발아래에는 반사율이 겨우 몇 퍼센트에 불과한 새까만 응결 물질이 양파 껍질처럼 휘어지며 층층의 계단 지형을 이루고, 그 날카로운 단차와 취성 균열 사이로 무너진 처마, 각진 바위, 낮은 곳에 고인 고운 먼지가 차갑게 펼쳐진다. 그 어두운 표면은 유기물이 풍부한 먼지 껍질과 얼음이 섞인 매우 다공성 물질로 이루어져 있으며, 깊은 그림자 틈과 균열 바닥에만 드물게 드러난 물얼음과 서리가 희고 푸른빛으로 번쩍여, 태양열에 의한 승화와 붕괴가 지금도 이 연약한 지형을 깎아내리고 있음을 보여준다. 대기가 전혀 없는 검은 하늘 아래 비스듬한 햇빛은 그림자를 칼날처럼 길게 드리워 지형의 굴곡을 과장하고, 가까이 휘어진 지평선은 이 천체가 고작 수 킬로미터 규모의 작은 덩어리임을 실감하게 한다. 멀리 층리 절벽 아래에서는 희미한 가스와 먼지의 분출이 유령 같은 기둥으로 솟고, 극도로 약한 중력 속에 먼지 알갱이와 자갈 몇 개가 천천히 포물선을 그리며 떠다녀, 마치 얼어붙은 폐허가 조용히 숨 쉬는 현장에 서 있는 듯한 기분을 준다.
과학 심사 위원회
각 이미지는 AI 위원회에 의해 과학적 정확성이 심사됩니다.
Claude
이미지: Adjust
설명: Adjust
I largely concur with GPT's assessment but want to add and refine several points.
SCIENTIFIC ACCURACY: The overall albedo (~4%) is well-represented — this surface is convincingly dark, among the darkest objects in the solar system, and the image captures that near-light-absorbing quality effectively. The layered, stratified morphology is one of 67P's most scientifically significant features (documented extensively in Rosetta/OSIRIS data), and the concentric terrace steps are a genuine strength of this render — possibly the most scientifically defensible element in the frame. Cracking/fracture patterns in the foreground are consistent with thermal stress cycling. However, I disagree with GPT's relatively mild characterization of the jet problem: the jets here are rendered as sharp, narrow, luminous columns with a bright point-source 'impact flash' appearance at their base, which is physically misleading. 67P's jets originate from sublimating fractures and pits — they are diffuse, optically thin, and not self-luminous at their source. The bright hotspot at the base of the right-side jet in particular resembles an explosion or impact rather than sublimation. This is a meaningful scientific inaccuracy, not merely a stylistic choice. The frost/ice patches are rendered with excessive specularity — real 67P ice patches (documented in Filacchione et al. 2016 and El-Maarry et al.) are bright but not mirror-like; they're dirty, granular water ice with diffuse reflectance. The implied horizon curvature is subtle but present and is directionally correct for a ~4km body, though not strongly convincing. Particle ejection/ballistic grain drift is entirely absent visually.
VISUAL QUALITY: Rendering quality is high. Subsurface scattering and self-shadowing in the terrace layers are handled well and contribute to realism. The black sky with faint star scatter is appropriate. My additional concern beyond GPT's review: the concentric layering on the central mesa reads almost too regular and architecturally precise — almost like a stepped pyramid — whereas actual 67P terracing (e.g., in the Ash, Seth, and Hathor regions) shows more irregular, partially collapsed, and laterally discontinuous layering. The regularity here edges toward the synthetic/idealized.
CAPTION ACCURACY: The caption is well-written and scientifically literate, referencing real phenomena (sublimation, organic-rich dust, extremely low gravity, ballistic grain arcs, coma activity). However, it overclaims relative to the image: 'grains and tiny pebbles drifting in slow ballistic arcs' are not depicted; 'extremely porous nucleus' is not visually conveyed; and 'grain by grain' micro-erosion is implied but invisible. The caption describes the jets as 'faint wisps of gas' which significantly undersells (and mischaracterizes) what is actually rendered — two prominent, bright, well-collimated columns. This is the most notable caption-image mismatch and should be reconciled in either direction.
RECOMMENDATIONS: (1) Redesign jet rendering to be diffuse, back-illuminated wisps without point-source bases. (2) Introduce more irregularity and lateral discontinuity in the terrace layering. (3) Reduce specularity on ice/frost patches to diffuse granular reflectance. (4) Either add visible particle/grain ejection to support the caption's gravity claims or remove those claims. These are refinements, not fundamental failures — the core concept is scientifically grounded and visually compelling.
