Äîêóìåíò âçÿò èç êýøà ïîèñêîâîé ìàøèíû. Àäðåñ îðèãèíàëüíîãî äîêóìåíòà : http://www.astronomy.com/news/2014/01/pinnacle-island
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Äàòà èíäåêñèðîâàíèÿ: Sun Apr 10 02:51:25 2016
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Ïîèñêîâûå ñëîâà: opportunity rover
Rock appears in front of <b style="color:black;background-color:#ffff66">Opportunity</b> <b style="color:black;background-color:#66ffff">rover</b> on "Murray Ridge" | Astronomy.com
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Rock appears in front of Opportunity rover on "Murray Ridge"

Before-and-after images from the Mars rover show a new doughnut-sized rock on the scene.
RELATED TOPICS: SOLAR SYSTEM | MARS | OPPORTUNITY
A martian rock named Pinnacle Island appeared in front of Opportunity on Murray Ridge
Rock that appeared in front of Opportunity on "Murray Ridge."
NASA/JPL-Caltech/Cornell Univ./Arizona State Univ.
This before-and-after pair of images of the same patch of ground in front of NASA's Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity 13 days apart documents the arrival of a bright rock onto the scene. The rover had completed a short drive just before taking the second image, and one of its wheels likely knocked the rock — dubbed "Pinnacle Island" — to this position. The rock is about the size of a doughnut.

The images are from Opportunity's panoramic camera (Pancam). The one on the left is from 3,528th martian day, or sol, of the rover's work on Mars — December 26, 2013. The one on the right, with the newly arrived rock, is from Sol 3,540 — January 8, 2014. Much of the rock is bright-toned, nearly white; a portion is deep red in color. Pinnacle Island may have been flipped upside down when a wheel dislodged it, providing an unusual circumstance for examining the underside of a martian rock.

The site is on "Murray Ridge," a section of the rim of Endeavour Crater where Opportunity is working on north-facing slopes during the rover's sixth martian winter.
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