![RIGHT SIDEBAR TOP AD](/site/uploads/2023/Apr/04/ad12.jpg)
One of the big pushes for some when it comes to setting up *** colony on Mars is that earth is having trouble from climate change to microplastics. Getting in our water supply. Humanity has really trashed the place up but now the United Nations Office of Outer Space Affairs says we're also junking up space and especially places like the red planet. Mankind has been exploring Mars for some 50 years now. The conversation reports that includes having sent 18 man made crafts there and none were ever planned to come back. That means that once their life cycle in the neighboring world is done, they're left there to die and become essentially litter on the unspoiled rusty landscape, but it's not just the rovers and mission based machinery, but also the peripheral debris caused by their landing crafts, parachutes and other non mission gear that results from getting our robots and instrumentation to Mars. And we've even found some of that in unexpected areas already swept surprisingly far away by winds. Now NASA is beginning to track all of the debris. It can hopefully able to prevent trashing Mars and of course, keeping perseverance from getting tangled in our own space, trash.
Curiosity rover captures dramatic new portrait of the Martian landscape
The Curiosity rover has captured a stunning new mosaic that reveals the dramatic, colorful hues of morning and afternoon light on the surface of Mars.Video above: Experts warn that humans are trashing mars, could jeopardize future missions The robotic explorer used its black-and-white navigation cameras to take panoramas of the Marker Band Valley on April 8 before leaving the site. One panorama was taken at 9:20 a.m., while the other was taken at 3:40 p.m., both local Mars time.The black-and-white panoramas captured how different the landscape looks at two different times of day, and color was added in post-processing by a team at NASA. The blue light signifies the morning, while the yellow light indicates the afternoon.The image is similar to another postcard taken by Curiosity in November 2021.“Anyone who’s been to a national park knows the scene looks different in the morning than it does in the afternoon,” said Curiosity engineer Doug Ellison at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, in a statement. “Capturing two times of day provides dark shadows because the lighting is coming in from the left and the right, like you might have on a stage — but instead of stage lights, we’re relying on the Sun.”Ellison, who serves as the Mars exploration team’s lead on rover cams, devised the plan for Curiosity to take the panoramas and processed the images to create the new mosaic.Curiosity has been exploring the foothills of the 3-mile-tall (5-kilometer) Mount Sharp at the center of Gale Crater since it landed in 2012. In the image, Marker Band Valley can be seen beyond the rover’s tracks, where the robotic explorer unexpectedly discovered evidence of an ancient lake.The shadows are more pronounced in the image because the panoramas were taken during winter at Gale Crater, when airborne dust is closer to the surface.“Mars’ shadows get sharper and deeper when there’s low dust and softer when there’s lots of dust,” Ellison said.
The Curiosity rover has captured a stunning new mosaic that reveals the dramatic, colorful hues of morning and afternoon light on the surface of Mars.
Video above: Experts warn that humans are trashing mars, could jeopardize future missions
The robotic explorer used its black-and-white navigation cameras to take panoramas of the Marker Band Valley on April 8 before leaving the site. One panorama was taken at 9:20 a.m., while the other was taken at 3:40 p.m., both local Mars time.
The black-and-white panoramas captured how different the landscape looks at two different times of day, and color was added in post-processing by a team at NASA. The blue light signifies the morning, while the yellow light indicates the afternoon.
The image is similar to another postcard taken by Curiosity in November 2021.
“Anyone who’s been to a national park knows the scene looks different in the morning than it does in the afternoon,” said Curiosity engineer Doug Ellison at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, in a statement. “Capturing two times of day provides dark shadows because the lighting is coming in from the left and the right, like you might have on a stage — but instead of stage lights, we’re relying on the Sun.”
Ellison, who serves as the Mars exploration team’s lead on rover cams, devised the plan for Curiosity to take the panoramas and processed the images to create the new mosaic.
Curiosity has been exploring the foothills of the 3-mile-tall (5-kilometer) Mount Sharp at the center of Gale Crater since it landed in 2012. In the image, Marker Band Valley can be seen beyond the rover’s tracks, where the robotic explorer unexpectedly discovered evidence of an ancient lake.
The shadows are more pronounced in the image because the panoramas were taken during winter at Gale Crater, when airborne dust is closer to the surface.
“Mars’ shadows get sharper and deeper when there’s low dust and softer when there’s lots of dust,” Ellison said.