t00fri wrote:Finally, let me point out that I am NOT dismissing his work which definitely looks neat. But from a scientific point of view it is rather worthless.
I think you're seriously underestimating the quality of the data. It doesn't matter if the mission is old - I was using and processing data from Voyager 18 years after its Jupiter flyby and didn't have problems with it. Your assertions about the mission quality are also baseless. I don't think you need a PhD to understand anything about a mission, you just need the information and the intelligence and ability to procees that information, and there's no evidence (beyond again your own assertion) that he lacks any of this.
After all, Einstein was a patent office worker without a PhD, I dare say you would have just dismissed his ideas about relativity out of hand back then if you'd been around too? There's plenty of smart, educated people capable of doing original research and work who don't have initials after their name, and they should not be ignored because of that.
And frankly, your attitude to this - as a supposedly professional scientist - is a disgrace because it seems that your chief concern is about the person's
background. A true scientist would
only be concerned with the data and the work being presented - the "messenger" is
never an issue - and it should be judged
objectively, without character assassination. I'd have thought you'd realise that given your position, Fridger - it seems that maybe you've lost your way somewhat.
Anyway. He's got the photometer and spectrometer data, he's corrected the images based on information
direct from the camera designer himself. That makes it better than anything else that came before.
And frankly, this is something I know a lot more about than you Fridger. You're an astrophysicist. I am (or was) a planetary scientist. I've spend many years processing images
specifically of planets in our solar system. And I don't see anything wrong or unscientific with the techniques that he's using here (personally I would have left the gaps in the images as black, and not filled them in with photoshop, but the perspective views are clearly done for aesthetics only, not science).
But the colour work seems fine by me - he seems to be taking the available data and processing it as well as anyone skilled in image processing would do. And it's more accurate than what has been done before, because he has access to the documentation and camera designer.
There is not a problem here.