- Home
- Getting Started
- Documentation
- Proxy/Firewall
- Tour the Interface
- Tour the Layers
- JMARS Video Tutorials
- Lat/Lon Grid Layer
- Map Scalebar
- Nomenclature
- Crater Counting
- 3D
- Shape Layer
- Mosaics
- Map
- Advanced/Custom Maps
- Graphic/Numeric Maps
- Custom Map Sharing
- Stamp
- THEMIS
- MOC
- Viking
- CTX
- HiRise
- HiRISE Anaglyph
- HiRISE DTM
- HRSC
- CRISM Stamp Layer
- OMEGA
- Region of Interest
- TES
- THEMIS Planning
- Investigate Layer
- Landing Site Layer
- Tutorials
- Video Tutorials
- Displaying the Main View in 3D
- Finding THEMIS Observation Opportunities
- Submitting a THEMIS Region of Interest
- Loading a Custom Map
- Viewing TES Data in JMARS
- Using the Shape Layer
- Shape Layer: Intersect, Merge, and Subtract polygons from each other
- Shape Layer: Ellipse Drawing
- Shape Layer: Selecting a non-default column for circle-radius
- Shape Layer: Selecting a non-default column for fill-color
- Shape Layer: Add a Map Sampling Column
- Shape Layer: Adding a new color column based on the values of a radius column
- Shape Layer: Using Expressions
- Using JMARS for MSIP
- Introduction to SHARAD Radargrams
- Creating Numeric Maps
- JMARS Shortcut Keys
- JMARS Data Submission
- FAQ
- Open Source
- References
- Social Media
- Podcasts/Demos
- Download JMARS
JMARS ›
Come visit us at LPSC. A booth and a showcase
Come visit us at LPSC or watch our showcase
We also have a booth all week so come check us out, ask questions and see what's new!
Come to the JMARS Showcase! See Scientists demo how they use JMARS. Noon Wednesday, March 22 , Indian Springs
Summary Below:
JMARS Showcase — Wednesday, 12:00 to 1:15 PM, Indian Springs The Java Mission-planning and Analysis for Remote Sensing (JMARS) team will present a series of short presentations on how specific science — including landing site analysis — can be done on planets, moons, and small bodies. The goal of these presentations will be to showcase how to use JMARS to discover available datasets, filter them to refine relevance, and fuse them with one another in order to evaluate research hypotheses and produce publication-quality results. JMARS is a free, open-source, Java-based geospatial information system developed by the Mars Space Flight Facility at Arizona State University. It is currently used for search and analysis of scientific data collected for multiple bodies (Mars, Earth, Moon, Vesta, Ceres, and many more) across various planetary missions.