NASA Orbiter Spots Curiosity Rover Making Tracks to Next Science Stop

NASA Orbiter Spots Curiosity Rover Making Tracks to Next Science Stop

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  • Post last modified:April 26, 2025
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“By comparing the time HiRISE took the image to the rover’s commands for the day, we can see it was nearly done with a 69-foot drive,” said Doug Ellison, Curiosity’s planning team chief at JPL.

Designed to ensure the best spatial resolution, HiRISE takes an image with the majority of the scene in black and white and a strip of color down the middle. While the camera has before, this time the rover happened to fall within the black-and-white part of the image.

In the new image, Curiosity’s tracks lead to the base of a steep slope. The rover has since ascended that slope since then, and it is expected to reach its new science location within a month or so.


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More About Curiosity and MRO

NASA’s Curiosity Mars rover was built at JPL, which is managed for the agency by Caltech in Pasadena, California. JPL manages both the Curiosity and Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter missions on behalf of NASA’s Science Mission Directorate in Washington as part of the agency’s Mars Exploration Program portfolio. The University of Arizona, in Tucson, operates HiRISE, which was built by BAE Systems in Boulder, Colorado.

For more about the missions, visit:


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Feed By Today and Features – NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory

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