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Risultati della ricerca nelle immagini - "Santa"
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ESP_014351_1995_RED_abrowse.jpgSanta Fé Crater (Natural Colors; credits: Lunexit)58 visitenessun commentoMareKromium
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ESP_021536_1780_00-PCF-LXTT.jpgSanta Maria Crater and "Oppy" (Absolute Natural Colors; credits: Dr Paolo C. Fienga - Lunexit Team)249 visitenessun commento2 commentiMareKromium
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OPP-SOL2450-PIA13707.jpgSanta Maria Crater - Sol 245075 visiteNASA's Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity used its NavCam to record this view of Santa Maria Crater at the end of a drive during the 2450th Sol of the Rover's work on Mars (Dec. 15, 2010). The drive brought Opportunity to the Western Edge of this crater, and this view is Eastward across it.

Santa Maria Crater is about 90 meters (295 feet) in diameter. The rover team plans to spend a few weeks investigating this small Crater before resuming Opportunity's long-term trek toward Endeavour Crater".

Nota Lunexit: la NASA, in realtà, nella sua "Caption Originale" del Planetary Photojournal ha scritto "before resuming Opportunity's long-term trek toward Endurance Crater". Che questa "svistina" degli Amici di Pasadena (svistina che se l'avessimo presa noi ci sarebbe valsa la nomea imperitura di p.p. (poveri pirla) Vi sia di monito sull'attenzione e la cura che costoro impiegano nel redigere i commenti ai loro frames.
E cioè zero o quasi (ovviamente le loro captions non se rileggono neppure). Meditate Amici, meditate...
1 commentiMareKromium
OPP-SOL2451-3D-MF-LXTT.jpg
OPP-SOL2451-3D-MF-LXTT.jpgSanta Maria Crater - Sol 2452 (an Image-Mosaic in 3D by Dr Marco Faccin - Lunexit Team)90 visitenessun commentoMareKromium
OPP-SOL2452-1F345867992EFFB0J3P1212L0M1.jpg
OPP-SOL2452-1F345867992EFFB0J3P1212L0M1.jpgOn the Edge... - Sol 2452 (Natural Colors; credits for the additional process. and color.: Dr Paolo C. Fienga - Lunexit Team)63 visitenessun commentoMareKromium
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OPP-SOL2452-MF-LXTT-2.jpgSanta Maria Crater - Sol 2452 (an Image-Mosaic by Dr Marco Faccin - Lunexit Team)126 visitenessun commentoMareKromium
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OPP-SOL2452-MF-PCF-LXTT-1.jpgSanta Maria Crater - Sol 2452 (an Image-Mosaic in Natural Colors by Drr Marco Faccin and Paolo C. Fienga - Lunexit Team)118 visitenessun commentoMareKromium
OPP-SOL2453-1P345950569EFFB0J3P2297L2M1.jpg
OPP-SOL2453-1P345950569EFFB0J3P2297L2M1.jpgHorizon - Sol 2453 (Slightly Saturated Natural Colors; credits for the additional process. and color.: Dr Paolo C. Fienga - Lunexit Team)72 visitenessun commentoMareKromium
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OPP-SOL2453-1P345952465EFFB0J3P2297R2M1.jpgMuddy Dunes inside Santa Maria Crater - Sol 2453 (Absolute Natural Colors; credits for the additional process. and color.: Dr Paolo C. Fienga - Lunexit Team)135 visitenessun commentoMareKromium
OPP-SOL2453-1P345952751EFFB0J3P2297R2M1.jpg
OPP-SOL2453-1P345952751EFFB0J3P2297R2M1.jpgOn the Edge... - Sol 2453 (Natural Colors; credits for the additional process. and color.: Dr Paolo C. Fienga - Lunexit Team)133 visitenessun commentoMareKromium
OPP-SOL2453-1P345953004EFFB0J3P2297L2M1.jpg
OPP-SOL2453-1P345953004EFFB0J3P2297L2M1.jpgOn the Edge... - Sol 2453 (Natural Colors; credits for the additional process. and color.: Dr Paolo C. Fienga - Lunexit Team)129 visitenessun commentoMareKromium
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OPP-SOL2453-2454-PIA13794-1.jpgSanta Maria Crater in Natural Colors, according to NASA - Sol 2453 and 2454 (an Image-Mosaic by NASA/JPL-Caltech - Cornell-ASU)131 visiteNASA's Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity is spending the Seventh Anniversary of its landing on Mars investigating a Crater called "Santa Maria", which has a diameter about the length of a football field. This scene looks Eastward across the Crater. Portions of the Rim of a much larger Crater, such as Endeavour Crater, appear on the horizon.

The panorama spans 125 compass degrees, from North/North-West on the left to South/South-West on the right. It has been assembled from multiple frames taken by the PanCam on Opportunity during the 2453rd and 2454th Martian Days, or Soles, of the Rover's work on Mars (such as Dec. 18 and 19, 2010).

Opportunity landed in the Meridiani Planum Region of Mars on Jan. 24, 2004, Universal Time (Jan. 25, Pacific Time) for a mission originally planned to last for three months. Since that Prime Mission, the Rover has continued to work in bonus-time extended missions.
Both Opportunity and its twin, Spirit, have made important discoveries about wet environments on ancient Mars that may have been favorable for supporting microbial life.

By mid-January 2011, Opportunity reached a location at the South-Eastern edge of Santa Maria Crater. The Rover Team developed plans for Opportunity to spend a few weeks investigating rocks at that site during Solar Conjunction, a period when communications between Earth and Mars are curtailed because the Sun is almost directly between the two Planets. After completion of its work at Santa Maria, the Rover will resume a long-term trek toward Endeavour.

This view combines images taken through three different PanCam filters admitting light with wavelengths centered at 753 nanometers (Near InfraRed), 535 nanometers (green) and 432 nanometers (violet). This "Natural Color" is the Rover Team's best estimate of what the scene would look like if we were there and able to see it with our own eyes. Seams have been eliminated from the Sky portion of the mosaic to better simulate the vista a person standing on Mars would see.
2 commentiMareKromium
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