![]() ![]() When you slide over for the second shot, you - and Just a tiny bit to the right, about the distance between your eyes or less,Īnd take the same picture. Make sure your subject stays very still, then step Hold the camera steady by securing your elbows in yourĬhest and snap a picture. Lot of angles and depth (not in front of a flat wall), and about 10 to 15įeet from the camera. Both strategies require specialized glasses forīut black-and-white 3-D images do not require fancy tools or equipment andĬan be snapped and clicked into being by following these directions recommended by Gorjian:ġ) Start out by picking a subject. Left and right eye images are flickered back and forth on a special screenįaster than an eye can blink. ![]() Is polarized, or made to travel in opposing, perpendicular directions. In polarization, the light from left and right eye images Instead, he and his colleagues at JPL's Multimission Image Processing LaboratoryĬreate 3-D color photos using two sophisticated techniques: polarization and "You give up full color when you use the red and blue glasses," says These basic 3-D photos are called anaglyphs and work best when viewed in black-and-white.Ĭolor anaglyphs are trickier because red and blue objects only appear to oneĮye. So does what it always does - combines them into one picture," says "Your brain thinks it is seeing two separate left and right images and Viewed through a pair of red- and blue-tinted glasses. Images from the rovers' stereo camera lenses (either the hazard-avoidanceĬameras, the navigation cameras or the panoramic cameras) are tinted in redĪnd blue, then merged into one blurred picture, which pops off the page when For the MarsĮxploration Rovers, this is accomplished with the aid of a left and right cameraĮye. The key to 3-D imaging lies in simulating a left and right eye. Sorts of pictures into 3-D feasts for the eyes, including his latest vacation Gorjian, who has been toying with the technique for 10 years, transforms all So simple is the trick that, with a little effort, anybody with a camera,Ī computer equipped with photo-editing software, and a pair of tinted glassesĬan make their own 3-D pictures of Mars, family members, pets or anything else Jet Propulsion Laboratory who makes 3-D pictures and animations of Mars forĪ living, both the black-and-white kind and the more advanced color versions. The time in the real world," says Zareh Gorjian, a graphic artist at NASA's "Basically, 3-D pictures trick your brain into doing what it does all Terrain may seem magical, but the concept behind the illusion is in fact quite To some, the realistic pictures of the rocky martian ![]() Have sent back a number of 3-D postcards to countless fans outfitted in red-Īnd blue-tinted spectacles. Since settling in on the red planet, the Mars Exploration Rovers Spirit and Opportunity If you slide on your red- and blue-tinted glasses, you'll see Gorjian and his fiancé pop out of the picture. + Download the PDF version of this feature The images used here are Gorjian and his fiancé's Hawaiian vacation photos. This series of screenshots illustrates the steps outlined in the story describing how to make 3-D images. ![]()
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