Why The ‘Happy Face Crater’ on Mars Is Happier Than Ever0
- From Around the Web, Space
- February 2, 2021
Who has an even bigger grin than ten years ago? This goofy-looking crater on Mars.
Who has an even bigger grin than ten years ago? This goofy-looking crater on Mars.
Researchers are “reading the rocks” and the history they show on Mars to paint a picture of when the planet supported liquid water on its surface billions of years ago.
Want to look inside a deep, dark pit on Mars? The scientists and engineers from the NASA’s HiRISE Camera on board the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter have done just that.
The images taken by the HiRISE camera on board the MRO probe in orbit on Mars, seem to indicate intelligent structures and subdivisions designed in such a way that they seem to be of logical proportions of the basic dimensions.
NASA’s newly arrived Mars lander has been spotted by one its orbiting cousins.
It’s been 107 agonizing days since NASA last heard from Opportunity, raising fears that the 14-year-old rover has finally expired after being battered by a massive dust storm.
If it’s quiet solitude and beauty you seek, there is no better place than the surface of Mars.
These Martian gullies may be linear, but they’re far from straight.
A cluster of recent meteorite impacts on Mars have been found, highlighting a deadly hazard for future Mars colonists.
Mars is still a strange and different world, and here are five strange things that NASA has taken pictures of about the red planet.