Mars
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This color panorama shows a 360-degree view of the landing site of NASA's Curiosity rover, including the highest part of Mount Sharp visible to the rover. That part of Mount Sharp is approximately 12 miles (20 kilometers) away from the rover. The images were obtained by the rover's 34-millimeter Mast Camera. The mos...
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Stats
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- 12
- Comments
- 6
- Snapshots
- Total Views
- 229305
- Explore Score
- 128
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Mars Observer MER HiRise Image
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- 0
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- 4
- Snapshots
- 1
- Total Views
- 2376
- Explore Score
- 88
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This is the Mission Success Panorama of the Phoenix Landing site on Mars. created by the NASA and University of Arizona Phoenix Scout Team, led by Peter Smith of University of Ariaona. It consists of several hundred 1kx1k images planned, acquired, and mosaiced by the Surface Stereo Imaging team, led by Phoenix Co-Inve...
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- 3
- Comments
- 2
- Snapshots
- 5
- Total Views
- 4655
- Explore Score
- 74
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This 360-degree view, called the "McMurdo" panorama, comes from the panoramic camera (Pancam) on NASA's Mars Exploration Rover Spirit. From April through October 2006, Spirit has stayed on a small hill known as "Low Ridge." There, the rover's solar panels are tilted toward the sun to maintain enough solar power for Spi...
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Stats
- Favorites
- 2
- Comments
- 0
- Snapshots
- 2
- Total Views
- 2264
- Explore Score
- 37
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NASA's Mars Exploration Rover Spirit used its panoramic camera (Pancam) to record this image on November 2005. This view is a stereo anaglyph of the Seminole panorama, showing it in three dimensions to viewers using red-blue stereo glasses. The images combined into this anaglyph were taken through the Pancam's infra...
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- 0
- Comments
- 0
- Snapshots
- 3
- Total Views
- 5569
- Explore Score
- 20
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NASA'S Mars Exploration Rover Spirit captured this westward view from atop a low plateau where Sprit spent the closing months of 2007. After several months near the base of the plateau called "Home Plate" in the inner basin of the Columbia Hills range inside Gusev Crater, Spirit climbed onto the eastern edge of the ...
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- Favorites
- 1
- Comments
- 1
- Snapshots
- 1
- Total Views
- 2020
- Explore Score
- 17
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If a human with perfect vision donned a spacesuit and stepped onto the martian surface, the view would be as clear as this sweeping panorama taken by NASA's Mars Exploration Rover Spirit. That's because the rover's panoramic camera has the equivalent of 20-20 vision. Earthlings can take a virtual tour of the scenery by...
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Stats
- Favorites
- 6
- Comments
- 0
- Snapshots
- 4
- Total Views
- 3767
- Explore Score
- 15
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Since April of 2006, NASA's Mars Exploration Rover Spirit has been sojourning in a place called "Winter Haven," where the robotic geologist spent several months parked on a north-facing slope in order to keep its solar panels pointed toward the sun. During that time, while the rover spent the daylight hours conducting ...
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Stats
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- 4
- Comments
- 0
- Snapshots
- 14
- Total Views
- 7717
- Explore Score
- 15
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Image credit: NASA/JPL/Cornell<br> Image mosaicking: Bob Deen (JPL/MIPL)<br> Calibration and color rendering: CCC<br> and the Pancam team (Jim Bell)
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Stats
- Favorites
- 7
- Comments
- 1
- Snapshots
- 7
- Total Views
- 7307
- Explore Score
- 10
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This is view captured by the panoramic camera on NASA's Mars Exploration Rover Spirit nearly a year ago is called Spirit's "Legacy" panorama. It combines many frames acquired during Spirit's 59th through 61st martian days, or sols (March 3 to 5, 2004) from a position about halfway between the landing site and the rim o...
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Stats
- Favorites
- 2
- Comments
- 0
- Snapshots
- 3
- Total Views
- 4101
- Explore Score
- 10
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