Global mosaic of 102 Viking 1 Orbiter images of Mars taken on orbit 1,334, 22 February 1980. The images are projected into point perspective, representing what a viewer would see from a spacecraft at an altitude of 2,500 km. At center is Valles Marineris, over 3000 km long and up to 8 km deep. Note the channels running up (north) from the central and eastern portions of Valles Marineris to the dark area, Acidalic Planitia, at upper right. At left are the three Tharsis volcanoes and to the south is ancient, heavily impacted terrain. (Viking 1 Orbiter, MG07S078-334SP)
Some of the features in this image are annotated in Wikimedia Commons.
Esta es una imagen retocada, lo que significa que ha sido alterada digitalmente de su versión original. Modificaciones: Some missing parts of the planet has been retouched. The edges of the sphere were partiially pixelated, and it's also corrected. The backround is inlarged, becouse previous crop was too tight.. La original se puede ver aquí: Mars Valles Marineris.jpeg. Las modificaciones las hizo Lošmi.
Material del Telescopio espacial Hubble puede tener copyright si no proviene explícitamente del Space Telescope Science Institute. [1]
Todo el material creado por la sonda espacial SOHO está protegido por copyright y requiere permiso para ser utilizado con fines comerciales o no educativos. [2]
2006-08-09T01:19:53Z Miguel Cervantes 1552x1552 (262191 Bytes) ==Summary== {{Information| |Description = Global mosaic of 102 Viking 1 Orbiter images of Mars taken on orbit 1,334, 22 February 1980. The images are projected into point perspective, representing what a viewer would see from
Añade una explicación corta acerca de lo que representa este archivo
Mars
Глобальная мозаика из 102 снимков Марса с орбитального аппарата "Викинг-1", сделанных на орбите 1334, 22 февраля 1980 года. Изображения проецируются в точечной перспективе, представляя то, что зритель увидел бы с космического корабля на высоте 2500 к
{{Information |Description=Global mosaic of 102 Viking 1 Orbiter images of Mars taken on orbit 1,334, 22 February 1980. The images are projected into point perspective, representing what a viewer would see from a spacecraft at an altitude of 2,500 km. At