AP/ August 9, 2012, 10:19 AM

Curiosity rover sends back first 360-degree color photos of Mars

A section of the first 360-degree color panorama taken on Mars by NASA's Curiosity rover. The panorama was stitched together using thumbnail images taken by the rover's mast camera.

A section of the first 360-degree color panorama taken on Mars by NASA's Curiosity rover. The panorama was stitched together using thumbnail images taken by the rover's mast camera. / AP Photo/NASA

PASADENA, Calif. (AP) - The Curiosity rover has returned another postcard from Mars — the first 360-degree color view from Gale Crater.

Since landing Sunday night for a two-year mission, NASA's six-wheel rover has been sending home a trickle of pictures, beginning with grainy, black-and-white photos. It also beamed back a low-quality video showing the last few minutes of its descent to the surface.

It recently raised its mast containing high-resolution and navigation cameras that have given scientists a better view of the landing site. NASA released the panoramic photo a Thursday.

The first 360-degree color panorama taken on Mars by NASA's Curiosity rover, released Aug. 9, 2012.

The first 360-degree color panorama taken on Mars by NASA's Curiosity rover, released Aug. 9, 2012.

/ AP Photo/NASA

On Wednesday, scientists said the ancient Martian crater where the Curiosity rover landed looks strikingly similar to the Mojave Desert in California with its looming mountains and hanging haze.

"The first impression that you get is how Earth-like this seems looking at that landscape," said chief scientist John Grotzinger of the California Institute of Technology.

In other new photos, Curiosity looked out toward the northern horizon. Nearby were scour marks in the surface blasted by thrusters, which kicked up a swirl of dust. There were concerns that Curiosity got dusty, but scientists said that was not the case.

This full-resolution image shows part of the deck of NASA's Curiosity rover taken from one of the rover's Navigation cameras looking toward the back left of the rover. On the left of this image, part of the rover's power supply is visible. To the right of the power supply can be seen the pointy low-gain antenna and side of the paddle-shaped high-gain antenna for communications directly to Earth. The rim of Gale Crater is the lighter colored band across the horizon. The effects of the descent stage's rocket engines blasting the ground can be seen on the right side of the image, next to the rover.

This full-resolution image shows part of the deck of NASA's Curiosity rover taken from one of the rover's Navigation cameras looking toward the back left of the rover. On the left of this image, part of the rover's power supply is visible. To the right of the power supply can be seen the pointy low-gain antenna and side of the paddle-shaped high-gain antenna for communications directly to Earth. The rim of Gale Crater is the lighter colored band across the horizon. The effects of the descent stage's rocket engines blasting the ground can be seen on the right side of the image, next to the rover.

/ NASA/JPL-Caltech

"We do see a thin coating of dust, but nothing too bad," said Justin Maki, imaging scientist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, which manages the $2.5 billion mission.

Scientists were giddy about the scour marks because they exposed bedrock below - information that should help them better understand the landing site.

Since landing, Curiosity has zipped home a stream of low-resolution pictures taken by tiny cameras under the chassis and a camera at the end of its robotic arm, which remained stowed. It also sent back a low-quality video showing the last 2 1/2 minutes of its descent.

The rover successfully raised its mast packed with high-resolution and navigation cameras. With the mast up, it can begin its shutterbug days in force, including taking a 360-degree color view of its surroundings as early as Thursday.

Grotzinger said he was struck by the Martian landscape, which appeared diverse. There seemed to be harder material underneath the gravelly surface, he said.

"It kind of makes you feel at home," he said. "We're looking at a place that feels really comfortable."

Mars, of course, is very different from Earth. It's a frigid desert constantly bombarded by radiation. There are geological signs that it was a warmer and wetter place once upon a time. One of the mission's goals is to figure out how Mars transformed.

Many tuned in to watch the Mars rover, named Curiosity, survive its death-defying landing on the Red Planet on Sunday.

/ NASA

After sailing 352 million miles and eight months, Curiosity parked its six wheels near the Martian equator, where it will spend the next two years poking into rocks and soil in search of the chemical ingredients of life. It is the most expensive and ambitious mission yet to Mars.

Its ultimate destination is a mountain towering from the center of the crater floor. Preliminary estimates indicate Curiosity landed four miles away from the base of Mount Sharp, thought to contain intriguing signs of past water - a starting point to learning whether microbial life could exist.

