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Sol 4718: 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 multiple jagged, medium-sized rocks stretching into the distance, where hills rise from the ground on the horizon. At center-right, a bright light behind a hill illuminates part of the sky, while the rest of the scene is fairly dark. Portions of the Curiosity rover are visible along the bottom of the image, including wheels in the lower-right corner.
NASA/JPL-Caltech
January 7, 2026
Credit NASA/JPL-Caltech
Historical Date November 14, 2025
Language
  • english

NASA's Mars rover Curiosity took 34 images in Gale Crater using its mast-mounted Right Navigation Camera (Navcam) to create this mosaic. The seam-corrected mosaic provides a 360-degree cylindrical projection panorama of the Martian surface centered at 216 degrees azimuth (measured clockwise from north). Curiosity took the images on November 14, 2025, Sols 4718-4711 of the Mars Science Laboratory mission at drive 82, site number 120. The local mean solar time for the image exposures was from 1 PM to 3 PM. Each Navcam image has a 45 degree field of view.