Very cool. It's too bad that Chroma noise is apparently quite visible on other planets too.
It took me a while to understand what looks like a legend in the article's image. I don't think it is a legend, those are color swatches showing that if you subtract the aurora color from the left image and add it to the right, the resulting color is very similar ("Observed sky" on left is similar to "Observed sky + aurora" on right), strongly suggesting the presence of green aurora.
widforss•5h ago
Interesting. But given the lack of magnetic field, how does the particles enter the atmosphere on the backside (night side) of the planet? On Earth it's easier to understand due to the magnetic field and that the polar regions also are very close to the day-side at all times.
Sharlin•3h ago
Probably was soon after sunset.
imoverclocked•2h ago
Mars does have a magnetic field, just not a global one like Earth does. It likely had a global magnetic field in the past.
jayavanth•1h ago
Why is the quality so bad compared to visible light daytime photos?
globie•3d ago
It took me a while to understand what looks like a legend in the article's image. I don't think it is a legend, those are color swatches showing that if you subtract the aurora color from the left image and add it to the right, the resulting color is very similar ("Observed sky" on left is similar to "Observed sky + aurora" on right), strongly suggesting the presence of green aurora.