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NASA’s Perseverance Mars rover has given us a sneak peek of an intriguing patch of the sun that’s not yet visible from Earth.
Perseverance photographs the sun daily with its Mastcam-Z camera system to gauge the amount of dust in the Martian atmosphere. Such an effort captured a big sunspot moving across the solar disk late last week and over the weekend, as SpaceWeather.com reported.
“Because Mars is orbiting over the far side of the sun, Perseverance can see approaching sunspots more than a week before we do,” SpaceWeather.com wrote in a post highlighting the sunspot photos. “Consider this your one-week warning: A big sunspot is coming.”
Related: Perseverance rover captures gorgeous video of solar eclipse on Mars
Sunspots are relatively dark and cool areas where the sun’s magnetic field is particularly strong.
These patches commonly serve as launch pads for solar flares (outbursts of high-energy radiation) and coronal mass ejections (CMEs; huge eruptions of solar plasma), which is why they’re also known as “active regions.”
Solar flares and CMEs that hit Earth can affect satellite navigation and disrupt power grids, among other things, so tracking the movement of sunspots is more than just of academic interest.
Sungazing is a sidelight for Perseverance, of course. The rover’s main tasks are hunting for evidence of life on Mars and collecting dozens of samples, which will be returned to Earth sometime in the next decade by a joint NASA-European Space Agency mission campaign (provided funding for the endeavor comes through).
Perseverance is exploring the floor of Mars’ Jezero Crater, which hosted a big lake and a river delta billions of years ago. The car-sized rover landed inside the 28-mile-wide (45 kilometers) crater in February 2021 along with the tiny Ingenuity helicopter.
Ingenuity was designed as a technology demonstrator, but has surpassed expectations to become something much more. It’s now serving as a scout for the Perseverance team and has a whopping 55 Red Planet flights under its belt.
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