Live From Mars ended in December 1997. Please see Mars
Team Online for a more recent project about Mars.
Live From Mars Photo Gallery
II. Thumbnails for Pathfinder Photos
-This
image shows the Sojurner Rover conducting its examination of "Barnacle Bill"
with the APXS. The images was taken by the fully deployed (1.8 meters) IMP
camera.
-The two
hills in the distance, approximately one to two kilometers away, have
been dubbed the "Twin Peaks" and are of great interest to Pathfinder scientists
as objects of future study. The white areas on the left hill, called the
"Ski Run" by scientists, may have been formed by hydraulic processes.
-Yogi,
a rock taller than rover Sojourner, is the subject of this image, taken
by the deployed Imager for Mars Pathfinder (IMP) on Sol3. The soil in
the foreground will be the location of multiple soil mechanics experiments
performed by Sojourner's cleated wheels. Pathfinder scientists will be
able to control the force inflicted on the soil beneath the rover's wheels,
giving them insight into the soil's mechanical properties.
-The
latest pinpointing of the Mars Pathfinder landing site.
-The Sojourner
rover and undeployed ramps onboard the Mars Pathfinder spacecraft can
be seen in this image, by the Imager for Mars Pathfinder (IMP) on July
4 (Sol 1). This image has been corrected for the curvature created by
parallax. The microrover Sojourner is latched to the petal, and has not
yet been deployed. The ramps are a pair of deployable metal reels which
will provide a track for the rover as it slowly rolls off the lander,
over the spacecraft's deflated airbags, and onto the surface of Mars.
Pathfinder scientists will use this image to determine whether it is safe
to deploy the ramps. One or both of the ramps will be unfurled, and then
scientists will decide whether the rover will use either the forward or
backward ramp for its descent.(204k)
The latest photos from the Pathfinder are available at the Pathfinder homepage
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