Last week, the Martian moon Phobos passed neatly between Mars and the sun.
NASA's Perseverance rover caught the fortuitous eclipse on camera.
Fear passed in front of the sun last week, and a NASA rover saw it fly.
The Mars moon Phobos, whose name means "Fear" in ancient Greek, was caught on camera by the NASA Perseverance rover on Feb. 8.
The potato-shaped moon was visible in front of the sun from Percy's current perch in Jezero Crater.
Engineers from NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) uploaded 68 images of the solar eclipse to their Perseverance raw images repository.
The footage was filmed using the rovers left Mastcam-Z camera, one of two scouting imagers high on the neck-like mast of Perseverance often used to get sweeping landscape views of the Red Planet.
Source
NASA's Perseverance rover caught the fortuitous eclipse on camera.
Fear passed in front of the sun last week, and a NASA rover saw it fly.
The Mars moon Phobos, whose name means "Fear" in ancient Greek, was caught on camera by the NASA Perseverance rover on Feb. 8.
The potato-shaped moon was visible in front of the sun from Percy's current perch in Jezero Crater.
Engineers from NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) uploaded 68 images of the solar eclipse to their Perseverance raw images repository.
The footage was filmed using the rovers left Mastcam-Z camera, one of two scouting imagers high on the neck-like mast of Perseverance often used to get sweeping landscape views of the Red Planet.
Source