발밑에는 유기물이 풍부한 초적색 얼음과 먼지가 얼어붙어 만든 진홍빛 평원이 완만하게 펼쳐지고, 그 위로 몇 미터 크기의 자주빛 암괴들이 믿기 어려울 만큼 작은 접점만으로 위태롭게 얹혀 있다. 깨져 나온 면에서는 더 신선한 얼음질 내부가 옅은 분홍빛과 희끗한 살구색으로 드러나며, 대기가 전혀 없는 약 40 K의 극저온 환경 탓에 그림자는 번짐 없이 칼날처럼 검게 고여 있고, 침식이나 바람의 흔적 없이 수십억 년 전의 표면이 거의 그대로 보존되어 있다. 멀리서는 접촉쌍성의 다른 엽이 납작한 벽 같은 언덕으로 하늘 위로 휘어 올라가며, 얕은 크레이터와 낮은 능선, 미세한 얼음 입자에 덮인 완만한 평원이 이 천체가 격렬한 충돌이 아니라 매우 느린 속도로 부드럽게 합쳐졌음을 말해 준다. 검은 진공의 하늘에는 별과 은하수가 유난히 또렷하고, 태양은 원반이 아닌 눈부신 흰 점으로만 빛나서, 이곳이 태양계 가장 바깥의 고요하고 원시적인 유물 위라는 사실을 실감하게 한다.
과학 심사 위원회
각 이미지는 AI 위원회에 의해 과학적 정확성이 심사됩니다.
GPT
이미지: Adjust
설명: Adjust
Scientific accuracy: The scene is plausibly trans-Neptunian (airless black sky with stars) and the overall crimson-to-maroon palette matches common “Arrokoth-like” artistic conventions (tholins/irradiated organics). However, the specific claims in the description are not well supported by the visible details. The caption emphasizes meter-scale blocks balanced on tiny contact points, razor-sharp black shadows beneath them, and subtle shallow pits/hummocks suggesting minimal alteration. In the image, most boulders appear simply resting on the ground with broadly consistent lighting and shadowing; several large blocks do not clearly exhibit “impossibly perched” balance on tiny contacts. Also, the sky includes an obviously enhanced, bright Milky Way band—this may be artistically accurate but is not physically constrained here (Arrokoth’s distance would still allow a Milky Way view; yet without a specified observational geometry, this is speculative). Lighting: the Sun is not shown as a tiny point; illumination direction seems strong enough to produce crisp shadows, which is not necessarily wrong for sunlight in vacuum, but the caption’s “faint, razor-edged light” is not clearly matched. Visual quality: The image is high-resolution and coherent with good texture detail, plausible ice/rock reflectance contrast, and no major compositing artifacts. The planet/lobe silhouette overhead is smoothly rendered, but the framing reads more like a cinematic vista than a strict ground-level, meter-scale boulder-field description; scale cues are ambiguous (many pebbles vs. few meter blocks). Caption accuracy: Several elements broadly align (crimson regolith, icy/whitish boulders, airless stars). But the distinctive “freshly broken faces gleaming pale pink/whitish,” “perched on tiny contact points,” and “sharp black shadows collecting beneath them” are not clearly demonstrated across the frame. Adjust the caption to match what’s actually shown (a boulder-strewn, icy/rocky surface on a contact-binary lobe) or regenerate with more explicit perched-balance geometry and more subdued/fainter lighting consistent with the stated observational conditions.
Claude
이미지: Adjust
설명: Regenerate
I largely agree with GPT's assessment but want to add more granular observations and push the caption vote harder toward 'regenerate.' On scientific accuracy: The ultra-red tholin-rich surface coloration is broadly defensible — New Horizons data confirms Arrokoth is among the reddest objects in the solar system, and the crimson-to-maroon palette is reasonable. However, several critical issues undermine fidelity. First, the boulder sizes and distribution read as Mars-analog rather than Arrokoth-specific; New Horizons imagery of Arrokoth shows a remarkably smooth, lightly cratered surface with subdued topography — not this density of large, angular, freshly fractured blocks. The sheer number and angularity of boulders here is inconsistent with a body that has experienced virtually no geological processing since accretion. Second, and most critically, the lighting is far too intense. At ~44 AU, solar irradiance is roughly 1/2000th of Earth's — the Sun would be an extremely faint point source producing extraordinarily low-contrast illumination, nearly indistinguishable from a bright star. The shadows here are deep and crisp in a way consistent with 1 AU sunlight, not the Kuiper Belt. This is a significant scientific error the caption actually acknowledges ('faint, razor-edged light') but the image directly contradicts. Third, the opposite lobe rendered overhead lacks the characteristic bilobed contact-binary geometry that defines Arrokoth — it reads as a generic rounded hill rather than the flattened, pancake-shaped Wenu/Weeyo lobe morphology documented by New Horizons. The smooth mantled plains described in the caption are not convincingly rendered. On visual quality: The image is technically competent — textures are detailed, there are no obvious compositing seams, and the star field with Milky Way is aesthetically pleasing. However, the scene feels generically 'alien rocky planet' rather than specifically Arrokoth. The rock reflectance contrast between pale icy faces and red matrix is a genuine strength and aligns with the caption's intent. On caption accuracy: The caption is far more scientifically specific than the image delivers. Claims about 'meter-scale blocks balanced on tiny contact points,' 'freshly broken faces gleaming pale pink to whitish,' 'sintered exotic ices,' and 'only lightly modified since the dawn of the Solar System' are either not visible or actively contradicted by the image's heavily disrupted, boulder-dense foreground. The description of the far lobe's 'smooth mantled plains, sparse shallow craters, embedded rocks, and subdued scarps' is not rendered with any recognizable fidelity to New Horizons data. The caption should be regenerated to either describe what the image actually shows (a generic reddish rocky landscape) or the image should be regenerated to match the scientifically grounded description. The two artifacts are currently mismatched to a degree that warrants caption regeneration at minimum, with a strong recommendation to also regenerate the image with corrected lighting intensity, reduced boulder density, smoother terrain, and a more morphologically accurate far-lobe silhouette.
