발아래에서는 거의 검은 현무암질·초염기성 규산염 절벽이 거대한 협곡의 심연으로 가파르게 떨어지고, 산산이 부서진 바위와 서리로 굳은 너덜비탈 사이로 새하얀 극저온 안개가 차가운 내해처럼 바닥을 메우고 있다. 이 안개는 스스로 빛나는 것이 아니라, 조용한 적색왜성에서 멀리 돌아 들어온 희미한 적갈색 여명과 대기 산란, 그리고 얼음 표면의 미약한 열복사를 받아 은은하게 떠오르며, 바위 모서리마다 붙은 무수한 착빙·상고대·깃털 같은 서리 결정에 창백한 청백색 반짝임을 남긴다. 영구적인 밤에 놓인 조석 고정 세계의 협곡 바닥에서는 별빛이 드문드문 박힌 거의 흑청색 하늘과, 림 너머 멀리 번진 아주 희미한 붉은 황혼만이 방향 감각을 주고, 맞은편 절벽의 주상절리와 붕괴 흔적, 거대한 낙석들은 짙은 어둠 속으로 사라지며 이 지형의 압도적인 규모를 드러낸다. 이곳의 암석 풍경은 화산성 기반암이 오래된 균열과 붕괴, 동결에 의한 파쇄를 겪으며 빚어진 것으로 보이며, 낮은 조도와 얼어붙는 안개가 결합한 환경은 생명 거주 가능 영역에 있으면서도 얼마나 냉혹하고 이질적인 기후가 펼쳐질 수 있는지를 눈앞에서 실감하게 한다.
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 precision and some pushback on certain points. SCIENTIFIC ACCURACY: The basaltic/ultramafic canyon morphology is genuinely well-executed — the columnar jointing, fractured ledge stacking, and talus slopes are consistent with mafic volcanic terrain undergoing freeze-thaw or impact-driven mechanical weathering. The frost accumulation on lower-lying rocks and the pooling of fog in the canyon floor are physically coherent with cold-trap dynamics on a tidally locked world where shadowed lowlands act as thermal sinks. These are genuine strengths. However, GPT is correct that the two celestial objects in the upper sky are problematic. They read as a crescent moon and a smaller companion body — neither is scientifically justified for TOI-700 d without explicit data supporting a large satellite system. More critically, they contribute ambient light that contradicts the 'almost black sky' premise. On the permanent night side of a tidally locked planet orbiting a dim M-dwarf at ~0.163 AU, scattered starlight would be negligible; the sky should be far darker and more featureless than shown. The reddish terminator gradient near the horizon is present but subtle — arguably undersold relative to the caption's description, though its softness is actually more physically realistic than a sharp glow would be. The fog's character is my additional concern beyond GPT's note: cryofog on such a world would likely be nitrogen or CO2 condensate rather than water ice, and its scattering properties could differ meaningfully from the rendered volumetric water-mist appearance. The bright white luminosity of the fog reads as slightly too warm and optically thick for an extremely cold, low-energy environment. VISUAL QUALITY: Photorealism is high. Rock textures are detailed and geologically coherent. Ice plate rendering on foreground rocks is convincing. No obvious geometric artifacts or structural impossibilities. The primary visual concern echoes GPT's: the fog has a cinematic polish that prioritizes legibility over physical plausibility — it's beautiful but slightly studio-lit rather than governed by faint thermal emission and weak atmospheric scattering as described. The overall scene lighting is too generous for a permanent night environment; surfaces are readable in ways that imply more ambient illumination than the scenario supports. CAPTION ACCURACY: The caption is descriptively rich and mostly honest about the speculative nature of the visualization. It accurately calls out frost, ice plates, cryofog pooling, dark cliffs, and the terminator smear. Where it misaligns with the image: it claims the terminator is the 'only hint' of stellar energy, but the image shows two distinct sky objects providing additional light. The caption's language about 'ghostly white only through faint atmospheric scattering and weak thermal reflection' sets a dimmer, more austere expectation than the rendered fog delivers. RECOMMENDATIONS: Remove or replace the crescent moon and companion object with a correctly rendered starfield appropriate to TOI-700's sky position. Darken overall scene illumination meaningfully to match permanent night-side conditions. Consider shifting fog coloration slightly toward blue-gray to suggest non-water condensate chemistry. The terminator glow could be modestly intensified to better match the caption's description since it is currently too subtle to read clearly. These are all adjustments rather than fundamental reconceptions — the core scene concept is sound and worth preserving.