SCIENTIFIC ACCURACY: The overall albedo (~4%) is well-represented — this surface is convincingly dark, among the darkest objects in the solar system, and the image captures that near-light-absorbing quality effectively. The layered, stratified morphology is one of 67P's most scientifically significant features (documented extensively in Rosetta/OSIRIS data), and the concentric terrace steps are a genuine strength of this render — possibly the most scientifically defensible element in the frame. Cracking/fracture patterns in the foreground are consistent with thermal stress cycling. However, I disagree with GPT's relatively mild characterization of the jet problem: the jets here are rendered as sharp, narrow, luminous columns with a bright point-source 'impact flash' appearance at their base, which is physically misleading. 67P's jets originate from sublimating fractures and pits — they are diffuse, optically thin, and not self-luminous at their source. The bright hotspot at the base of the right-side jet in particular resembles an explosion or impact rather than sublimation. This is a meaningful scientific inaccuracy, not merely a stylistic choice. The frost/ice patches are rendered with excessive specularity — real 67P ice patches (documented in Filacchione et al. 2016 and El-Maarry et al.) are bright but not mirror-like; they're dirty, granular water ice with diffuse reflectance. The implied horizon curvature is subtle but present and is directionally correct for a ~4km body, though not strongly convincing. Particle ejection/ballistic grain drift is entirely absent visually.
VISUAL QUALITY: Rendering quality is high. Subsurface scattering and self-shadowing in the terrace layers are handled well and contribute to realism. The black sky with faint star scatter is appropriate. My additional concern beyond GPT's review: the concentric layering on the central mesa reads almost too regular and architecturally precise — almost like a stepped pyramid — whereas actual 67P terracing (e.g., in the Ash, Seth, and Hathor regions) shows more irregular, partially collapsed, and laterally discontinuous layering. The regularity here edges toward the synthetic/idealized.
CAPTION ACCURACY: The caption is well-written and scientifically literate, referencing real phenomena (sublimation, organic-rich dust, extremely low gravity, ballistic grain arcs, coma activity). However, it overclaims relative to the image: 'grains and tiny pebbles drifting in slow ballistic arcs' are not depicted; 'extremely porous nucleus' is not visually conveyed; and 'grain by grain' micro-erosion is implied but invisible. The caption describes the jets as 'faint wisps of gas' which significantly undersells (and mischaracterizes) what is actually rendered — two prominent, bright, well-collimated columns. This is the most notable caption-image mismatch and should be reconciled in either direction.
RECOMMENDATIONS: (1) Redesign jet rendering to be diffuse, back-illuminated wisps without point-source bases. (2) Introduce more irregularity and lateral discontinuity in the terrace layering. (3) Reduce specularity on ice/frost patches to diffuse granular reflectance. (4) Either add visible particle/grain ejection to support the caption's gravity claims or remove those claims. These are refinements, not fundamental failures — the core concept is scientifically grounded and visually compelling.
Grok
이미지: Adjust
설명: Adjust
I concur with both GPT and Claude on the core strengths and issues, adding targeted insights from Rosetta/OSIRIS imagery (e.g., El-Maarry et al. 2015 on 67P stratigraphy; O'Rourke et al. 2019 on jets). SCIENTIFIC ACCURACY (adjust): Excellent capture of 67P's ~4% albedo dark, organic-rich dust mantle, layered/terraced morphology (evident in Imhotep and Ash regions), low-angle lighting casting sharp shadows, and black vacuum sky—highly consistent with Philae landing site and global mosaics. Horizon curvature is subtly present and appropriate for ~4.2km body (escape velocity ~.5 m/s). However, jets are inaccurately rendered as collimated, self-luminous columns with hotspot bases (rightmost jet especially explosion-like), unlike 67P's diffuse, optically thin, back-scattered sublimation plumes from pits/fractures (Fornasier et al. 2016; Vincent et al. 2016). Ice patches show excessive specularity (mirror-like glints) vs. real granular, dirty H2O ice (Filacchione et al. 2016; diffuse albedo ~.5-.9). Layering is impressively concentric/onion-like but overly regular/continuous—real 67P terraces (e.g., Hathor cliffs) are irregular, laterally pinched-out, with more talus/collapse debris. No visible ballistic grains/particles, despite low-g environment. VISUAL QUALITY (implied adjust via image_vote): Photorealistic rendering with coherent subsurface scattering, depth-of-field, and particle details (boulders, dust pockets plausible). Minor artifacts: jet glow edges slightly aliased/game-like; ice glints too HDR-perfect. CAPTION ACCURACY (adjust): Strong match on dark crust, sharp risers/brittle fractures, frost seams, boulders/pits/erosion, close curved horizon, layered cliffs, and sublimation concept. Mismatches: 'curved onion-like layers' somewhat present but idealized; 'faint wisps of gas' contradicts prominent jets; absent 'grains/pebbles drifting in slow ballistic arcs' and 'grain-by-grain' micro-erosion (no visible ejecta/trajectories). Agree with Claude's jet critique (physically misleading self-luminosity) and GPT's scale cue weakness; add: foreground dust lacks 67P's characteristic fine-grained 'fairy castle' porosity texture (low density ~.5 g/cm³). RECOMMENDATIONS: (1) Soften jets to faint, diffuse wisps without bases; (2) Irregularize terraces with collapses/discontinuities; (3) Desaturate ice to matte granular; (4) Add subtle ballistic particle arcs; (5) Align caption jets to 'faint wisps' or tone down image. Solid foundation—refinements will elevate to approve.
