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jakeXT

(10,575 posts)
Sat Aug 3, 2013, 01:08 PM Aug 2013

Curiosity takes picture and video of Mars moons

Take a look at this amazing photo, captured by Curiosity from the surface of Mars on sol 351 (August 1, 2013). It is unmistakably Phobos. And take my word for it when I tell you that the other bright blob is Deimos. Curiosity caught them both in one shot!



But that's not all. This is the only full-resolution image of both moons that I've seen on the raw image website yet. But there are thumbnails, lots of them, showing that Curiosity got video. Video! Here's an animation of those thumbnails that should whet your appetite for what will be coming once the data finally squeeze through the pipeline to Earth. Deimos is almost lost in the JPEG compression artifacts, but you can see it at the center, and watch Phobos actually cross right in front of it. I've elnarged it by a factor of three without resampling -- these are all the pixels we have right now, but be patient; we'll get more.





http://www.planetary.org/blogs/emily-lakdawalla/2013/08030836-curiosity-mutual.html

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Curiosity takes picture and video of Mars moons (Original Post) jakeXT Aug 2013 OP
Attribution: Emily Lackdawalla's Blog. longship Aug 2013 #1
Video jakeXT Aug 2013 #2

longship

(40,416 posts)
1. Attribution: Emily Lackdawalla's Blog.
Sat Aug 3, 2013, 01:18 PM
Aug 2013

On the Plantary Society Web Site

There is also their weekly radio program, Planetary Radio which is damned good. (Available as a podcast.)

R&K

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