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Sol 4425: Right Navigation Camera, Cylindrical Projection

A grayscale panorama of the Martian surface, possibly at night or in twilight, shows a wide field of flat, dark gray terrain dotted with flat, angular, medium-sized rocks, lighter gray, stretching into the distance where a pyramid-shaped hill rises from the ground on the horizon, just to the right of image center. A bright light behind the hill illuminates a small part of the sky. Portions of the Curiosity rover are visible at the bottom of the image, including a wheel visible in the lower left of the frame, and two others in the lower right.A grayscale panorama of the Martian surface, possibly at night or in twilight, shows a wide field of flat, dark gray terrain dotted with flat, angular, medium-sized rocks, lighter gray, stretching into the distance where a pyramid-shaped hill rises from the ground on the horizon, just to the right of image center. A bright light behind the hill illuminates a small part of the sky. Portions of the Curiosity rover are visible at the bottom of the image, including a wheel visible in the lower left of the frame, and two others in the lower right.
NASA/JPL-Caltech
January 17, 2025
Credit NASA/JPL-Caltech
Historical Date January 17, 2025
Language
  • english

NASA’s Mars rover Curiosity took 17 images in Gale Crater using its mast-mounted Right Navigation Camera (Navcam) to create this mosaic. The seam-corrected mosaic provides a 282-degree cylindrical projection panorama of the Martian surface centered at 276 degrees azimuth (measured clockwise from north). Curiosity took the images on January 17, 2025, Sol 4425 of the Mars Science Laboratory mission at drive 1326, site number 112. The local mean solar time for the image exposures was from 3 PM to 4 PM. Each Navcam image has a 45 degree field of view.