Gemini
이미지: Adjust
설명: Adjust
I concur with the previous committee members. The rendering of 67P’s albedo and the general structural concept of layered, terraced terrain are strong, but the scientific execution of volatile-driven activity is flawed. The 'jets' are rendered as high-energy, collimated plumes with artificial hotspots at their origin, which contradicts the diffuse, low-pressure sublimation observed by the Rosetta mission. Furthermore, the 'mirror-like' specularity of the ice patches is physically inconsistent with the porous, granular, and dirty nature of water ice on a cometary surface. Visually, the terrace layering is too geometrically perfect; real cometary stratigraphy, while present, is heavily disrupted by mass wasting and collapse. The caption is well-written but suffers from 'descriptive inflation'—it promises ballistic grain trajectories and grain-by-grain erosion that are entirely absent from the visual field. To reach an 'approve' status, the jets must be diffused, the ice reflectance must be desaturated to a matte finish, and the terrace morphology should be randomized to include more talus and structural discontinuity.
Matania — 종합 평가
이미지: Adjust
설명: Adjust
The committee agrees the image is broadly and recognizably faithful to 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko: it captures the body’s very dark albedo, low-angle illumination, layered/terraced stratigraphy, fractured surfaces, and overall cometary setting well. The strongest scientific element is the terrace-like geology, which plausibly reflects Rosetta-observed stratification. However, several details are too idealized or physically misleading. The jets are the main issue: they read as sharp, self-luminous, almost explosion-like columns with hotspot bases, whereas real 67P activity is diffuse, optically thin sublimation driven by fractures and pits. The bright surface patches are also too mirror-like/specular for dirty cometary ice, and the terrace geometry is more regular and architecturally perfect than the irregular, collapsed, laterally discontinuous morphology seen in OSIRIS imagery. The caption is scientifically literate and well matched in tone, but it overreaches by describing ballistic grains, micro-erosion, and faint wisps that are not visibly present, while underdescribing the prominence of the rendered jets. Overall: strong concept and good photorealistic execution, but key comet-physics and morphology details need refinement.
Visual quality: The image is high quality and largely photorealistic in rendering style (coherent shading, crisp surface detail, consistent lighting). There are no obvious compositing artifacts, but the bright highlights on the ground look a bit too uniform/high-contrast (more like reflective wet/icy patches than the subtle frost/sublimation contrast usually seen). The jets are visually strong and somewhat game-like, though not grossly inconsistent.
Caption accuracy: The caption emphasizes almost light-swallowing dark material, sharp risers, curved onion-like layers, brittle fractures, and small bright frost patches in shaded seams, plus active sublimation. The image does show dark layered terraces/bands, fractures/cracks, boulders, pits/depressions, and localized bright areas consistent with frost/ice-rich material. The “perfectly black sky” and low, hard sunlight are consistent. But the described curved “onion-like” terraces and “extremely porous nucleus”/grain-by-grain micro-erosion are not clearly represented; instead, the layering looks more like regular stratified ridges with large-scale texturing. Also, the described near-horizon curvature and gravity-driven slow ballistic drifting grains are not visible.
Net: Good overall comet-like look and composition, but several elements (frost brightness/reflectance, exact terrace curvature/onion layering, jet morphology, and implied scale/curvature) need refinement to match 67P observations more closely.