NASA's Mars Rover Opportunity catches
its own late-afternoon shadow in this dramatically lit view eastward across
Endeavour Crater on Mars.
The rover used the panoramic camera
(Pancam) between about 4:30 and 5:00 p.m. local Mars time to record images
taken through different filters and combined into this mosaic view.
Most of the component images were
recorded during the 2,888th Martian day, or sol, of Opportunity's work on Mars
(March 9, 2012). At that time, Opportunity was spending low-solar-energy weeks
of the Martian winter at the Greeley Haven outcrop on the Cape York segment of
Endeavour's western rim. In order to give the mosaic a rectangular aspect, some
small parts of the edges of the mosaic and sky were filled in with parts of an
image acquired earlier as part of a 360-degree panorama from the same location.
Opportunity has been studying the
western rim of Endeavour Crater since arriving there in August 2011. This
crater spans 14 miles (22 kilometers) in diameter, or about the same area as
the city of Seattle. This is more than 20 times wider than Victoria Crater, the
largest impact crater that Opportunity had previously examined. The interior
basin of Endeavour is in the upper half of this view.
The mosaic combines about a dozen images
taken through Pancam filters centered on wavelengths of 753 nanometers (near
infrared), 535 nanometers (green) and 432 nanometers (violet). The view is
presented in false color to make some differences between materials easier to
see, such as the dark sandy ripples and dunes on the crater's distant floor.
Image
credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Cornell/Arizona State Univ.
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