For good reason,Poland Mars has earned the nickname the Red Planet: Its ruddy color comes from high levels of oxidized iron, the same crusty stuff people observe on old, corroded metal.
But a new mosaic image of Mars shows Earth's neighbor as much more than a rusty sphere. With veins of contrasting colors running through it, you can start to see the world the way it probably once was — more Earth-like, laced with oceans and rivers rushing over its surface.
The European Space Agency produced this new photo using the High Resolution Stereo Camera (HRSC) on Mars Express, a spacecraft that has been orbiting the planet for two decades. The agency released the image to celebrate its 20 years of science. Gathering 90 images at altitudes of 2,500 to 6,400 miles above Mars, it captured swaths of terrain. The team then put the pictures together to make a global view.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Mars' changing atmosphere, sometimes rather opaque, has made it difficult to see the planet's surface colors from space in the past.
"Dust scatters and reflects light, causing colours to shift between images," the space agency said in a recent post. And when the mismatched pieces are put together, according to ESA, the result is usually patchy looking.
To overcome the color variation problem, engineers color-referenced every individual image, allowing them to keep each color intact and reveal a more complex and accurate view of Mars than has been possible before. Along with red, the planet shows areas of blue, gray, and black.
The large blue-toned areas get their hue from gray-black sands from volcanic activity. The wind carries the sand to form dark, imposing dunes that have been pockmarked with craters. The material weathered by water actually tends to look lighter, scientists say. Clay and sulfates, the two most common water-worn minerals present, indicate where liquid water flowed.
Want more scienceand tech news delivered straight to your inbox? Sign up for Mashable's Light Speed newslettertoday.
The mosaic also captures immense detail in Valles Marineris, the biggest canyon in the solar system. The colossal gash stretches over 2,500 miles, 10 times longer than the Grand Canyon. In this region, a thin layer of dark sand covers salty minerals. But this close look gives scientists a chance to appreciate the color variations, with the brighter material peeking out.
For years researchers have found little signs that Mars used to be bathed in creeks and lakes. Martian water chiseled sinuous river beds and deep ravines into the ground now hollowed out and dusty. In the first year of NASA's Curiosity rover expedition, it sent home pictures of a stream bed, eroded and dry, with bountiful round pebbles, similar to those formed on Earth from flowing water.
The obsessive search for past water on Mars, a frozen desert, is a quest to prove the Red Planet was once wet, warm, and more Earth-like. Lakes and oceans could have been a key ingredient for supporting primitive Martian life, once upon a time, but this doesn't outright mean the environment was habitable.
By exploring former water sites, NASA hopes to find evidence of ancient microbial life. Earlier this year, the U.S. space agency found its clearest evidence yet of ancient water: rocks carved with ripples, the telltale fingerprints of water waves.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Mars Express has been observing the Red Planet since 2003. Over that time, it has studied the Martian surface, minerals, and its ever-changing atmosphere. It has orbited Mars 24,510 times and has taken nearly 7,000 pictures.
Through its lens, the spacecraft camera has captured wind-whipped ridges, sinkholes, craters, fault lines, river channels, and ancient lava pools.
In a video shared on Twitter by the German Aerospace Center, which provided the camera, planetary scientist Daniela Tirsch said the team hopes to continue working with the instrument over the next three to five years.
"I've fallen in love with our beautiful images over and over each day," she said.
NBA rookie dunks on LeBron James and Kyrie Irving in the same damn game'Through the roof' Christmas trees are the season's most festive prankOMG, look at these original 'Legend of Zelda' design documentsBatteries are more dangerous than you thinkCosplayers pull a 'Nightmare Before Christmas' prank on mall SantaCosplayers pull a 'Nightmare Before Christmas' prank on mall SantaYouTube prankster claims he got removed from Delta plane 'for speaking Arabic'Just try not to cry watching the 10 mostA prominent climate scientist just won a major court battleWhat we want our boyfriends, The Chainsmokers, to buy us for ChristmasMan's live tweets from a café prove love isn't dead just yetThese Hogwarts House prints could be the perfect 'Harry Potter' Xmas presentThis online retailer is now selling cash!Chrismukkah this year is more perfect than normal. Allow 'The O.C.' to explain.The best 'Mega Man' games ever are going mobileThis student's genius bath hack has taken the internet by stormWatch the first surgery recorded with Snapchat SpectaclesDog pees all over bed, receives gentle but fair punishmentWar of words after flashy headlines claim hackers can take down a planeSon travels 5,000 miles to surprise his mother, scares the sh*t out of her Scooch, Mooch: Scaramucci is already out as White House communications director Macaulay Culkin wore a 'Home Alone' screaming mask and it was kind of creepy 'The Crown' reveals first look at Princess Diana's wedding dress NASA's new space toilet is successfully launched into space Netflix adds section to promote new content This may be the greatest interaction with a delivery man of all time The best politics podcasts: 9 shows that'll keep you informed and entertained Apple kicks third party speakers and headphones out of its store Florida's voter registration website failed miserably on night of deadline 'Raised by Wolves' and Ridley Scott's milk obsession, explained Noted bath salts fan John McAfee arrested, charged with crypto fraud and tax evasion 14 best tweets of the week, including a Jokerfied Watto, smack barm, and pey wet The Hubble telescope stared at this magnificent galaxy for nine hours 'Gilmore Girls' 20th anniversary: Looking back at pop culture references 5 questions Americans asked Google about the election this week Kid draws a hilarious family portrait, featuring his mother on her period Here are Trump and Scaramucci's scenes from that Wall Street movie Not even baseball fans are safe from Chris Christie's boiling rage Yeah, 'Emily in Paris' is bad. But the memes are so so good. Florida online voter registration deadline extended after website crash