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Still Shining After All This Time (Polar)

Jet Propulsion Laboratory https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/ Jan. 4, 2006
This self-portrait of NASA's Mars Exploration Rover Spirit taken in Aug 27, 2005 shows its solar panels still gleaming in Martian sunlight and carrying only a thin veneer of dust two years after the rover landed and began exploring the red planet.

This bird's-eye view combines a self-portrait of the spacecraft deck and a panoramic mosaic of the Martian surface as viewed by NASA's Mars Exploration Rover Spirit. The rover's solar panels are still gleaming in the sunlight, having acquired only a thin veneer of dust two years after the rover landed and commenced exploring the red planet. Spirit captured this 360-degree panorama on the summit of "Husband Hill" inside Mars' Gusev Crater. During the period from Spirit's Martian days, or sols, 583 to 586 (Aug. 24 to 27, 2005), the rover's panoramic camera acquired the hundreds of individual frames for this largest panorama ever photographed by Spirit.

This image is an approximately true-color rendering using the camera's 750-nanometer, 530-nanometer and 480-nanometer filters for the Martian surface, and the 600-nanometer, 530-nanometer, and 480-nanometer filters for the rover deck. This polar projection is a compromise between a cylindrical projection ( http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/gallery/press/spirit/20051205a.html; https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA03610), which provides the best view of the terrain, and a vertical projection, which provides the best view of the deck but distorts the terrain far from the rover. The view is presented with geometric seam correction.

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Mission
Target
  • Mars
Spacecraft
  • Spirit
Instrument
  • Panoramic Camera
Credit
NASA/JPL-Caltech/Cornell

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