INA- sources
Nasa’s Perseverance Mars rover has captured a rare strange “blue sunset” over the Red Planet’s horizon, an image that sheds more light on the physics behind an alien sunset.
The rover took the snap on its 933rd Martian day with its navigation camera as the sky above the Red Planet began to go dark.
Perseverance’s image shows the Sun setting down on the Martian horizon glowing a strange, cool blueish green.
The image captured by the rover’s navigation camera, located high on the rover’s mast aiding in driving, was acquired by Nasa on Thursday, the American space agency noted.
The otherworldly nature of the sunset image also sheds light on the physics of light scattering on the Red Planet, and how it contrasts with a similar phenomenon on the Earth.
On the Earth, when different wavelengths of light from the Sun enters the atmosphere, it is scattered by tiny particles including gasses like oxygen, nitrogen, carbon dioxide, and water vapour as well as other particulate matter.
During the peak of the day, when a planet’s side is closer to the Sun, blue light – which travels in shorter waves – is scattered far and wide making the sky appear blue during this time.
However, during sunrise and sunset, the sunlight travels more distance in the atmosphere.
This causes light with shorter wavelengths, including violet and blue to be scattered away, leaving only the orange and red light to reach the eyes.
Mars’ atmosphere is very thin, about 1 per cent of the Earth’s, and the Red Planet is also 50 per cent further from the Sun than the Earth.
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