Grok
이미지: Adjust
설명: Regenerate
Agree strongly with both GPT and Claude on core issues, with added emphasis on lighting and scale fidelity. Scientific accuracy: Color palette (crimson-maroon regolith with pale icy boulder faces) aligns well with Arrokoth's tholin-dominated spectrum from New Horizons data (e.g., V-J colors ~2.+ mag redder than average KBOs). Black star-crowded sky with Milky Way is correct for airless TNO at ~44 AU. However, major issues: (1) Lighting is unrealistically intense—solar flux at Arrokoth is ~1/1936 Earth's, yielding illuminance ~.0006 lux; shadows should be extremely faint/diffuse, not the crisp, high-contrast ones shown (caption's 'faint, razor-edged light' is contradicted). Sun appears as a plausible tiny white point, but overall scene brightness evokes 1-5 AU bodies like asteroids, not Kuiper Belt. (2) Boulder density/angularity excessive—Arrokoth's lobes are exceptionally smooth (crater density ~.3 km^-2 for D>.1 km, few exposed boulders); this looks like Phobos or heavily impacted regolith, not primordial accretion surface. Some blocks show subtle balancing, but not 'improbably perched on tiny contact points' en masse. (3) Far lobe silhouette is a generic smooth rise, lacking Arrokoth's specific Wenu-Weeyo contact-binary 'snowman' profile (flattened lobes, narrow neck)—no visible 'smooth mantled plains, sparse craters, subdued scarps.' Visual quality: Excellent photorealism—sharp textures, coherent specular highlights on ices, no artifacts, atmospheric perspective via faint dust/scatter plausible for micro-regolith. Scale ambiguous (pebbles to meters blend well via low-g cueing). Caption accuracy: Mismatch is severe; image shows boulder-strewn field with prominent pale rocks and intense lighting, but caption demands delicate perching, fresh pink-whitish fractures, subtle pits/hummocks, and precise lobe morphology—all undelivered or contradicted. Regenerate caption to describe actual image (e.g., 'dense angular boulders on red icy plain under bright TNO sunlight') or regenerate image with dimmed lighting (boost exposure simulation), sparser smoother terrain, accurate bilobe overhead, and explicit perched meter-blocks. Minor image tweaks could approve it as generic TNO, but for Arrokoth-specificity, adjust prompts accordingly.
Gemini
이미지: Regenerate
설명: Regenerate
The committee consensus is clear: the current submission fails to capture the unique, low-energy morphology of Arrokoth. I concur that the image suffers from 'geological noise'—the high density of angular, fractured boulders is fundamentally inconsistent with the smooth, mantled, and lightly cratered regolith documented by New Horizons. Furthermore, the lighting is physically implausible; at 44 AU, the solar flux is far too low to create the high-contrast, deep shadows depicted here. The caption is equally problematic, as it describes a level of geological detail (delicate perched blocks, specific scarp features) that the image fails to render. To reach scientific standard, the next iteration must prioritize the 'pancake' geometry of the lobes, significantly reduce the boulder density to favor smooth, dust-covered plains, and adjust the lighting model to reflect the extreme attenuation of the Sun in the Kuiper Belt.
Matania — 종합 평가
이미지: Regenerate
설명: Regenerate
The committee found the submission broadly evocative of Arrokoth in color and airless setting, but scientifically mismatched in its core morphology and illumination. The red tholin-like palette and star-filled black sky are defensible, but the scene shows too many angular boulders, overly crisp deep shadows, and a generic rocky-landscape structure that does not reflect Arrokoth’s unusually smooth, low-relief contact-binary surface. The overhead lobe silhouette also lacks the distinctive flattened Wenu/Weeyo geometry. The caption compounds the problem by describing perched meter-scale blocks, subtle pits, and faint razor-edged sunlight in more detail than the image supports; most of those features are either not visible or contradicted by the rendering. Overall, the image and caption are both scientifically over-specific in ways the art does not fulfill, so the committee recommends regenerating both to better match Arrokoth’s actual appearance.