Popular Science

August 6, 2012

Mars Rover Curiosity Sends First High-Resolution Photo

Share

NASA has just released the best-looking photo (above) we have of the Gale Crater, the piece of the Red Planet where Mars rover Curiosity landed last night. The photo shows the rim of the crater on the horizon and a gravel field in the foreground, as seen through a fisheye lens, a part of the many cameras Curiosity has on board.

Even though this image is twice the size of the first sent out by the rover, we’ll be seeing plenty of amazing images (with more pixels) soon. What you see here was taken with one of Curiosity’s lower resolution hazard avoidance cameras; the higher resolution, full-color images will be beamed back in the coming days.

[NASA]

Article source: http://feeds.popsci.com/c/34567/f/632419/s/221b8865/l/0L0Spopsci0N0Cscience0Carticle0C20A120E0A80Chigher0Eresolution0Eimage0Emars0Erover0Ecuriositys0Elanding0Ezone/story01.htm

Share





 
 

 
 

The Week In Numbers: Fire In Space, The First Cloned Human Embryo, And More

1,350 light-years: the distance to a “fiery ribbon” stretching across the Orion Nebula, captured recently by a submillimeter-wavelength camera inside Chile’s Atacama Pathfinder Experiment telescope. The ribbon is actually...
by Geek Staff
0

 
 
 

8 Of The Year’s Most Oddly Gorgeous Science Images

Click here to enter the gallery Is this the era of C. instagram? That’s the clever name of a cellphone photo one undergraduate took of a plate crawling with C. elegans (it kind of rhymes). Caenorhabditis elegans are micro...
by Geek Staff
0

 
 
 

A Zombie Worm And Other Amazing Images From This Week

Online Content Director: Suzanne LaBarre | EmailSenior Editor: Paul Adams | EmailAssociate Editor: Dan Nosowitz | EmailAssistant Editor: Colin Lecher | EmailAssistant Editor: Rose Pastore | Email Contributing Writers:<!̵...
by Geek Staff
0