The sex video porno gay men.comPerseverancerover has reached the top of the Jezero Crater rim on Mars, a hike that rose 1,640 feet — higher than the Empire State Building is tall.
NASAmission leaders said the rover, which had embarked on the journey 3.5 months ago, got its first look at its destination on Dec. 10. From there, the mobile lab will begin its fifth science campaign, pursuing a route dubbed "Northern Rim" that will span several years.
On the drive up, Perseverance encountered steep, slippery slopes. Its human operators, separated by some 70 million miles in space, had to brainstorm solutions on the fly to help navigate obstacles. At one point, the Jet Propulsion Laboratory team even tried steering the rover in reverse to see if that made the trek any easier.
"Our rover drivers have done an amazing job negotiating some of the toughest terrain we’ve encountered since landing," said Steven Lee, deputy project manager for Perseverance, in a statement.
SEE ALSO: NASA's Mars rovers had a gangbusters summer of rocksThe climb follows a highly productive summerfor the rover and its twin Curiosity. They discovered several rocks that reveal Mars as having been a more geologically diverse planet than once thought. In a stretch of seven weeks, Perseverance and Curiosity found pure sulfur, a likely anorthositeboulder that could be a part of the planet's original crust, and a spotted rock with the most compelling signs of ancient Martian lifeyet, though a sample would need to be shipped back to Earth for confirmation.
Then this fall, as Perseverance rumbled up the crater, it found an odd zebra-striped rockthat could have formed through igneous or metamorphic processes.
Jezero Crater is a site on the Red Planet where scientists believe a river once emptied into a body of water. The reason scientists now want to explore the rim is to look for ancient Martian bedrockrubble. Jezero formed when something substantial smacked into the planet close to 4 billion years ago. The impact could have churned up and tossed deep materials to the surface.
Over the first year of the new campaign, the rover is expected to visit up to four sites to collect samples, traversing about four miles. First stop: Witch Hazel Hill, composed of a vast layered field of rocks.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
"Each layer is like a page in the book of Martian history," said Candice Bedford, a rover scientist from Purdue University in Indiana, in a statement. "As we drive down the hill, we will be going back in time, investigating the ancient environments of Mars recorded in the crater rim."
Intriguing rock discoveries have only mounted pressure on NASA to solve the problems facing its proposed Mars Sample Return mission, an expensive and complex plan to fly bits of rock, dust, and air collected by Perseverance back to Earth.
The mission has been in limbo since a reviewfound it would cost upward of $11 billion and take nearly two decades to achieve. NASA has since engaged the greater aerospace industry for input on how to save it. Earlier this year, seven companies suggested a variety of ideas, which Mashable reported, including repurposing Artemismoon landers and rethinking the last leg of the journey.
NASA hasn't yet announced its path forward, and it's unclear how the incoming administration will affect plans.
Topics NASA
7 apps to keep your plants alive and wellLarry David Humor; Fairies and Mushrooms by Sadie SteinSinging Cowgirl; Cigarette Boy by Chris FlynnJoaquin Phoenix, Parker Posey, and Patti LuPone on creepy keepsakes'Wordle' today: Here's the answer, hints for April 25TV cops break down how police dramas need to changeChez Panisse Menus by Patricia CurtanStaff Picks: Microstyle, The Epiplectic Bicycle by The Paris ReviewPaying for porn should be the postScene and Heard by Alexandra PechmanFrida’s Corsets by Leslie JamisonMicrosoft removes Xbox gameplay video sharing to Twitter after API fee hikeCharge 4 vs. Vivosmart 4: Which fitness tracker is right for you?Stieg's Stockholm by Elisabeth Donnelly'Atlanta's Missing and Murdered: The Lost Children' HBO Doc: ReviewStephen Marche and Arthur Phillips on Shakespeare by The Paris ReviewBlair Fuller, Editor Emeritus by The Paris ReviewOn the Shelf by Sadie SteinStaff Picks: Food, Fiction, and Summer Dresses by The Paris ReviewThe Late, Great Theodora Keogh by Joan Schenkar 'Designated Survivor' will be a heavy, hokey hit Twitter is pushing further into one of the mobile ad economy's biggest moneymakers Overeager giraffe gets a little too friendly during local news report 11 outdated technology moments from 'Friends' on its 22nd anniversary Cartoonist compares gay rights advocates to Nazis, gets a powerful history lesson How to check if you've been the victim of a breach like the Yahoo hack This MP3 player that doesn't require Wi Here's what two Drunk man can't get out of this f*cking box 'Hamilton' songs get gorgeous ASL treatments NBC enlists social media stars to help promote 'Superstore' Season 2 Smoke fills cabin on commercial flight, making an unscheduled landing Gigi Hadid would like strange men to stop grabbing her body Thousands of gay men could finally be pardoned for historical 'offences' 'You're The Worst' Recap: Season 3 examines complete darkness Blizzard is overhauling the pro 'Heroes of the Storm' scene Oregon's newest creative football uniforms make the players look like actual ducks Hillary Clinton's 'Between Two Ferns' interview is hilariously awkward Datawind's $45 smartphone will come with free internet subscription in India MashReads Podcast: Discussing David Foster Wallace's 'The Depressed Person'
1.9424s , 10522.46875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【sex video porno gay men.com】,Creation Information Network