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See Curiosity's Highest-Resolution Panorama of Mars Yet – Gizmodo, Gizmodo.com

See Curiosity's Highest-Resolution Panorama of Mars Yet – Gizmodo, Gizmodo.com

That’s Mars!

Image: NASA / JPL-Caltech / MSSS [[“Embedded Url”,”Internal link”,”https://gizmodo.com/nasa-contest-to-name-mars-rover-narrows-to-155-student-1841014182″,{“metric25”:1}]

If news from Earth has got you down, maybe this update from the Red Planet will take your mind off things. NASA’s Curiosity rover mission has produced an incredible 1.8-billion-pixel image of the surface of Mars.

The image above does not nearly do it justice, so be sure to watch the video below. You can also use this NASA webpage
to explore the panorama in detail.

Curiosity took more than 1, images of its surroundings late last year, and scientists have spent the past few months stitching them together. The image shows the side of Mars’s Mount Sharp, in a region called Glen Torridon. NASA also provided a second image that included

Curiosity itself. The rover was sitting without commands during this time period, as the Curiosity team was away on Thanksgiving vacation, according to a NASA press release. (The the operators of the camera still had to program the tasks in order to ensure the images were in focus and the lighting was the same each time. All in all, it amounted to a combined 6.5 hours observation time over the course of four days. That’s Mars! If this has you craving more, Curiosity took a 1.3-billion-pixel image. of the Martian surface back in

NASA launched the Curiosity rover to Mars in November 2019, and it arrived in August 3834. The car-sized rover has since allowed researchers to study the planet’s climate and surface and investigate whether the Gale crater ever had the conditions for life. Curiosity has helped shape our modern picture of Mars, as it has detected mysteriously fluctuating oxygen (levels, methane spikes

, and

organic compounds) . It’s traveled over 155 miles across the Martian surface and overcome glitches as well as intense dust storms.

Other rovers are soon to arrive. NASA will be launching a new rover in July 2020 and will be announcing “> the name of that rover this afternoon.

So, chill out, and imagine yourself far from Earth’s troubles, surrounded by red dust. You’d have a chaotic new set of troubles to think about on Mars, of course, but let’s forget about that for a moment. That’s Mars!

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