For good reason,Woman Who Does as Her Oppa Wishes Mars has earned the nickname the Red Planet: Its ruddy color comes from high levels of oxidized iron, the same crusty stuff people observe on old, corroded metal.
But a new mosaic image of Mars shows Earth's neighbor as much more than a rusty sphere. With veins of contrasting colors running through it, you can start to see the world the way it probably once was — more Earth-like, laced with oceans and rivers rushing over its surface.
The European Space Agency produced this new photo using the High Resolution Stereo Camera (HRSC) on Mars Express, a spacecraft that has been orbiting the planet for two decades. The agency released the image to celebrate its 20 years of science. Gathering 90 images at altitudes of 2,500 to 6,400 miles above Mars, it captured swaths of terrain. The team then put the pictures together to make a global view.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Mars' changing atmosphere, sometimes rather opaque, has made it difficult to see the planet's surface colors from space in the past.
"Dust scatters and reflects light, causing colours to shift between images," the space agency said in a recent post. And when the mismatched pieces are put together, according to ESA, the result is usually patchy looking.
To overcome the color variation problem, engineers color-referenced every individual image, allowing them to keep each color intact and reveal a more complex and accurate view of Mars than has been possible before. Along with red, the planet shows areas of blue, gray, and black.
The large blue-toned areas get their hue from gray-black sands from volcanic activity. The wind carries the sand to form dark, imposing dunes that have been pockmarked with craters. The material weathered by water actually tends to look lighter, scientists say. Clay and sulfates, the two most common water-worn minerals present, indicate where liquid water flowed.
Want more scienceand tech news delivered straight to your inbox? Sign up for Mashable's Light Speed newslettertoday.
The mosaic also captures immense detail in Valles Marineris, the biggest canyon in the solar system. The colossal gash stretches over 2,500 miles, 10 times longer than the Grand Canyon. In this region, a thin layer of dark sand covers salty minerals. But this close look gives scientists a chance to appreciate the color variations, with the brighter material peeking out.
For years researchers have found little signs that Mars used to be bathed in creeks and lakes. Martian water chiseled sinuous river beds and deep ravines into the ground now hollowed out and dusty. In the first year of NASA's Curiosity rover expedition, it sent home pictures of a stream bed, eroded and dry, with bountiful round pebbles, similar to those formed on Earth from flowing water.
The obsessive search for past water on Mars, a frozen desert, is a quest to prove the Red Planet was once wet, warm, and more Earth-like. Lakes and oceans could have been a key ingredient for supporting primitive Martian life, once upon a time, but this doesn't outright mean the environment was habitable.
By exploring former water sites, NASA hopes to find evidence of ancient microbial life. Earlier this year, the U.S. space agency found its clearest evidence yet of ancient water: rocks carved with ripples, the telltale fingerprints of water waves.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Mars Express has been observing the Red Planet since 2003. Over that time, it has studied the Martian surface, minerals, and its ever-changing atmosphere. It has orbited Mars 24,510 times and has taken nearly 7,000 pictures.
Through its lens, the spacecraft camera has captured wind-whipped ridges, sinkholes, craters, fault lines, river channels, and ancient lava pools.
In a video shared on Twitter by the German Aerospace Center, which provided the camera, planetary scientist Daniela Tirsch said the team hopes to continue working with the instrument over the next three to five years.
"I've fallen in love with our beautiful images over and over each day," she said.
Previous:Blood Will Out
Magic mushrooms ease anxiety in cancer patients, studies showGame of Thrones actor Jerome Flynn will advise a vegan crypto projectArianna Huffington is now selling ridiculous things like phone bedsReddit user allowed to remain anonymous following court ruling'John Wick 3' fight scenes, ranked by animal involvementWhy I hate the new Instagram Stories cameraA sea of children dancing to 'Old Town Road' is the best thing you'll see today10 questions for King Bran after that 'Game of Thrones' finaleWhy powerful thunderstorms look like they’re boiling from spaceYou're blocked! How to get The Donald to block you on TwitterClever scientists catch up with rogue, ozone layerHow to fix your TV settings to make your screen look perfectAmazon prevails in battle with South American countries for ‘.amazon’ domain nameSpidering lightning and red skies are the ominous weather 2016 deservesGoogle stored some users' passwords in plain text for yearsMike Pence's neighbors are calling him out with rainbow flagsApple releases 2019 MacBook Pros with 'improved' keyboardsClever scientists catch up with rogue, ozone layerNo one agrees on what iMessage Tapbacks actually meanMike Pence's neighbors are calling him out with rainbow flags The public doesn't agree with Elon Musk's 'freedom of speech' Twitter crusade Watch Elon Musk's TED talk, in which he explains his Twitter bid Stephen King has strong words following Trump's tweet about Omarosa Meta will stop users from sharing private residential information Netflix introduces 'two thumbs up' in attempt to refine its recommendation algorithm Cop stops driverless car, driverless car seems to flee, confusion ensues A bird pooped on someone's laptop then died in front of them How to change Instagram Story background color 'Our Flag Means Death' heals the wounds of SuperWhoLocke queerbaiting J.K. Rowling's latest Trump burn is one of her most brutal so far The website for Vermont's 14 No, Mike Pence’s website has not been hacked. Please take a deep breath. WhatsApp's new 'Communities' messaging tool sounds a lot like Slack Yeah, Walter White and Jesse Pinkman will be in 'Better Call Saul' final season How to use VPN on an iPhone How to make a playlist on YouTube Sophie Turner absolutely destroys tweet about her crying on Joe Jonas' birthday with pure fire Coach Taylor to Tim Riggins: 'Friday Night Lights' crushes, ranked Woman says her ex Angela from 'The Office' called out her nephew for his Tinder photo
2.2702s , 10131.2265625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Woman Who Does as Her Oppa Wishes】,Evergreen Information Network