In astronomical imaging and Earth imaging, the crater illusion, also known as the dome illusion or crater/dome illusion, is an optical illusion which causes impact craters and other depressions to appear raised as domes or mountains.[1] It is believed to be caused by our being accustomed to seeing light from overhead.[2] When some images are taken from orbit, the light from the sun is nearly horizontal. This is the only time shadows are seen. Our brains are tricked into thinking that the interior of the crater is above the surrounding terrain instead of below it.[3]

Examples

In September 2015, NASA released an image from the space probe Dawn of the crater Occator on dwarf planet Ceres. Because of the position of the Sun at the time the image was taken, the walls of the crater may appear to be convex instead of concave. On the right is the same image rotated 180 degrees to change the position of the shadows and eliminate the illusion.

Crater Occator on the dwarf planet Ceres
The same image of Occator rotated 180-degrees

In December 1968, the Apollo 8 mission took the photograph on the right of the Moon's crater Goclenius. On the left is the same image rotated in an attempt to create the illusion.

Photograph of Goclenius rotated in an attempt to create the crater illusion
The original Apollo 8 Photograph of the Moon's Goclenius Crater

In March 2011, NASA released an image of Mercury's Spitteler and Holberg craters taken by the MESSENGER spacecraft.[4] The image on the left is the original image and the image on the right is the same image rotated in an attempt to remove the illusion.

Original image of Spitteler and Holberg craters showing illusion.
The same image rotated in an attempt to eliminate the illusion

In the image on the left of the Tin Bider crater produced by NASA Earth Observatory's EO-1-based Advanced Land Imager produces a reverse illusion. The crater rises above the surrounding terrain, however the position of the sun makes it appear to be below it.[5]

Original NASA Earth Observatory image of Tin Bider Crater
The same image rotated

References

  1. "An Impact Melt Crater You'll Flip For". Slate.com Bad Astronomy. 28 July 2013.
  2. Crater Illusion by Paul Doherty, retrieved September 12, 2015
  3. "Do You See a Mountain or a Crater in this Picture?". Universe Today. 29 January 2015.
  4. "A Trip Around our Solar System". The Atlantic In Focus. 27 May 2001.
  5. Tin Bider Crater, Algeria from the NASA Earth Observatory, retrieved September 12, 2015
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.