NASA's Curiosity Rover Captures a Martian Day, From Dawn to Dusk
CURIOSITY NEWS | December 28, 2023
When NASAs Curiosity Mars rover isnt on the move, it works pretty well as a sundial, as seen in two black-and-white videos recorded on Nov. 8, the 4,002nd Martian day, or sol, of the mission. The rover captured its own shadow shifting across the surface of Mars using its black-and-white Hazard-Avoidance Cameras, or Hazcams.
Instructions to record the videos were part of the last set of commands beamed up to Curiosity just before the start of Mars solar conjunction, a period when the Sun is between Earth and Mars. Because plasma from the Sun can interfere with radio communications, missions hold off on sending commands to Mars spacecraft for several weeks during this time. (The missions werent totally out of contact: They still radioed back regular health check-ins throughout conjunction.)
Rover drivers normally rely on Curiositys Hazcams to spot rocks, slopes, and other hazards that may be risky to traverse. But because the rovers other activities were intentionally scaled back just prior to conjunction, the team decided to use the Hazcams to record 12 hours of snapshots for the first time, hoping to capture clouds or dust devils that could reveal more about the Red Planets weather.
https://mars.nasa.gov/news/9529/nasas-curiosity-rover-captures-a-martian-day-from-dawn-to-dusk/?site=msl