NASA takes us on a video tour of the Martian landscape in all its glorious details.
(Photo : NASA/JPL-Caltech/ASU/MSSS) Perseverance, a brand-new Mars rover, is very powerful when it comes to revealing the planet's landscape in exquisite detail. It recently unveiled a fully functional Mars unit brimming with 2.5 billion pixels worth of sand, rocks, sky, and rover pieces. On September 14th, NASA released the most detailed image of the Martian surface ever taken, as reported first by Interesting Engineering. Sights and Sounds of the Jezero Crater NASA also published a video tour of the image along with the images. The video's narrator, Rachel Kronyak, a member of the perseverance scientific operations team, takes viewers through the sights and sounds of the Jezero Crater, which is considered an ancient river delta site. The video immerses you into the Martian cliffs, sedimentary rocks, hills, rover trails, and sample collection sites. The pixels in this image eclipsed the 1.8 billion-pixel panoramic photo of the Gale Crater taken by the Curiosity rover in 2020. The Mastcam-Z, a head-mounted camera made specifically for…