logo
Amazing space image shows route of Mars rover as it treks across the Red Planet

Amazing space image shows route of Mars rover as it treks across the Red Planet

Independent26-04-2025

NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter just captured its first image of the Curiosity rover driving along the red planet's surface.
The 2,000-pound Mars rover is shown as a dark speck in the bottom center of the picture frame. It leads a long, thin trail of its tracks that stretches 1,050 feet.
The space agency said in a statement that Curiosity's tracks are likely to last there for months before the strong Martian wind erases them.
The line shows the progress Curiosity has made since it arrived on Mars in August of 2012.
The photo was taken using the orbiter's High-Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HiRISE) camera, which snaps an image with the majority of the scene in black and white, and a strip of color down the middle to ensure the best spatial resolution.
'By comparing the time HiRISE took the image to the rover's commands for the day, we can see it was nearly done with a 69-foot drive,' Doug Ellison, Curiosity's planning team chief, noted in a statement.
Curiosity is seen moving toward the base of a steep slope, and has since ascended it.
The orbiter reached Mars orbit in March 2006. It snapped this scene on February 28, or the 4,466th Martian day of the rover's mission.
While the camera has captured Curiosity in color before, the rover happened to fall within the black and white part of the image this time around.
Earlier in the month, the rover began the first of roughly 11 drives, as it slowly trekked from the Gediz Vallis channel to its next stop.
The rover is heading to an area with potential boxwork formations, possibly made by ancient groundwater billions of years ago.
The boxwork pattern is a weblike form of ridges that were captured by NASA's orbiter nearly 20 years ago.
When exactly Curiosity will get there depends on several factors, including how its software navigates the surface and how challenging the terrain is to climb. It's expected, however, to reach the new science location within a month.
'Engineers at NASA's Southern California-based Jet Propulsion Laboratory work with scientists to plan each day's trek,' NASA said.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Chimps share with children sense of curiosity for social interactions
Chimps share with children sense of curiosity for social interactions

BreakingNews.ie

time3 hours ago

  • BreakingNews.ie

Chimps share with children sense of curiosity for social interactions

Chimpanzees share a sense of curiosity with children and enjoy watching social interactions in a similar way, according to a study. An international team of researchers found that chimpanzees and young children prefer to watch videos of social interactions compared to videos of a single individual. Advertisement They also found that young children and male chimpanzees were even willing to give up a treat to watch the videos. The study involved three experiments carried out at the Ngamba Island Chimpanzee Sanctuary in Uganda and at Oakland Zoo and the Lawrence Hall of Science in California. The researchers built two 'curiosity boxes' which held tablets playing different videos with one showing social interaction such as grooming, playing or arguing with the other showing just an individual acting alone. In the first experiment involving chimpanzees and children aged between four and six, they found that both species spent more time watching the social scenes. Advertisement In the second, the participants had to choose between a reward – jackfruit seeds for chimps and marbles for children – for the chance to watch a social video. They found that some younger children and male chimpanzees would choose the video over the treat. For the third experiment, they tested whether the participants preferred watching positive interactions such as grooming or play or negative ones such as conflict. They found the chimpanzees did not appear to show a strong preference, while the humans did. Advertisement The researcher said boys as they got older preferred negative scenes while the girls were more interested in positive ones. Dr Esther Herrman, of the University of Portsmouth's Centre for Comparative and Evolutionary Psychology, who co-authored the research, said: 'This study tells us that curiosity about what others are doing – what you might call being a bit nosy – starts young and runs deep. 'It's probably something that helps not only us but also our closest living relatives to survive and thrive in complex social groups.' She added: 'This kind of social curiosity is actually really important for learning about our environment, making decisions and building relationships.' Advertisement The researchers say the study results, published in Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, indicate that human curiosity could be a trait inherited millions of years ago from a common ancestor we had with chimpanzees. Lead author, Dr Laura Simone Lewis at the University of California in Santa Barbara, said: 'Our strong interest in the lives of others – think gossip magazines and celebrity shows – seems to have deep evolutionary roots in our great ape lineage.'

Ocean off Shetland coast turns green due to natural phenomenon
Ocean off Shetland coast turns green due to natural phenomenon

The National

time3 hours ago

  • The National

Ocean off Shetland coast turns green due to natural phenomenon

Nasa's Earth Observatory published the photo of the ocean with a burst of green colour in the middle, and the Fair Isle is visible at the top left corner, earlier this month. According to the American space agency, a large algae bloom, phytoplankton, amassed in the waters near Scotland's Shetland Islands. Scientists added that despite their microscopic size, the plant-like organisms can become visible in satellite images when they explode in numbers, forming what is known as a phytoplankton 'bloom.' READ MORE: Shetlanders raise £10k for Gaza charities through pop-up art exhibition The bloom likely contains coccolithophores as well, notably Gephrocapsa Huxleyi, which is armoured with plates of highly reflective calcium carbonate, researchers added. However, scientists will need water samples to confirm the types of phytoplankton present. (Image: NASA) Nasa said such blooms do commonly occur in the northern North Sea, but on rarer occasions, they can turn up in Scottish coastal waters. The OLI-2 (Operational Land Imager-2) on Landsat 9 captured this image on June 13, 2025, and the part of the bloom shown in the picture spanned a width of around 160 kilometres (100 miles).

Ocean off Shetland coast turns turquoise due to natural phenomenon
Ocean off Shetland coast turns turquoise due to natural phenomenon

The National

time5 hours ago

  • The National

Ocean off Shetland coast turns turquoise due to natural phenomenon

NASA's Earth Observatory published the photo of the ocean with a burst of green colour in the middle, and the Fair Isle is visible at the top left corner, earlier this month. According to the American space agency, a large algae bloom, phytoplankton, amassed in the waters near Scotland's Shetland Islands. Scientists added that despite their microscopic size, the plant-like organisms can become visible in satellite images when they explode in numbers, forming what is known as a phytoplankton 'bloom.' READ MORE: Shetlanders raise £10k for Gaza charities through pop-up art exhibition The bloom likely contains coccolithophores as well, notably Gephrocapsa Huxleyi, which is armoured with plates of highly reflective calcium carbonate, researchers added. However, scientists will need water samples to confirm the types of phytoplankton present. (Image: NASA) NASA said such blooms do commonly occur in the northern North Sea, but on rarer occasions, they can turn up in Scottish coastal waters. The OLI-2 (Operational Land Imager-2) on Landsat 9 captured this image on June 13, 2025, and the part of the bloom shown in the picture spanned a width of around 160 kilometers (100 miles).

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store