Curiosity Sends Back Incredible Hi-Res Views of Mt. Sharp

PIA16104.jpg

Wow -- what a view! This image, released today, is a high-resolution shot of the Curiosity rover's ultimate goal: the stratified flanks of Gale Crater's 3.4-mile (5.5-km) high central peak, Mount Sharp. The image was taken with Curiosity's 100mm telephoto

Mastcam

as a calibration test... if views like this are what we can expect from the MSL mission, all I can say is (and I've said it before)

GO CURIOSITY!

"This is an area on Mount Sharp where Curiosity will go," said Mastcam principal investigator Michael Malin of Malin Space Science Systems. "Those layers are our ultimate objective. The dark dune field is between us and those layers. In front of the dark sand you see redder sand, with a different composition suggested by its different color. The rocks in the foreground show diversity -- some rounded, some angular, with different histories. This is a very rich geological site to look at and eventually to drive through."

Read more: Take a Trip to Explore Gale Crater

The gravel-strewn region in the foreground is Curiosity's immediate landing area. Then the ground dips into a low depression called a

swale

, then rises up again to the edge of a crater that's rimmed with larger rocks. Quite a bit beyond

that

(about 2.2 miles/3.7 km away) are fields of dunes composed of darker material, and then the hummocky base of Mount Sharp itself begins to rise up about 3.4 miles (5.5 km) in the distance.

The topmost ridges of Mount Sharp visible above are actually 10 miles (16.2 km) away.

A crop of the full-size image shows a large rock at the foot of a knoll that's about the same size as Curiosity (which is

this big

compared to a person and previous rovers):

The rocky mound just behind the boulder in that image is itself about 1,000 feet (300 meters) across and 300 feet (100 meters) high. Gale Crater isn't a place for a faint-hearted rover!

The colors have been modified from the

original image

in order to help better discern landforms and differences in surface materials. Here, the images look more like what we'd see under natural Earthly lighting.

Curiosity already is returning more data from the Martian surface than have all of NASA's earlier rovers combined.

"We have an international network of telecommunications relay orbiters bringing data back from Curiosity," said JPL's Chad Edwards, chief telecommunications engineer for NASA's Mars Exploration Program. "Curiosity is boosting its data return by using a new capability for adjusting its transmission rate."

See more images from Curiosity

here

, and keep up to date on the mission

at the MSL website here.

– NASA Administrator Charles Bolden in a message transmitted to the Curiosity rover and then back to Earth, August 27, 2012

Images: NASA/JPL-Caltech