Zeenews bureau
New Delhi: NASA`s rover Curiosity has driven 368 feet on Mars in just one month and its tire tracks can be seen from space.
NASA satellite circling Mars has photographed Curiosity`s slightly zig-zaggy tire tracks on the red planet.
The spacecraft landed on Aug. 5 on a mission to look for ingredients in Martian soil and rocks that could support life.
When the images from the Martian satellite showed the rover tracks, "there was much high-fiving," mission manager Michael Watkins said Thursday. He said engineers were thrilled by the idea that "we left tracks on Mars that we can see from orbit" because it gave them a visible sense of accomplishment.
Other rovers have left tracks on Mars, but not as deep or wide as Curiosity`s, Watkins said.
Curiosity won`t be traveling any more for several days. Engineers will spend the next week checking out its crucial robotic arm. At the end of that arm is a "Swiss Army knife" of scientific instruments designed to test rocks and the chemicals in the soil, Watkins said.
After the arm and its tools are given clean bills of health, the rover will continue on a trek of more than a week to its first destination, a point called Glenelg, where three types of terrain meet. The rover is likely to stop on the way to test its first rocks.
(With Agency inputs)
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