Link to images: [b]http://mars.nasa.gov/multimedia/interactives/billionpixel/?image=PIA16918&view=cyl[/b]
[url=http://news.yahoo.com/wow-mars-rover-captures-stunning-billion-pixel-photo-210407312.html]Yahoo:[/url]
[spoiler]A new 1.3-billion-pixel image from NASA’s Mars rover Curiosity allows viewers to zoom in and investigate part of the Red Planet in incredible detail.
The huge mosaic stitches together nearly 900 photos that the Curiosity rover took with some of its 17 cameras during the robot's exploration of Gale Crater on Mars, NASA officials said.
"It gives a sense of place and really shows off the cameras' capabilities," Bob Deen, of the Multi-Mission Image Processing Laboratory at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., said in a statement. "You can see the context and also zoom in to see very fine details."
The new image is the first NASA-produced view from the surface of Mars that's larger than 1 billion pixels, officials said. It's a full-circle scene centered on the site dubbed "Rocknest," where Curiosity gathered its first scoops of sandy soil for analysis. The 3.4-mile-high (5.5 kilometers) Mount Sharp looms in the distance.
You can access the full-resolution, zoomable image at: http://mars.nasa.gov/bp1/ .
Deen constructed the mosaic using 871 pictures from Curiosity's Mast Camera instrument and 25 black-and-white frames from the rover's navigation cameras. The photos were taken between Oct. 5 and Nov. 16, 2012, officials said.
Curiosity landed inside the 96-mile-wide (154 km) Gale Crater on Aug. 5, 2012, kicking off a planned two-year surface mission to assess Mars' past and present potential to host microbial life. In addition to its 17 cameras, Curiosity also carries 10 different science instruments to aid its quest.
The six-wheeled robot has already checked off its primary goal. Mission scientists announced in March that a spot near Curiosity's landing site called Yellowknife Bay was indeed habitable long ago.
The foothills of Mount Sharp, which lie about 5 miles (8 km) from Yellowknife Bay as the crow flies, have long been Curiosity's ultimate destination; mission scientists want to read the history of Mars' changing environmental conditions like a book as the rover climbs up the mountain's lower reaches.
Curiosity is wrapping up activities near its landing site and should be ready to start the roughly year-long journey to Mount Sharp in the coming days, mission team members have said.[/spoiler]
It's a bit surreal to think that we have something on a different planet right now.
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That. Is. Beautiful. I love the Universe!
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[b][/b]
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To bad it's fake..... Mars doesn't exist guys stop believing the government.
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Mars looks kinda like Arizona
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Fake and gay, Mars doesn't exist
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I got better pic of Mars on my phone :)
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Saved for when I'm not data roaming
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It just looks like a field of dirt but the thought that simply being there would kill you within seconds is terrifying
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I found a weird lil' metal thing. Must be aliens.
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I don't see any Cabal.
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Edited by Dooodley: 10/10/2014 12:12:05 AMI wonder how many "artifacts" they had to edit out before it was introduced to the public.
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From Opportunity a few years back.
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Horizons of Venus, Earth, the Moon, Mars, and Titan.
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Bump if you saw the Cabal
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This is super cool, I love space stuff. [spoiler]KSP FTW![/spoiler]
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Edited by Onion Beetle: 9/13/2014 6:12:00 PMI always get such a strange feeling knowing that a robot humanity built, is on an entirely different planet, void of all life and vegetation, just wandering and taking photos and samples for years.
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I miss Goat.
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At least they let us view the actual color too, instead of only the red one edited for people who expect it to look like that. Still waiting for a video/gif of it zooming in and finding a cabal in the distance.
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It's interesting how Mars pretty much just looks like an Earth desert.
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Well that probably took a while to download, I hear the wireless internet on Mars has horrible ping.
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This is awesome!
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That's from an entirely different world from our own. Holy shit.
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>you must install silverlight ;_;
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That's amazing! i love science.