iPhone app delivers daily ASU Mars camera images


THEMIS Image of the Day iPhone app
<p> Feel a buzz in your pocket? That&#39;s Mars calling your iPhone.</p><separator></separator><p> Thanks to a new &mdash; and free &mdash; iPhone app, users can have images of Mars delivered daily to their device. The images come from an Arizona State University-designed camera on-board NASA&#39;s Mars Odyssey orbiter, and they include every kind of feature there is on the Red Planet.</p><separator></separator><p> The iPhone app is <a href="http://itunes.apple.com/gb/app/mars-odyssey-themis-image/id371924669?mt…; through the iTunes website.</p><separator></separator><p> The app comes from Kate Gordon-Bloomfield, a software developer and codirector at <a href="http://www.LittleCollie.com">LittleCollie Ltd.</a> in the U.K. A programmer for about 10 years, she said, &quot;I became interested in developing software for Apple&#39;s mobile platforms after getting an iPhone and MacBook Pro.&quot; She wrote the app on weekends and evenings.</p><separator></separator><p> Gordon-Bloomfield is also a self-described &quot;complete space nut,&quot; adding, &quot;I have always had an interest in space exploration. I even went to space camp when I was in my teens.&quot;</p><separator></separator><p> <strong>From Mars to you</strong></p><separator></separator><p> The camera providing the daily images of Mars is the <a href="http://themis.asu.edu">Thermal Emission Imaging System</a>, or THEMIS. It was designed by Philip Christensen, Regent&#39;s Professor of geological sciences in the School of Earth and Space Exploration, part of ASU&#39;s College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.</p><separator></separator><p> A multiband instrument, THEMIS makes images of Mars at infrared and visible wavelengths. Its latest accomplishment is the completion of a global portrait of Mars at a resolution of 100 meters (330 feet). Besides being available through the iPhone, the THEMIS images of the day are accessible on the web at <a href="http://themis.asu.edu/image_of_the_day">http://themis.asu.edu/image_of_…;. The site also has links categorizing the Martian features by type.</p><separator></separator><p> <strong>On beyond iPhone?</strong></p><separator></separator><p> Choosing to create an app for the iPhone was a natural, said Gordon-Bloomfield, a graduate of ASU who majored in religious studies.</p><separator></separator><p> &quot;The iPhone, iPod touch and iPad are a great market,&quot; she said.</p><separator></separator><p> The Blackberry? Maybe not so much. &quot;While the Blackberry has a large user base,&quot; she said, &quot;its primary focus is enterprise-tier business users. I don&#39;t see the THEMIS Mars app as meeting their needs.&quot;</p><separator></separator><p> What about the Android? &quot;The Droid&#39;s a budding platform,&quot; Gordon-Bloomfield said. &quot;If its market percentage increases, this app would make a great project for that platform.&quot;</p><separator></separator><p> Meanwhile, Gordon-Bloomfield is weighing updates. &quot;I&#39;ve been thinking that loading the images could be improved by loading a lower-quality image initially and then loading higher and higher quality and detail as the user zooms.&quot;</p><separator></separator><p> Call it Red-Planet-in-Your-Pocket.</p>