The Perseverance rover has been traversing the rocky hills and valleys of Mars for the past year.
Perseverance landed on the Red Planet. Its initial mission was to monitor. It was Perseverance's job to take pictures of what Mars looks like. In May, it began conducting science experiments to help us understand our planetary neighbor.
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Perseverance continued to take pictures and send them to NASA. The public has been voting on a picture of the week from Perseverance's photo dumps for the past 10 months. NASA put the most-liked images into a cache.
The images of the Martian surface and Perseverance selfies are our favorites. Enjoy.
The picture of the week was black and white. Credit: Caltech.
Week 4's picture shows that the key to a good selfies is getting that horizon line right. Credit: Caltech.
I was impressed with Perseverance's Week 6 photography skills. It's not easy to capture that depth with multiple layers of terrain. Credit: Caltech.
Has Perseverance been listening to music? Week 10 is called yellow because it is the only way to describe it. Credit: Caltech.
You thought your phone could take a macro shot. Perseverance's "Super cam" brought you this extreme- close up of a martian rock from Week 15. Credit: Caltech.
The rock from Week 16 looks better now than it did when it was there. