When NASA announced that the Opportunity rover stopped working on Mars, the space community mourned the loss of a very tough exploratory machine.
But the Opportunity rover, who used to record all of his route, managed to send a last panorama before it stopped working. NASA released this picture on Tuesday, showing the latest Opportunity position on the end of the Endeavor crater.
The image is composite and consists of 354 pictures that Opportunity sent between May 13 and June 10 using the Pancam instrument.
Below is a section of the panorama image:
NASA lost contact with the rover on 10 June during a major planetary storm.
In the panoramic image compiled by NASA, you can see that the lower left corner of the image is black and white because the storm has risen before Opportunity has had the opportunity to use its color filters in this section.
The dark picture was the final transmission NASA received from the robot.
"This final panorama shows what Opportunity did on such a remarkable exploration mission," he said in a statement. communication John Callas, director of Opportunity; project at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
Right and left is the bottom of the Perseverance cavity while the top of the Endeavor crater remains virgin and unexplored, waiting for visits from future explorers.
Callas also pointed out that the tracks of the rover wheels are shown in the panorama.
See the image at high resolution
https://www.nasa.gov/sites/default/files/thumbnails/image/pia-22908-legacypan-annotated-nasa2.jpg
______________
- Internet Archive and ArchiveTeam store Google+
- Windows 10 build 18855: Improvements to Notepad and Sandbox
- FreeCAD 0.18 free CAD for those who are interested