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Mars panorama: next best thing to being there

The scene recorded from the mast-mounted color camera includes Opportunity’s own solar arrays and deck in the foreground, providing a sense of sitting on top of the rover and taking in the view.
By Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, California Published: July 9, 2012
Panoramic-Mars
This full-circle scene combines 817 images taken by the panoramic camera (Pancam) on NASA's Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity. It shows the terrain that surrounded the rover while it was stationary for four months of work during its most recent martian winter. Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Cornell/Arizona State Univ.
From fresh rover tracks to an impact crater blasted billions of years ago, a newly completed view from the panoramic camera (Pancam) on NASA's Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity shows the ruddy terrain around the outcrop where the long-lived explorer spent its most recent martian winter.

This scene recorded from the mast-mounted color camera includes the rover's own solar arrays and deck in the foreground, providing a sense of sitting on top of the rover and taking in the view. Its release coincides with two milestones: Opportunity completing its 3,000th martian day on July 2, and NASA continuing past 15 years of robotic presence at Mars. Mars Pathfinder landed July 4, 1997. NASA's Mars Global Surveyor orbiter reached the planet while Pathfinder was still active, and Global Surveyor overlapped the active missions of the Mars Odyssey orbiter and Opportunity, both still in service.

The new panorama is presented in false color to emphasize differences between materials in the scene. It was assembled from 817 component images taken between December 21, 2011, and May 8, 2012, while Opportunity was stationed on an outcrop informally named "Greeley Haven" on a segment of the rim of ancient Endeavour Crater.

"The view provides rich geologic context for the detailed chemical and mineral work that the team did at Greeley Haven over the rover's fifth martian winter, as well as a spectacularly detailed view of the largest impact crater that we've driven to yet with either rover over the course of the mission," said Jim Bell of Arizona State University in Tempe.

Opportunity and its twin, Spirit, landed on Mars in January 2004 for missions originally planned to last three months. NASA's next-generation Mars rover, Curiosity, is on course for landing on Mars next month.

Opportunity's science team chose to call the winter campaign site Greeley Haven in tribute to Ronald Greeley (1939–2011), a team member who taught generations of planetary science students at Arizona State University.

"Ron Greeley was a valued colleague and friend, and this scene, with its beautiful wind-blown drifts and dunes, captures much of what Ron loved about Mars," said Steve Squyres of Cornell University in Ithaca, New York.

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4 stars
SAM NAUMAN from TEXAS said:
Well no pain no gain. If the settlers were too scared to go west, California would still be a prestine land and no film industry or semiconductors. One needs to take chances and Mars is the only planet that looks good in photographs and we can get to, after a fashion. We could live in caves or underground, to avoid the killer radiations and maybe find some hidden water. Of course the thin atmosphere and scarsity of water maybe somewhat inconvenient but we need to go there.
MENACHEM GOREN from MICHIGAN said:
Bill S's comments are sobering and should be remembered by all who think that "terraforming" is just a matter of shifting material (water,etc) from one place to another and getting some plants to grow. As a frequent flyer (and a radiologist), I fully am aware of the increased radiation exposure those who travel (and who fly those planes) are absorbing. That is one reason that I think we should continue to strengthen our unmanned probes, as much as I myself would be thrilled to go into space (and if I weren't so old and attached to family) and be among the pioneers, The images are astounding, aren't they?
GERVAIS ARSENEAULT said:
Nice view but what we should do is terraform the planet using all the debris that are left over in the solar system so that instead of having a poor substitute of the earth we could have something much better for our future generation.

I know that it would take lot of time but Rome was not built in one day this would be truly the first wander created by man in space much better then to waste money on arming the military that don’t know what to do with them self but to go kill other combatant.
4 stars
BILL SIMPSON from LOUISIANA said:
It might not be better being there yourself. Since Mars doesn't have much of a magnetic field and very little atmosphere, it might be quite hazardous to be standing on the surface in your space suit for too long. I can remember reading that 3 of the Apollo astronauts were lucky that they missed getting hit be a big CME that hit a week or so before (or after, it was a long time ago) they were on the Moon. The article said that if they had been out there when it hit, they wouldn't have made it back to Earth alive. That seems a bit extreme to me, but I wouldn't want to go out there and test it out myself. It is easy to forget that the Earth needs a magnetic field AND ozone layer to sustain all but the most primitive life. Get rid of only the ozone layer, and the surface will be sterilized in one month. That is hard to visualize until you get a bad sunburn if you are fair skinned. And that pain and blistered skin is WITH an ozone layer! Without it, you would probably be fatally burned in 10 minutes.
While Mars is a lot farther from the Sun than we are, getting hit just right, or should I say, just wrong, by a big CME might prove hazardous. Even if you only got a moderate case of radiation poisoning, Mars isn't exactly the place where you want to get sick at all. No ER with IVs and transfusions, or antibiotics, or whatever else you might need, out there. Two things come into my warped mind - kidney stones (one almost killed me) and a ruptured appendix. Take plenty of opium products if you volunteer, just in case. No recreational use is allowed. You might end up in orbit around Jupiter. They say the radiation around it is really bad.
I wonder if that next rover will land in one piece? It is getting close. NASA has a little graphic on their site. Check out how distorted the orbits of the planets are. It makes me think of ice ages with woolly mammoths and cold people in animal skins carrying spears. No ER back then either. Bummer.
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