with the surface sampling system were also analyzed with special images. During the Extended Mission and beyond, the emphasis of imaging shifted to: A) monitoring the surface and atmosphere through the Mars seasons; B) supporting other lander investigations; and C) performing special experiments. Camera health was monitored throughout the Extended Mission. Surface monitoring included periodically looking at disturbed areas (trenches and soil piles) and undisturbed areas (e.g., drifts) for movement and change. Images were also acquired to search for evidence of sediment deposition. During the winter season, the spacecraft and surface at VL2 were monitored for frost formation. Images, known as "repro" images, were acquired to match the lighting conditions of Primary Mission images so that subtle changes could be detected without complications from lighting differences. Jones et al. [1981] and Wall and Ashmore [1985] have image lists sorted by sun position to identify such "repro" images. Atmospheric studies during the Extended Mission continued with optical depth, twilight rescan, and sky brightness sequences. Some of the special imaging sequences of the Extended Mission included images to search for fog and ozone, images for photometric studies, and rescan images to detect the passage of the shadow of Phobos over VL1. The PDS4 labels for each image and the index tables in the miscellaneous collection include a field for the primary target of the image. Possible values for the target are: Mars, Sun, Phobos, Deimos, or Calibration. Target names of Mars are either images of the surface, sky, or lander parts. Calibration images are either internal radiometric measurements or verification of the camera scanning mechanisms. The table below shows the number of images for each lander and target type. Target Type Lander 1 Lander 2 ----------- -------- -------- Mars 2616 2351 Sun 660 494 Phobos 54 23 Deimos 3 0 Calibration 209 175 ----------- ---- ---- Total Images 3542 3043 9. References Arvidson, R. E., E. A. Guinness, H. J. Moore, J. Tillman, and S. D. Wall, Three Mars Years: Viking Lander 1 Imaging Observations, Science, 222, 463-468, 1983. Arvidson, R. E., J. L. Gooding, and H. J. Moore, The martian surface as imaged, sampled, and analyzed by the Viking Landers, Rev. Geophys., 27, 39-60, 1989. Colburn, D. S., J. B. Pollack, and R. M. Haberle, Diurnal variations in optical depth at Mars: Observations and interpretations, NASA Tech. Memo. TM 100057, 1988. Hargraves, R. B., D. W. Collinson, R. E. Arvidson, and P. M. Cates, Viking magnetic properties experiment: Extended mission results, J. Geophys. Res., 84, 8379-8384, 1979. Huck, F. O., E. E. Burcher, E. J. Taylor, and S. D. Wall, Radiometric performance of the Viking Mars lander cameras, NASA Tech. Memo. TM X-72692, 1975a. Huck, F. O., H. F. McCall, W. R. Patterson, and G. R. Taylor, The Viking Mars lander camera, Space, Sci. Instr., 1, 189-241, 1975b. Huck, F. O., and S. D. Wall, Image quality prediction: An aid to the Viking Lander imaging investigation on Mars, Applied Optics, 15, 1748-1766, 1976. Jones, K. L., M. Henshaw, C. McMenomy, A. Robles, P. C. Scribner, S. D. Wall, and J. W. Wilson, Viking Lander imaging investigation during extended and continuation automatic missions, NASA Reference Publication 1068, 2 vols., 1981. Kieffer, H. H., B, M, Jakosky, and C. W. Snyder, The planet Mars: From antiquity to the present, In Mars, Kieffer et al., eds., Univ. of Arizona Press, Tucson, 1992. Levinthal, E. C., W. Green, K. L. Jones, and R. Tucker, Processing the Viking Lander camera data, J. Geophys. Res., 82, 4412-4420, 1977a. Levinthal, E. C., K. L. Jones, P. Fox, and C. Sagan, Lander imaging as a detector of life on Mars, J. Geophys. Res., 82, 4468-4478, 1977b. Levinthal, E. C., and K. L. Jones, The mosaics of Mars as seen by the Viking Lander cameras, NASA Contractor Report 3326, 1980. Liebes, S., Viking Lander Atlas of Mars, NASA Contractor Report 3568, 1982. Michael, W. H., Viking Lander tracking contributions to Mars mapping, Moons and Planets, 20, 149-152, 1979. Moore, H. J., R. E. Hutton, G. D. Clow, and C. R. Spitzer, Physical properties of the surface materials at the Viking landings sites on Mars, USGS Professional Paper 1389, 1987. Mutch, T. A., A. B. Binder, F. O. Huck, E. C. Levinthal, E. C. Morris, C. Sagan, and A. T. Young, Imaging experiment: The Viking Lander, Icarus, 16, 92- 110, 1972. Patterson, W. R., F. O. Huck, S. D. Wall, and M. R. Wolf, Calibration and performance of the Viking Lander cameras, J. Geophys. Res., 82, 4391-4400, 1977. Snyder, C. W., The missions of the Viking Orbiters, J. Geophys. Res., 82, 3971- 3983, 1977. Snyder, C. W., The extended mission of Viking, J. Geophys. Res., 84, 7911-7933, 1979. Snyder, C. W., and I. V. Moroz, Spacecraft Exploration of Mars, in Mars, Kieffer et al., eds., Univ. of Arizona Press, Tucson, 1992. Soffen, G. A., The Viking Project, J. Geophys. Res., 82, 3959- 3970, 1977. Tucker, R. B., Viking Lander imaging investigation: Picture catalog of primary mission experiment data record, NASA Reference Publication 1007, 1978. Wall, S. D., and T. C. Ashmore, Conclusion of the Viking Lander imaging investigation, NASA Reference Publication 1137, 1985.