Jet Propulsion Laboratory JPL - Earth JPL - Solar System JPL - Stars & Galaxies JPL - Science and Technology Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology Mars Exploration Rover Mission Home NASA Home Page Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology Follow this link to skip to the main content
header NASA logo
+ NASA Homepage
+ NASA en Español
+ Marte en Español
Overview Science Technology The Mission People Features Events Multimedia
Mars for Kids
Mars for Students
Mars for Educators
Mars for Press
+ Mars Home
+ Rovers Home
Multimedia
Summary
Images
Press Release Images
Spirit
Opportunity
All Raw Images
Spirit
Opportunity
Panoramas
Spirit
Opportunity
3-D Images
Spirit
Opportunity
Special-Effects Images
Spirit
Opportunity
Spacecraft
Mars Artwork
Landing Sites
Videos
Podcasts
Press Release Images: Spirit
03-Jun-2009
 
 
Spirit Photographs Her Underbelly, SOL 1925

This panorama of images from the Spirit rover, taken on Sol 1925 (June 2, 2009), is helping engineers assess the rover's current state and plan her extraction from the soft soil in the region now called "Troy." The images were taken by Spirit's microscopic imager instrument, mounted on the end of her robotic arm.

This is the first time the microscopic imager has been used to assist in planning a rover's escape from an embedding event. The imager isn't intended to take these types of images--it is designed to focus on targets only 6 centimeters (2.4 inches) in front of its optics. As a result, the images in this mosaic are well out of focus. Yet despite the focus and the backlighting of the scene, the mosaic is still very useful for helping to assess the rover's state. The mosaic, which is rotated to show the true orientation of the rover relative to the local terrain, shows the underside of the rover, the depth to which the wheels are embedded and the terrain itself in sufficient detail.

Credit: NASA/JPL/USGS
Browse Image | Medium Image (124 kB) | Large (2.3 MB)

JPL Image Use Policy

Credits Feedback Related Links Sitemap
first gov logo
footer NASA logo