‘Float rocks,’ sand ripples, and vast distances are among the sights to see in the latest high-resolution panorama by the six-wheeled scientist.
The imaging team of NASA’s
Perseverance Mars rover took advantage of clear skies on the Red Planet to
capture one of the sharpest panoramas of its mission so far. Visible in the
mosaic, which was stitched together from 96 images taken at a location the science
team calls “Falbreen,” are a rock that appears to lie on top of a sand ripple,
a boundary line between two geologic units, and hills as distant as 40 miles
(65 kilometers) away. The enhanced-color version shows the Martian sky to be
remarkably clear and deceptively blue, while in the natural-color version, it’s
reddish.
“Our bold push for human space
exploration will send astronauts back to the Moon,” said Sean Duffy, acting
NASA administrator. “Stunning vistas like that of Falbreen, captured by our
Perseverance rover, are just a glimpse of what we’ll soon witness with our own
eyes. NASA’s groundbreaking missions, starting with Artemis, will propel our
unstoppable journey to take human space exploration to the Martian surface.
NASA is continuing to get bolder and stronger.”
The rover’s Mastcam-Z instrument
captured the images on May 26, 2025, the 1,516th Martian day, or sol, of
Perseverance’s mission, which began in February 2021 on the floor of Jezero Crater.
Perseverance reached the top of the crater rim late last year.
“The relatively dust-free skies
provide a clear view of the surrounding terrain,” said Jim Bell, Mastcam-Z’s
principal investigator at Arizona State University in Tempe. “And in this
particular mosaic, we have enhanced the color contrast, which accentuates the
differences in the terrain and sky.”
Buoyant
Boulder
One detail that caught the science
team’s attention is a large rock that appears to sit atop a dark,
crescent-shaped sand ripple to the right of the mosaic’s center, about 14 feet
(4.4 meters) from the rover. Geologists call this type of rock a “float rock”
because it was more than likely formed someplace else and transported to its
current location. Whether this one arrived by a landslide, water, or wind is
unknown, but the science team suspects it got here before the sand ripple
formed.
The bright white circle just left
of center and near the bottom of the image is an abrasion patch. This is the 43rd rock Perseverance has abraded since it landed on Mars. Two inches (5 centimeters) wide, the shallow
patch is made with the rover’s drill and enables the science team to see what’s beneath the weathered, dusty surface of a rock before deciding to drill a
core sample that would be stored in one of the mission’s titanium sample tubes.
The rover made this abrasion on May
22 and performed proximity science (a detailed analysis of Martian rocks and
soil) with its arm-mounted instruments two days later. The science team wanted
to learn about Falbreen because it’s situated within what may be some of the
oldest terrain Perseverance has ever explored — perhaps even older than Jezero
Crater.
Tracks from the rover’s journey to
the location can be seen toward the mosaic’s right edge. About 300 feet (90
meters) away, they veer to the left, disappearing from sight at a previous
geologic stop the science team calls “Kenmore.”
A little more than halfway up the
mosaic, sweeping from one edge to the other, is the transition from
lighter-toned to darker-toned rocks. This is the boundary line, or contact,
between two geologic units. The flat, lighter-colored rocks nearer to the rover
are rich in the mineral olivine, while the darker rocks farther away are
believed to be much older clay-bearing rocks.
More About
Perseverance
NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory,
which is managed for the agency by Caltech, built and manages operations of the
Perseverance rover on behalf of NASA’s Science Mission Directorate in
Washington, as part of NASA’s Mars Exploration Program portfolio. Arizona State
University leads the operations of the Mastcam-Z instrument, working in
collaboration with Malin Space Science Systems in San Diego, on the design,
fabrication, testing, and operation of the cameras.
For more about Perseverance:
https://science.nasa.gov/mission/mars-2020-perseverance
Source: NASA’s
Perseverance Rover Captures Mars Vista As Clear As Day - NASA


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