|
|
|
Opportunity beams back photos ( 2004-01-26 11:35) (NASA)
This 'postcard' from the panoramic camera on
the Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity shows a view of the martian landscape
southwest of the rover. The image was taken in the late martian afternoon
at Meridiani Planum on Mars, where Opportunity landed on January 24,
2004 and was released by NASA on January 25. [NASA] |
This image, taken by the Mars Exploration
Rover Opportunity's panoramic camera made available on Sunday, shows where
the rover's airbags left impressions in the martian soil. The drag marks
were made after the rover successfully landed at Meridiani Planum and
its airbags were retracted. The rover can be seen in the foreground.
The unmanned, six-wheeled rover landed at 9:05 pm PST January 24, 2004
in Meridiani Planum, NASA said. [NASA] |
This image, taken by the Mars Exploration
Rover Opportunity's hazard-identification camera shortly after the
rover successfully landed at Meridiani Planum on Mars, shows the view from
behind the rover. NASA 's Opportunity rover zapped its first photos of Mars
to Earth on January 25, 2004, delighting and puzzling scientists just
hours after the spacecraft bounced to a landing. [NASA] |
This color image shows the martian landscape
at Meridiani Planum, where the Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity
successfully landed at 9:05 pm PST on Saturday. This is one of the first
images beamed back to Earth from the rover shortly after it touched down.
The image was captured by the rover's panoramic camera.
[NASA] |
US Principal Investigator from Cornell
University Dr Steve Squyres describes what they have found from the
latest images from Mars during a news conference at the Jet Propulsion
Laboratory in Pasadena, California January 25, 2004. Behind Squyres is a photo
of the surface of Mars that was beamed back to Earth by the Mars Rover Opportunity,
which landed late January 24, 2004.
[Reuters] |
|
|
|
|
Go to Another
Section |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Article Tools |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|