NASA Mars Orbiter Takes Amazing Picture Of Curiosity Rover

Mars Orbiter Photographs Mars Rover, Just Because It Can
|

Let’s say you’re a multi-billion dollar space agency, and you happen to have a spacecraft in orbit over Mars AND a space robot on the surface of Mars.

Is there any reason you could imagine not to have the former take a high resolution photo of the latter?

Turns out, there is not.

This is a photograph of NASA's $2.5 billion Curiosity Rover taken by NASA’s own Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter.

Open Image Modal

The picture shows the robot on the "Pahrump Hills" outcrop that forms part of the basal layer of Mount Sharp - itself located in Mars' Gale Crater. And no - there's no human engineer in sight.

The rover has been inside the Gale Crater since it landed via a very awesome sky crane in mid-2012. The Reconnaissance Orbiter has been studying Mars since 2006 and has taken photographs of NASA’s surface robots before - but none with quite so pleasing panache as this picture.

Indeed, NASA also managed to use the Orbiter to help find Britain’s sort-of-failed Beagle 2 lander, which was thought lost in 2003 until it was discovered very recently -- dead, yes, but successfully landed -- on the surface.