A Martian spacecraft spied a Martian rover rumbling through the red desert.
The Silipnew image captured by NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter — which has orbited Mars since 2006 — shows the space agency's car-sized Curiosity rovertraversing the terrain below as it scales the planet's 3.4-mile-high Mount Sharp.
"The image marks what may be the first time one of the agency’s Mars orbiters has captured the rover driving," NASA said in a statement.
The Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter hosts a powerful camera — called the High Resolution Imaging Experiment, or HIRISE — which can spot surface objects as small as a kitchen table from some 160 to 200 miles above the surface. Here, we see the Curiosity rover as a dark spot, trailed by the robot's tracks as its six metallic wheels crossed the desert.
These tracks, spanning 1,050 feet (320 meters), were created over 11 separate drives. The orbiter spotted the tracks and rover on Feb. 28.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
The Curiosity rover has driven over 21 miles of uneven desert since it landed in 2012, and is now ascending Mount Sharp as it investigates Mars' climatic and geologic past. Curiosity's observations point to a Martian past, billions of years ago, that supported floods, lakes, rivers, and even rain. For example, the rover revealed ripple formations on the surface, which is telltale evidence of small waves breaking on lake shores long ago. Observations like this suggest that Mars once was warm, wet, and quite habitable before it gradually transformed into the extremely dry and frigid desert we see today. (Today, Mars is 1,000 times drierthan the driest desert on Earth.)
Curiosity is currently headed to a new destination on Mount Sharp, a place home to expansive and compelling "boxworks" formations. From space, they look like spiderwebs. They are "believed to have formed when minerals carried by Mount Sharp's last pulses of water settled into fractures in surface rock and then hardened," NASA explained. "As portions of the rock eroded away, what remained were the minerals that had cemented themselves in the fractures, leaving the weblike boxwork."
As NASA's rovers find more and more evidence of past water on Mars, it's becoming clear that Mars was once a planet friendly to life, capable of hosting the temperate environs that could potentially host microbes.
Still today, however, there's no compelling proof that life ever existed on Mars. But there are quite a few Martian robots, both dead and alive.
Topics NASA
China’s Hozon to start operations at a new EV parts plant in September · TechNodeDJI secretly develops eIllegal animal trade uncovered on Facebook in ThailandKuaishou publicly launches its own large language model that takes on GPT3.5 · TechNodeThe Space Between'Shōgun's writers love all the Blackthorne and Yabushige memesGoats like it best when you smile, new research showsTwitter/X might charge all new users a 'small fee' before they can post, like, and replyBayern Munich vs. Arsenal 2024 livestream: Watch Champions League for freeIPhone 16 Pro: New feature will reportedly fix this annoying camera issueAndroid 15: The tech used for Google Pay may be used to charge your devicesHow to mirror iPhone to TVSpaceX nails another rocket landing on its droneship: WatchNYT's The Mini crossword answers for April 17Best fitness tracking deal: Save 10% on a Whoop membership and get the Whoop 4.0 for freePhone maker Honor may soon return to Google Mobile Services · TechNodeBest free online courses from University of MichiganBaidu and automaker Changan build computing center for intelligent driving · TechNodeNetEase Games launches new US studio TGAC Group and Tencent Apple's AirPower fail is an unprecedented embarrassment The Cure's Robert Smith was perfectly blunt in this interview, and the internet loves it Discovery Channel and BBC Studios announce new streaming service Here's how to add captions to your Instagram Stories to make them more accessible FBI reports Chinese embassy robocall scam is back Mom breaks down in tears with daughter after voting for Hillary How to upgrade AirPods for better fit, sound, and performance New 'Game of Thrones' images are all about Daenerys Targaryen The most important buying factors for video Forget AirPower. The MacBook Pro keyboard is the real problem. Intense video shows a vape exploding inside a dude's pocket The Humm.ly app uses music to tune out stressful thoughts 'Sekiro' makes a great case for killing horses A Sega Genesis Mini will hit stores this fall Asteroid Gault is breaking apart as it zooms through the solar system Joe Biden outshines the sun by putting on Ray John Lithgow wants to play Boris Johnson if there's a Brexit film YouTube restricts videos from far Fashion ecommerce star pranks Facebook in the name of tech education 'Fox & Friends' aired a graphic suggesting there are three Mexicos
2.6731s , 10131.5546875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Silip】,Wisdom Convergence Information Network