Mars

August

Metanoia
Scientists Just Demonstrated How These 'Spiders' Might Form on Mars (msn.com)

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August

Metanoia
Said this was taken with its Navcams but then seen this posted in India Times. Its seems its a stitch up. Good call Toroid. :)
"I stumbled upon a post by one video creator who goes by the name of Hugh Hou, who took these different images, stitched them together and edited them to look like a panoramic view of the Martian surface."
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He also made some modifications such as editing the sky adding beautiful stars and colourful hues making the end result a picturesque beauty that will make everyone’s jaw drop. The clear sky created by Hou showcases various constellations of stars that look breathtaking and something straight out of one of the planets in Avengers Endgame.
 
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Kchoo

At Peace.
Said this was taken with its Navcams but then seen this posted in India Times. Its seems its a stitch up. Good call Toroid. :)
"I stumbled upon a post by one video creator who goes by the name of Hugh Hou, who took these different images, stitched them together and edited them to look like a panoramic view of the Martian surface."
OIP.fRCdrP9pvH8OdSaT49HiDQHaE7



He also made some modifications such as editing the sky adding beautiful stars and colourful hues making the end result a picturesque beauty that will make everyone’s jaw drop. The clear sky created by Hou showcases various constellations of stars that look breathtaking and something straight out of one of the planets in Avengers Endgame.

Dust Trouble
But the Red Planet provides another complication: dust. Even straight overhead at zenith — the region where atmospheric interference is the least — the dust decreases a star’s brightness by one whole magnitude. That gets drastically worse toward the horizon, where dust can dim stars by as much as 4 magnitudes.

Astronomers know this from watching the night sky with the Mars rovers, which have cameras about as sensitive as the unaided human eye. When the sky is perfectly clear, NASA’s Opportunity rover can just make out magnitude 6 stars — generally considered the limit for human viewing.

What do the stars look like from Mars?
 
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