Before the 1-ton, nuclear-powered Curiosity can start roving, it has to undergo several weeks of tedious but essential health checks.

Since it was too heavy to land using traditional air bags, it used a heat shield, parachute, rockets and cables. An orbiting spacecraft spotted the discarded spacecraft hardware, including the ballast weights that were shed soon after entry into the atmosphere.

© 2012 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
20 Comments Add a Comment
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normanbilll says:
Curiosity rover is a great robot Nasa sends to Mars. I'm delighted to see rover huge success of sending back first 360 degree photos of mars. It seems like sunlight of mars bit different than our world. Thanks for the snaps and informative details.
http://www.mitechtechnology.com/
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dresia says:
I tell you this, how about spendind that money on feeding the many hungry families here in the USA, the many people who have lost jobs, create and give them some of that money. The people who have lost their homes, etc because of downsizing, GIVE THEM THAT MONEY TO HELP THEM OUT. THEY ARE GOING TO KEEP GOING UP THERE MESSING WITH MARS, THEY ARE GOING TO SEE SOMETHING THEY WISH THEY HAD NOT SEEN, AND NOT BE ABLE TO COME BACK AND TELL US ABOUT IT DUE TO A HEART ATTACK OR STROKE. LET MARSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS ALONG AND HELP AMERICA.
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Big19999 replies:
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My god you are one dumb mother f**ker, I suggest reading some literature?
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Noval53 says:
Nothing we build, sing, write, think, or say will endure past the life of this planet unless we learn to leave it. A solar system calamity will one day erase this place and all that it is. What is a waste of time, is to be totally absorbed in the existence of this one place and nothing else. What is certain, is that one unpredictable day it will cease to exist.
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blueflag56 says:
waste of oxygen ...
waste waste waste waste money forever ....
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dresia replies:
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I totally agree with you.
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unclebernies says:
Take a good look at these pics because this could be a preview of things to come if we don't start taking care of our own planet.
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AnnieDanny says:
Obviously a dream location for my next vacation.

I still haven't heard a reasonably good explanation for this outrageously expensive Mars rover. And based on the photos, I still don't see that there's any reasonable purpose in sending astronauts to Mars. We've got plenty of dirt and rocks here. If it's red dirt they want, Kentucky has all you could ever want. Cheap.
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signseeker1717 replies:
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Why is some sort of justification necessary to explore and learn about everything we can in the Universe, including our neighbors in the solar system?

Yes, the pursuit of knowledge can be pretty expensive, but ignorance has a much higher price.
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Disclosure_33 says:
Yea lets congratulate all the Nazi scientists that if we didn't win the war would have undoubtedly been the death of us all. Also lets congratulate them on the 39 worst photos they decided to share with the people. They can control a rover on another planet but we can barley get decent phone reception???? You need to wake up. Before we go to other planets, lets try and understand and fix the one we are currently on. And if that's not hard enough, let's try and send a rover with thermal optic vision to the dark side of the moon. That should wake most of the people still dreaming that we are the only life outside this planet up.
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netjunkie1 replies:
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What an ignorant posting.
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Vetzero58 says:
Ecellant ! EXCELLANT !

I'm lovin it !...magnificent work, a great success.

Hail Curiosity

Hail NASA

Hail Victory

Roma Victor
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arkajun-2009 says:
If the rover were to look under a rock and find 1 democratic voter, Obama would fund the program for another 10 years
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daffy64 replies:
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Yes, let's turn this amazing scientific event into yet another political debate.

Yawn.
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hamiltongrad says:
This is an amazing achievement. I am wondering, could CBS Science explain why the missions just do not try to "grow" any microbes that may be on Mars, such as we would here, with "petrie" dishes, or other "broth", under various conditions. This is the most direct means of seeing "if there is life". Looking for "by products" of life is so indirect, that it makes me wonder if there is more to this mission than what we are being told. Again, great job!
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PaleHorse87 replies:
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Interesting, One could swab and plate samples from Mars but I dont know how well that would work out. In the lab I work in you usually have an idea of what you are looking for, and the plates are incubated at 37deg (body temp). One would have to do a very wide range of Augars,Temps,Incubation times etc to hope to grow novel species. Easier to just look for by products, and evidence I suppose..Great Idea though got me thinking
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