Curiosity Vista from Vera Rubin Ridge  
 
 Image Credit:  
NASA,
JPL-Caltech,
MSSS,
Curiosity Mars Rover
  
 Explanation:  
If you could stand on Mars -- what might you see?
If you were NASA's 
Curiosity rover, just last month you would have seen 
the view from Vera Rubin Ridge, an 
intriguing rock-strewn perch 
on the side of 
Mount Sharp.
In the 
featured 360-degree panorama, you can spin around and take in 
the vista from all directions, 
in many browsers, just by pointing or 
tilting. 
In this virtual reality view, many instruments on 
the rover are labelled, including antennas, the robotic arm, and the radioisotope thermoelectric generator (RTG).
Dark sand and light rock cover the ground nearby in a mixture called lakebed mudstone.
Towering Mount Sharp is only barely visible in the distance due to airborne dust from a 
planet-wide storm just winding down.
Among its 
many discoveries, Curiosity has found that the 
raw ingredients for life are present on Mars. 
Next on Mars will be NASA's 
Insight, on target 
to land in late November, 
which is scheduled to deploy a 
seismometer 
to better study the interior of the 
red planet. 
To watch the video, Click here.
Source: NASA