NASA Orbiter Spots Curiosity Rover Making
Tracks to Next Science Stop
April
24, 2025
NASA’s Curiosity rover appears as a dark speck in this
contrast-enhanced view captured on Feb. 28, 2025, by the HiRISE camera aboard
NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. Trailing Curiosity are the rover’s tracks,
which can linger on the Martian surface for months before being erased by the
wind.
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/University of Arizona
The
image marks what may be the first time one of the agency’s Mars orbiters has
captured the rover driving.
NASA’s
Curiosity Mars rover has never been camera shy, having been seen in selfies and
images taken from space. But on Feb. 28 — the 4,466th Martian day, or sol, of
the mission — Curiosity was captured in what is believed to be the first
orbital image of the rover mid-drive across the Red Planet.
Taken by
the HiRISE (High-Resolution Imaging Science
Experiment) camera aboard NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, the image shows
Curiosity as a dark speck at the front of a long trail of rover tracks. Likely
to last for months before being erased by wind, the tracks span about 1,050
feet (320 meters). They represent roughly 11 drives starting on Feb. 2 as
Curiosity trucked along at a top speed of 0.1 mph (0.16 kph) from Gediz Vallis channel on the journey to
its next science stop: a region with potential boxwork formations, possibly made by
groundwater billions of years ago.
How
quickly the rover reaches the area depends on a number of factors, including
how its software navigates the surface and how challenging the terrain is to
climb. Engineers at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California,
which leads Curiosity’s mission, work with scientists to plan each day’s trek.



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