Grok
이미지: Adjust
설명: Adjust
I concur with both GPT and Claude on the core issues, adding some refinements based on the visible image. SCIENTIFIC ACCURACY: approve with caveats—the geological features are exemplary: fractured basaltic/ultramafic cliffs with columnar jointing, ledge scarring, landslide talus, and frost-rimed rubble convincingly evoke slow cryogenic weathering on a tidally locked rocky world like TOI-700 d (~1.1 Earth radii, potentially habitable zone but with extreme night-side cold traps). Cryofog pooling in the valley floor aligns with atmospheric transport of volatiles (likely N2/CO2 over H2O) into shadowed basins, and the subtle reddish terminator horizon glow aptly hints at the M2V dwarf's distant limb without direct illumination. However, the two prominent sky objects (crescent moon-like body and smaller orb) are unjustified—no data supports large moons for TOI-700 d, and they introduce unphysical scattered light, undermining the 'almost black sky' and 'stars sharp' premise amid negligible stellar flux (~.008% Earth's). Fog scattering is well-stratified but appears optically thick/white like water mist rather than dimmer blue-gray cryogenic particulates. Overall consistent with informed speculation, but celestial additions detract. VISUAL QUALITY: High photorealism—sharp rock/ice textures, coherent depth/scale (colossal canyon feels vast), no artifacts like warping or glow anomalies. Fog volumetric rendering is polished yet slightly cinematic (overly luminous foreground pooling implies stronger thermal emission than faint scattering supports). Lighting is moody but too ambiently lit by sky objects for true permanent night. CAPTION ACCURACY: Mostly accurate—captures canyon scale, frost/ice plates on rubble, dense low-lying cryofog glow, dark cliffs, and terminator 'smear.' Misaligns on sky: caption claims terminator as 'only hint' of star, but image's moon/planet orbs provide dominant light sources; fog 'ghostly white' matches visually but caption's 'faint' physics undersells the rendered brightness. RECOMMENDATIONS: Regenerate sky to remove moons, deepen to starfield-only blackness with sharper pinpoint stars; subtly blue-shift fog for non-aqueous cryogenics; preserve all geology/fog pooling as-is. These tweaks elevate an already strong concept without major overhaul.
Gemini
이미지: Adjust
설명: Adjust
I concur with the committee's assessment regarding the celestial bodies. The inclusion of crescent moons introduces an unphysical light source that directly contradicts the 'permanent night' and 'almost black sky' constraints essential to the TOI-700 d model. Geologically, the image is excellent; the basaltic weathering and talus distribution are highly credible for an M-dwarf-orbiting world. However, the 'cinematic' lighting of the fog suggests a photostudio environment rather than the low-energy, high-contrast environment expected on a tidally locked night side. To reach approval, the sky must be purged of non-existent satellites and the fog's albedo needs to be reduced to reflect the scarcity of available light, shifting the color palette from warm white to a cooler, more alien blue-gray. The caption is well-written but must be updated if the celestial objects are removed, or it must explicitly acknowledge their presence if they are intended as speculative (though I recommend their removal for scientific consistency).
Matania — 종합 평가
이미지: Adjust
설명: Adjust
The committee finds the landscape concept scientifically strong overall: the canyon geology is highly convincing, with basaltic-looking cliffs, fractured ledges, talus slopes, and frost-rimed rubble that plausibly evoke cryogenic weathering on TOI-700 d. The pooling fog in the canyon floor is also directionally correct for a cold-trap environment on a tidally locked world. However, the image’s sky contains crescent-moon-like bodies that are not justified by the prompt and introduce unrealistic ambient light, weakening the intended permanent-night, almost-black-sky setting. The fog is also rendered a bit too cinematically bright and Earthlike in appearance, reading more like generic mist than physically constrained cryofog. The caption is broadly aligned with the scene’s geology and low-lying fog, but it overstates the idea that the horizon smear is the only sky illumination, since the image shows additional celestial light sources; it also should better match the rendered fog’s appearance or the image should be changed to match the caption more closely.
VISUAL QUALITY: The image is high quality and convincing—crisp detail in rock textures, believable ice/frost highlights on protruding blocks, and strong depth cues. I do not see obvious AI artifacts (warped structures, impossible anatomy, or geometry discontinuities). The main visual concern is that the atmospheric fog has a slightly stylized/cinematic look—especially the lower-foreground “white” fog mass—rather than clearly governed by physically consistent scattering/thermal contrast. Also, the presence of a distinct crescent moon in a “planetary night-side” setting is an unrealistic specificity unless intentionally justified.
CAPTION ACCURACY: The caption’s core concepts (colossal canyon, permanent night, dark cliffs, frost/ice plates, dense freezing fog pooling in the valley, distant red terminator hint) are broadly consistent with what’s shown. But it over-specifies items that are not clearly supported: the caption emphasizes a “dim reddish smear” as the only hint of the star—whereas the image shows a noticeable crescent moon and a stronger, more Earthlike nocturnal sky illumination gradient. The “ghostly white” glow is present, yet the distribution and appearance of the fog read more like general mist than specifically cryofog confined by shadowed lowland processes.
Overall: Keep the general canyon + cryofog concept, but remove or justify the crescent moon/sky lighting and make the terminator/starlight contribution match the ‘almost black sky’ description more closely; also improve the fog’s stratification and scattering character to better convey “freezing fog pooling” rather than generic volumetric mist.