Images of Gale #28

Scaled Image

Image Credit: NASA/JPL/ASU

About this image

During the month of April Mars will be in conjunction relative to the Earth. This means the Sun is in the line-of-sight between Earth and Mars, and communication between the two planets is almost impossible. For conjunction, the rovers and orbiting spacecraft at Mars continue to operate, but do not send the data to Earth. This recorded data will be sent to Earth when Mars moves away from the sun and the line-of-sight between Earth and Mars is reestablished. During conjunction the THEMIS image of the day will be a visual tour of Gale Crater, the location of the newest rover Curiosity.

Moving eastward across the southern part of Gale Crater, this image shows the easternmost arc of the channel deposit at the far left edge. Towards the bottom of the frame are sand dunes. Unlike the dunes on the western and eastern sides of Mt. Sharp, these dunes are located near the rim, rather than margin of Mt. Sharp.

Please see the THEMIS Data Citation Note for details on crediting THEMIS images. 

Context

Image ID: 
V37660002 (View data in Mars Image Explorer)
-5.841
137.501
37660
2010-06-11 04:38
Mon, 2013-05-13
VIS
1024 pixels (18 km)
3648 pixels (64 km)
0.017577 km/pixel
0.017705 km/pixel

Downloads

PNG | JPEG (high res) | JPEG (reduced res) | PDF | TIFF