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It will take the Odyssey seven months to reach Mars, on Oct. 24, and another 76 days to achieve the desired 250-mile-high circular orbit required to chart the red planet's chemical composition in ...
NASA Odyssey orbiter snapped a first-ever image of a Mars volcano peeking above some clouds before dawn. It’s twice as tall as Earth’s largest volcano ...
NASA Odyssey orbiter snapped a first-ever image of a Mars volcano peeking above clouds before dawn. It’s twice as tall as Earth’s largest volcano.
The NASA Odyssey orbiter, which launched in 2001 from Cape Canaveral, snapped a 1st-ever image of a Mars volcano peeking above the clouds before dawn.
NASA's long-running Mars Odyssey orbiter celebrated its 100,000th orbit with a fresh view of Olympus Mons, the largest volcano in the solar system.
NASA’s Mars Odyssey Orbiter NASA. NASA’s Mars Odyssey Orbiter is one of seven currently circling the red planet (three of them belonging to NASA), capturing imagery and performing tasks from ...
NASA's Mars Odyssey Orbiter captures a rare view of the Red Planet's horizon. Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / ASU Imagine being in the International Space Station and looking at the world below ...
A dazzling image taken by NASA’s 2001 Mars Odyssey orbiter shows an unprecedented view of a 12-mile-high volcano poking through clouds at dawn on the Red Planet. Arsia Mons, which dwarfs Earth ...
The Odyssey, which completed its 22nd year orbiting Mars last month, is expected to take similar pictures in the future to try and capture the Martian atmosphere in different seasons, NASA said.
Larry Mantle talks with Dr. Jeff Plaut, Project Scientist for the Mars Odyssey Mission at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory about the Mars Odyssey spacecraft, launched April 7, 2001 and its science ...
The NASA Odyssey orbiter, which launched in 2001 from Cape Canaveral, snapped a 1st-ever image of a Mars volcano peeking above the clouds before dawn.
NASA Odyssey orbiter snapped a first-ever image of a Mars volcano peeking above clouds before dawn. It’s twice as tall as Earth’s largest volcano.