• @RGB3x3
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      329 months ago

      Glorious.

      All hail Space Cookie Monster

      • Optional
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        89 months ago

        Absolutely first thought. Thanks for confirming, Internet cousin!

      • SanguinePar
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        29 months ago

        Ah, THAT’s who it reminded me of, I couldn’t think at the time :-)

      • SanguinePar
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        49 months ago

        Nice! I was going to do something like that, but I was in a rush. And also lazy.

      • SanguinePar
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        29 months ago

        Oh no, poor doggo! All the best for his/her recovery :-)

  • @[email protected]
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    9 months ago

    That means someone at NASA made an effort to search for eclipse events on Mars visible by Perseverance and put the right wheels inside the organisation in motion so that they made the rover make a photo of the sun (and deimos). Nice.

    • Overzeetop
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      109 months ago

      Very likely. Lots of super geeks on staff.

      But it’s also possible some astroenthusiast did the math and emailed it to NASA, and whoever got that endo thought it would be cool and passed it to someone who could schedule the instrument. If you think about your geekiest friend and how they’d react if you sent them something truly unique about their geekdom that they could act on - well, that’s pretty much how every engr/scientist at NASA would react.

  • Destide
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    229 months ago

    Is that radiation causing those awesome 70s colour spots

    • Chainweasel
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      249 months ago

      More or less, those are dead pixels that have been killed by radiation over time. The same thing happens to cameras on the ISS.

      • @derphurr
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        19 months ago

        Well why would they not remove dead pixels after they download photos? If it is always the same pixel why aren’t they simply processed out and replaced with avg of neighbors? If it is radiation noise then they would need a few photos.

  • @BenadrylChunderHatch
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    199 months ago

    Doom (1993) took place on both moons FYI. Episode 1 was Phobos and episode 2 was Deimos.

  • @[email protected]
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    89 months ago

    This must clearly be the first time we’ve seen such an event on another planet, right?

    • @XeroxCool
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      79 months ago

      Mars is the first planet, as far as I know, but this isn’t the first transit we saw

    • @AnAustralianPhotographerOP
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      19 months ago

      I don’t know, but one of the other comments said they’re dead pixels, a part of the camera has failed over time.

    • @[email protected]
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      59 months ago

      I’ve heard that people claim the moon landings were faked, but (until now?) I’d never heard anyone claiming the Martian rovers were faked.