Interview: Jim Bell on the process of taking pictures from the Mars rover SpiritIRA FLATOW
Vote up the space selfies that are out of this world. As it stands today, everyone has taken a selfie - even your grandma. And as cool as your grandma’s selfies may be, they’ll never stack up to the space selfies taken by astronauts or the Mars Rover. Astronaut selfies are part...
I am an astronaut, last year I was assigned to go to Mars exploration. I aboard spacecraft spent two weeks at the time taken to reach Mars, the Mars rover landing, I discovered that there was filled with dust. But I am very excited, and I photographed the many photographs of Mars. ...
Vote up the space selfies that are out of this world. As it stands today, everyone has taken a selfie - even your grandma. And as cool as your grandma’s selfies may be, they’ll never stack up to the space selfies taken by astronauts or the Mars Rover. Astronaut selfies are part...
Behold Curiosity's first color image of the Martian landscape, looking north from the rover toward the north wall and rim of the Gale Crater that Curiosity now calls home. The picture was taken by the Mars Hand Lens Imager (MAHLI), still protected for the time being by its transparent dust...
(1)细节理解题。根据第一段The Mars rover(探测器)Zhurong has traveled more than 1.9 km since it first set its wheels on the surface of the planet in May the year before last year.(火星探测器祝融号自前年5月首次在火星表面着陆以来,已经飞行了超过1.9公里
In search for evidence of water on Mars, Odyssey - a robotic spacecraft that orbited Mars - captured images which scientists believe indicates a history of flood waters with peak volumes many times the flow of today's Mississippi River. The teardrop shaped land trailing off from the craters...
NASA's Mars Science Laboratory, or Curiosity rover, is scheduled to land on the Red Planet on Aug. 5, 2012. Here's how the rover will touch down on the planet's surface.
Earth seen above Mars' horizon.Credit: NASA / JPL / Cornell / Texas AM NASA's Spirit rover, which explored the Martian surface for six years and found evidence of a once watery planet, snapped this historic image in 2004. "This is the first image ever taken of Earth from the surface ...
VIRCAM allowed the astronomers to capture light from deep within the clouds of dust that are all less than 1,500 light-years away, and thus glimpse infants stars that had never been seen before. "The dust obscures these young stars from our view, making them virtually invisible to our eye...