NASA Publishes a Thousand Photos of Mars (engadget.com) 62
An anonymous reader writes from a report via Engadget: NASA has released a huge number of high-resolution photos of Mars captured from the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter's HiRise camera, which has been capturing images of the planet since 2005. The latest dump consists of over a thousand images that can familiarize you with the red planet's many craters, impact sites, dunes, mountains, ice caps and other features. You can view every single photo captured on HiRise's official website. Popular Science mentions that every 26 months or so, Mars and the sun are on the opposite sides of the Earth, allowing MRO to transmit a massive amount of photos from the planet's surface.
Fascinating (Score:2)
I could spend hours staring at these images. Just in time too, I needed a new desktop background!
I look forward to the day we go to Mars and meet up with the various probes and rovers we sent there.
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But how will we ever manage to prove that the moon landings were faked if we never travel to the place on Mars where they were filmed?
I smell a conspiracy! Re: Fascinating (Score:2)
After looking over 200 of those pictures I find no relicts of ancient civilizations and no obvious alien landings ... must be a conspiracy!
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I did find one that contains the complete text of the Wikipedia article on pareidolia.
You really have to squint to see it, though.
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Ah, you joined the conspiracy!! Throwing such complicated words at me! My greek is rusty! You insensitive clot!
Does it not bother you, that they obviously now have even control over wikipedia? Or how else can the text from Mars come into the website?? Hu? Never thought about it?
You see!!
P.S. I guess I have to fetch my 30" screen from my fathers place and then I have to replace my nice Orion Nebula desktop image by some Martian deserts :D
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It will never happen. We're not going to Mars anytime soon. Humans haven't even been to the moon yet. The moon "landings" were filmed on a large set. I know you like to deny science and pretend that humans have been to the moon, but it's a scientific impossibly.
To fake the moon landing they still had to go to the moon and build a huge fuckoff rocket so when people say how did you get there? they can say with that huge fuckoff rocket you watched us launch and then was tracked by a whole bunch of different people.
Simple question (Score:1)
How does this affect anyone? Nobody is going to visit these sand dunes and other topographical features anytime soon. We're not going to Mars for awhile and we're really not making much progress. Even so, it's a dead planet that's not capable of sustaining human life. How does this affect anyone at all? This doesn't affect me and it doesn't affect anyone I know. It's a complete waste of money, time, and effort. Can anyone explain why this matters? Now, I know you'll censor my post to -1 to avoid the questio
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Also, the pictures are really pretty.
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I could get you pretty pictures for vastly cheaper. ;)
Seriously, though, while I think the exploration is great, the fact that NASA has morphed into the All-Mars Channel [scientificamerican.com] is kind of annoying for those of us who prefer other destinations in the solar system (for me, it's Venus and Titan with a little Enceladus, Europa and Io on the side)
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Pretty much every space mission has been a great driver of technology. We invest in space because it returns science, but it also lets us invest big in technologies needed to obtain that science.
You know how Formula 1 / Rally Driving has absolutely NO BEARING on your life? Apart from the airbags. And the automatic seat restraints. And the ABS. And disc brakes. And speed cameras (invented for race track timing). And gearing systems. And fuel efficiencies. And aerodynamics. And tyre design. And...
Ba
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Tang is from China, and Chinese consumers are more into Tang [wikipedia.org] than American consumers are.
The only real question is, when will China start sending Tang into space?
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And if you keep idle and thinking that you should only do things when you have total certainty that they wi
Re:Simple question (Score:4, Insightful)
How does this affect anyone? Nobody is going to visit these sand dunes and other topographical features anytime soon. We're not going to Mars for awhile and we're really not making much progress. Even so, it's a dead planet that's not capable of sustaining human life. How does this affect anyone at all? This doesn't affect me and it doesn't affect anyone I know. It's a complete waste of money, time, and effort. Can anyone explain why this matters? Now, I know you'll censor my post to -1 to avoid the question and pretend like it doesn't exist. But it's an important question: why does this matter at all? Can anyone explain how this affects me? I think not! But I expect to be censored to -1 almost instantly.
Won't affect you for sure. How sad to live a life without a spark of curiosity.
Popular Science is a joke (Score:3)
And doesn't know what they're talking about. As long as Mars isn't obscured by the Sun (which also happens every 26 months) the communications with the probes around Mars continues unhindered.
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Does director of the Planetary Image Research Laboratory Alfred McEwen know what he's talking about? Because he's the one who actually said it.
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it never said that it was impossible at other time (Score:1)
this enables them to get higher bandwidth and the bandwidth is the main limiter of how many images they can transmit from mars, so for these few weeks they get higher bandwidth, which means more images during this time.
how much higher, no idea.
it never said that it was impossible at other times, just that this time every n months they can get "massively" more than normally.
it is too bad the articles stick to terms like massive and hefty and not to actual numbers. the weight of my massive and hefty member mi
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And doesn't know what they're talking about. As long as Mars isn't obscured by the Sun (which also happens every 26 months) the communications with the probes around Mars continues unhindered.
Not to mention the phrase in the summary that's just stupid:
What the hell do they think the 'O' stands for in MRO? If it's orbiting, it's not sending photos from the planet's surface, it's sending them from orbit. It should say "massive amount of photos of the planet's surface", but we can't actually expect the 'editors' around here to do any actual editing.
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You're reading it wrong:
allowing MRO to transmit a massive amount of ( photos from the planet's surface ).
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Correction! Subruled! Overstained!
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Re: my earlier reply - oops, no you're not.
there he is (Score:2)
Pictures OF the planet's surface... (Score:2)
I can see my house! (Score:1)
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Too late (Score:2)
Delays, Delays... (Score:2)
iCloud Leak (Score:1)
High Resolution Images of Cydonia Face (Score:2)
Are missing!