Click on the picture to embiggen.
It is from the Astronomy Picture of the Day (APOD).
By planet Earth’s calendar, the Curiosity Mars Rover reached its 3rd anniversary on the surface of the Red Planet on August 6. To celebrate, gaze across this dramatic panoramic view of diverse terrain typical of the rover’s journey to the layered slopes of Aeolis Mons, also known as Mount Sharp. Recorded with Curiosity’s Mast Camera instrument, the scene looks south across gravel, sand ripples, and boulders toward rounded buttes. In the background, higher layers at left are toward the southeast, with southwest at panorama right. The individual images composing the view were taken on Curiosity’s mission sols (martian days) 952 and 953 since the rover’s landing on August 6, 2012.
What’s on your mind?
I am hopeful that we will soon have nuclear powered rockets and we will get a livable earth-class planet in its range. We may not need to remain tied to this planet. That is my hope.
Our very own MoM updates available at: http://www.isro.gov.in/pslv-c25-mars-orbiter-mission/first-image-taken-mcc-after-mom-comes-out-of-blackout
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