CalTech NASA JPL JPL CalTech
NASA Logo - Jet Propulsion Laboratory Follow this link to skip to the main content
   + View the NASA Portal

JPL Home Earth Solar System Stars & Galaxies Technology
Mars Exploration Rovers
Images Multimedia News Missions Events Kids Education Science & Research About JPL
At a Glance
Daily Updates
Flight Director Reports
News Releases
Features
Image Releases
Multimedia
Fact Sheet
Press Kit
Media Contacts
Link to MER Home Page

 


 Popular Images:
 + Raw Images
 + Artist's Concept
 + Mars Wallpapers

 Image Archives:
 + January 2007
 + December 2006
 + November 2006
 + October 2006
 + September 2006
 + August 2006
 + July 2006
 + June 2006
 + May 2006
 + April 2006
 + March 2006
 + February 2006
 + January 2006
 + December 2005
 + November 2005
 + October 2005
 + September 2005
 + August 2005
 + July 2005
 + June 2005
 + May 2005
 + April 2005
 + March 2005
 + February 2005
 + January 2005
 + December 2004
 + November 2004
 + October 2004
 + September 2004
 + August 2004
 + July 2004
 + June 2004
 + May 2004
 + April 2004
 + March 2004
 + February 2004
 + January 2004
 + 2003
 + 2002

 Site Tools:
 + Adobe Reader
 + Apple QuickTime
 + Macromedia Flash
 + RealPlayer
Panoramic image from the plains of Meridiani

Opportunity's 'Rub al Khali' Panorama
7/27/05
This panoramic image, dubbed "Rub al Khali," was acquired by NASA's Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity on the plains of Meridiani during the period from the rover's 456th to 464th sols on Mars (May 6 to May 14, 2005). Opportunity was about 2 kilometers (1.2 miles) south of "Endurance Crater" at a place known informally as "Purgatory Dune."

The rover was stuck in the dune's deep fine sand for more than a month. "Rub al Khali" (Arabic translation: "the empty quarter") was chosen as the name for this panorama because it is the name of a similarly barren, desolate part of the Saudi Arabian desert on Earth.

The view spans 360 degrees. It consists of images obtained in 97 individual pointings of the panoramic camera. The camera took images with five camera filters at each pointing. This 22,780-by-6,000-pixel mosaic is an approximately true-color rendering generated using the images acquired through filters admitting light wavelengths of 750, 530, and 480 nanometers.

Lighting varied during the nine sols it took to acquire this panorama, resulting in some small image seams within the mosaic. These seams have been smoothed in sky parts of the mosaic to better simulate the vista that a person would see if able to view it all at the same time on Mars.

Opportunity's tracks leading back to the north (center of the panorama) are a reminder of the rover's long trek from Endurance Crater. The deep ruts dug by Opportunity's wheels as it became stuck in the sand appear in the foreground. The crest and trough of the last ripple the rover crossed before getting stuck is visible in the center. These wind-formed sand features are only about 10 to 15 centimeters (4 to 6 inches) tall. The crest of the actual ripple where the rover got stuck can be seen just to the right of center. The tracks and a few other places on and near ripple crests can be seen in this color image to be dustier than the undisturbed or "normal" plains soils in Meridiani. Since the time these ruts were made, some of the dust there has been blown away by the wind, reaffirming the dynamic nature of the martian environment, even in this barren, ocean-like desert of sand.

Image Credit: NASA/JPL/Cornell

+ Medium resolution version of this image
+ Print this image and caption
Privacy / Copyrights FAQ Contact JPL Sitemap
FIRST GOV + Freedom of Information Act NASA Home Page
Site Manager:
Webmasters:
  Susan Watanabe
Tony Greicius, Martin Perez