Maximizing the value of Solar System data through Planetary Spatial Data Infrastructures
Jani Radebaugh (1), Bradley J. Thomson (2), Brent Archinal (3), Ross, Beyer (4), Dani DellaGiustina (5), Caleb Fassett (6), Lisa Gaddis (3), Sander, Goossens (7), Trent Hare (3), Jay Laura (3), Pete Mouginis-Mark (8), Andrea, Na{\ss} (9), Alex Patthoff (10), Julie Stopar (11)

TL;DR
This paper emphasizes the importance of developing Planetary Spatial Data Infrastructures (PSDI) to enhance accessibility, usability, and long-term management of planetary spatial data for scientific research and exploration.
Contribution
It advocates for creating PSDIs for all Solar System bodies, outlining standards, policies, and tools to improve data sharing and analysis capabilities.
Findings
PSDI enhances data accessibility and usability.
Standardized data formats facilitate infrastructure development.
Establishment of PSDIs is critical for future planetary exploration.
Abstract
Planetary spatial data returned by spacecraft, including images and higher-order products such as mosaics, controlled basemaps, and digital elevation models (DEMs), are of critical importance to NASA, its commercial partners and other space agencies. Planetary spatial data are an essential component of basic scientific research and sustained planetary exploration and operations. The Planetary Data System (PDS) is performing the essential job of archiving and serving these data, mostly in raw or calibrated form, with less support for higher-order, more ready-to-use products. However, many planetary spatial data remain not readily accessible to and/or usable by the general science user because particular skills and tools are necessary to process and interpret them from the raw initial state. There is a critical need for planetary spatial data to be more accessible and usable to…
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