Once, you may search for great views of our moon, you may greatly lit up our sunlight. But have you ever stopped temporarily to wonder about the shape of other satellites from the surfaces of other planets in our solar system?
NASA, who has been exploring Mars since its arrival in an exciting way in 2021, has shared a wonderful picture of Deimos, a red planet’s moons.
“I hope … the moon?” The NASA -based perseverance team in California wrote in a post at the Rover X account on Thursday, adding: “The” bright star “is actually Mark Mon Dimus.
The perseverance was taken in March “in the hours before dawn” through long exposure using the left Navcam. The image also includes two stars – Regulus and Algieba – from Constellation Leo, which NASA indicated useful:
With a diameter of 7.7 miles (12.4 km), Dimos, who scientists believe is likely to be a quarrel captured, is much smaller than the Earth’s moon, which has a diameter of 2159 miles (3474 km).
While Deimos Mars is 14577 miles (23,460 km), adjacent Earth neighbors rotate much larger than about 238,855 miles (384,400 km).
Also, our moon contains a spherical shape, while Deimos has an irregular shape and NASA has unbearable as “potatoes”.
A Rover image offers a refreshing exit from its usual focus on the terrain of Mars, as it searches for the signs of ancient microbial life, allowing us to appreciate the broader cosmic context of the mission of perseverance.
In many ways, the amazing image is more than just an artistic achievement because it also provides a moment of reflection during the Rover’s Epic mission to search for knowledge outside our home planet.