urbanists.social is one of the many independent Mastodon servers you can use to participate in the fediverse.
We're a server for people who like bikes, transit, and walkable cities. Let's get to know each other!

Server stats:

530
active users

#solarrocks

1 post1 participant0 posts today

Another day on Mars, another drive for Perseverance rover. This drive was completed during mission sol 1472 April 11, 2025). Arriving at site 72.0.

Attached is a roughly processed / cropped post-drive L-NavCam composite image from 6 tiles, the drive data, and screen capture of the updated mission map. The traverse distance was 14.5 meters (47.5 ft) due west. Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech/UofA.

Curiosity rover used its arm mounted MAHLI camera to capture close up images of one of the knobby/bumpy rocks in its workspace on sol 4479. Attached is an animated GIF using three focus stacked images that were acquired by moving the rover's robotic arm between images. The camera standoff was 25/30cm from the target which provides us with an scene width of ~15cm. Credits:NASA/JPL-Caltech

#Mars#Curiosity#MSL

Another day, another drive for Perseverance rover. This short drive was completed during mission sol 1445 (March 14, 2025). Arriving at site 70.0.

Attached is a roughly processed post-drive 4-tile L-NavCam image, the drive data and screen capture of the mission map. The dogleg traverse distance was just 6.45 meters (~21 ft) west-northwest. Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech/UofA.

Curiosity Rover: A 'Bump' on sol 4478 'to get the rover in an ideal position to analyze and characterize a rock with a knobby/bumpy texture that appears quite different from the typical surrounding bedrock'. Post drive NavCam, Drive data & Traverse map (with scale). Image Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech

#Mars#Curiosity#MSL

Curiosity's latest workspace imaged on mission sol 4471 (March 5, 2025 ) after a drive of 19.6 meters (64.4 ft). This composite image is roughly assembled from 15 overlapping L-MastCam subframe images, the images were Bayer reconstructed prior to assembly.
Image Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS/fredk

#Mars#Curiosity#MSL

Curiosity continues to make steady progress through the upper sulfate unit and toward its next major science waypoint. The drive of ~19.6 meters (64ft) is shown on the map, with the details in the table. The monochrome image from one of its NavCam's shows the rover's new robotic arm workspace that it reached on sol 4471 (March 5, 2025) Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech/UofA. #Mars #Curiosity #MSL #MarsRover #NASA #Science #Space #Exploration #Solarrocks #data #map

Curiosity Rover's latest workspace after a drive to the south of ~37 meters (120 ft) during Sol 4469. By the end the drive it had climbed nearly 4 meters (13 ft). The detailed data from the drive are attached as is a screenshot from the mission traverse map (with scale) and a post-drive L-NavCam image featuring the robotic arm workspace.

#Mars#Curiosity#MSL

Curiosity's latest workspace imaged on mission sol 4464 (February 25, 2025 ) after a drive of ~26 meters (85 feet). . The workspace covers an area about 2 meters (~6.5 feet) across, and shows details within the workspace accessible to the instruments and tools on the rover's 2 meter-long robotic arm. Also attached is the drive data and an updated map with scale.
Image Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS/fredk

#Mars#Curiosity#MSL

Meanwhile on Mars - We now have the Bayer reconstructed left side mast camera images of the sol 4462 robotic arm workspace (reached February 23, 2025). Attached is a rough mosaic of those 15 overlapping frames, the drive data and a screen capture of the mission map (with scale) at the new location. The drive data is imported from JPL's waypoints URL

#Mars #Curiosity #MSL #MarsRover #NASA #Science #Space #Exploration #Solarrocks #Data #map #LibreOffice

Credits: NASA.JPL-Caltech/MSSS/UofA/fredk

Meanwhile on Mars - Curiosity rover continues its traverse towards the west-southwest with another drive of ~35 meters. Attached is a post-drive left side navigation camera image of its new workspace, the drive data and a screen capture of the mission map (with scalebar), the sol 4452 traverse is highlighted by a yellow path.

Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech/UofA

#Mars#Curiosity#MSL