Media Credit: Bryan Bullock
OSU undergraduate Jeremiah Glascock is
helping OSU researchers map out the planet Mars through satellite
images.
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While
most students are still sleeping, one undergraduate student is on
campus viewing images from Mars. For Jeremiah Glascock, receiving
classified information from NASA is just part of the morning routine.
Monday
through Friday he arrives on campus before 6:00 a.m. and downloads
images taken by the two Mars rovers, Spirit and Opportunity.
Just
a few hours later, in a room where a picture of a Martian crater covers
the far wall, a team of seven people go to work. They use the images
Glascock downloaded to create three-dimensional maps of Mars'
desert-like surface.
"We use the images to look forward and
backward to map out the natural landmarks to navigate the rovers
safely," Glascock said. "One miscalculation on our part could result in
it flipping over - and that's it, there's no one up there."
The completed maps are then used by NASA to calculate the rovers'
movements for the next day.
Glascock,
a father of two, learned about the job while taking a class last spring
taught by Ron Li, the leading researcher on the team.
"He
asked if there was anybody who wanted to help out, and I volunteered to
take the position" Glascock said. "I do get paid, but it's not the best
job for (a) student."
Waking up before dawn and having no
opportunity to call in sick may not be appealing to all undergraduate
students. The mapping process that takes place on campus begins with
Glascock.
"If I don't show up they can't make the maps," Glascock said.
The information Glascock retrieves in the morning is not available to
the general public.
"Because it's an ongoing mission the data is highly protected," said
Leslie Smith, program associate for the project.
Though
Glascock has only been working in the lab for about a year, Li and his
team have been tracking the rovers since they landed in 2003.
The
mission was originally scheduled to last 90 days, from January to April
of 2004. Since that time, NASA has extended the mission twice.
"We
are in extended mission, but as long as the rovers can do significant
work, NASA will extend it," said Kaichang Di, research scientist for
the project.
Besides creating maps, the team has also been a part of other projects,
including initially locating the rovers.
"People wanted to know where the rovers landed," Di said. "It was a big
question in the first few weeks."
Using satellite images and pictures taken by the rovers, the team was
able to locate the machines, which both landed close to the equator on
opposite sides of the planet.
Other work includes developing products for future NASA missions, such
as new cameras and improved software.
Glascock's time on the project is coming to an end. The 29-year-old
will soon graduate with a degree in geomatics engineering.
A small program at OSU, geomatics engineering has only about 12
students. About five students graduate from the program per year, said
Carolyn Merry, chair of the civil and environmental engineering and
geodetic science department, in an e-mail.
Glascock reflects positively on his time working on the Mars project.
"I've been lucky to have this opportunity," Glascock said. "I have
learned a lot from participating in the research. All the graduate and
Ph.D. students are a great group of people to work with and I have
learned a lot from them."