A new Mars image from the landing site for robbers shows the red planet in high definition

The rover’s Mastcam-Z instrument, a pair of zoomable color cameras, returned 142 images of its landing site on February 21.

This is the first high-definition look at the Jezero crater, the site of a 3.9 billion-year-old dry lake bed where the rover will search for signs of ancient life for the next two years.

In the photo, the crater rim and the rock face of an ancient river delta can be seen in the distance. This is no different from images previously shared by NASA’s Curiosity rover of its Gale Crater reconnaissance site.

“We’re in a lovely place, where you can see different features that are in many ways similar to features found by Spirit, Opportunity and Curiosity at their landing sites,” said Jim Bell, lead researcher on the Mastcam-Z instrument at Arizona State University’s School of Earth and Space Exploration, in a statement.

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Perseverance also sent back a panorama over the weekend using its Navcams, or navigation cameras.

Mastcam-Z is a new feature on Perseverance that builds on lessons learned from the Curiosity rover’s Mastcam tool. Curiosity’s Mastcam has two cameras with a fixed focal length, while Mastcam-Z has the zoom capability.

These two cameras are like a high-definition eye on perseverance, while sharing her views with a team of scientists and engineers at home.

The edge of the Jezero crater can be seen in the distance.

They sit on the machine and reach eye level for a person who is just over six and a half feet tall. The cameras are 9.5 inches apart to enable stereo vision.

NASA officials said that the color images produced by Mastcam-Z are very similar to the quality you would expect from your own digital HD camera. These cameras can not only zoom, but also focus on capturing videos, panoramas and 3D images.

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This will enable scientists in the mission’s team to investigate objects that are both near and far from the rover.

In the panorama, details from 0.1 to 0.2 centimeters can be seen if an object is near the rover, while those between 6.5 and 10 feet in the distance are also visible.

This wind-carved rock can be seen in the first 360-degree panorama taken by the Mastcam-Z instrument.

These capabilities will help the general objectives of the mission to understand the geological history of the crater and to identify the types of rock that the other instruments of the Rover should study. The views Mastcam-Z offers will also help scientists determine from which rocks they should collect samples that will eventually be returned to Earth by future missions.

The team working on the Mastcam-Z instrument will share more details about the panorama on NASA’s website and social media accounts on Thursday, February 25 at 4pm.

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