Sol 1092: Bunsen Peak Core and Abrasion Patch Mastcam-Z Mosaic
This text is based on the NASA/JPL media release for this mosaic, online at https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA26312
This view shows a rock nicknamed “Bunsen Peak” where NASA’s Perseverance Mars rover extracted its 21st rock core (left) and abraded a circular patch (right) to investigate the rock’s composition.
Perseverance’s Mastcam-Z camera system took the eight images that make up this mosaic on March 16, 2024, the 1,092th Martian day, or sol, of the rover’s mission to Mars. For scale, the abrasion patch is approximately 2 inches (5 centimeters) in diameter.
[Note: The preview images embedded in the text here are low-resolution 1/10 scale JPEGs, because the full-resolution versions of these mosaics would take a long time to load on cell phones or tablets/laptops without high-speed internet access. Full-resolution PNG versions can be downloaded with the hyperlinks below each preview.]
Natural & Enhanced:

Left eye color panorama, natural color (view high resolution PNG)
Right eye color panorama, natural color (view high resolution PNG)

Left eye color panorama, enhanced color (view high resolution PNG)
Right eye color panorama, enhanced color (view high resolution PNG)
Anaglyphs:

Left/Right eye RED channel anaglyph panorama (view high resolution PNG)

Left/Right eye BLUE channel anaglyph panorama (view high resolution PNG)

Left/Right eye RGB color anaglyph panorama, enhanced color (view high resolution PNG)

Left/Right eye RGB color anaglyph panorama, natural color (view high resolution PNG)
March 16, 2024