Curiosity sends postcard from Mars

Fri, Aug 10, 2012, 01:00

   

The science rover Curiosity took a break from instrument checks on its third full day on Mars to beam back more pictures from the Red Planet, including its first self-portrait and a 360-degree colour view of the Gale Crater.

The panoramic mosaic, comprising 130 separate images that Curiosity captured with its newly activated navigation cameras, shows a rust-coloured, pebble-strewn expanse stretching to a wall of the crater's rim in one direction and a tall mound of layered rock in another.

That formation, named Mount Sharp, stands at the centre of the vast, ancient impact crater and several miles from where Curiosity touched down at the end of an eight-month voyage across 566 million km of space.

The layers of exposed rock are thought to hold a wealth of Mars' geologic history, making it the main target of exploration for scientists who will use the rover to seek evidence of whether the planet most similar to Earth might now harbour or once have hosted key ingredients for microbial life.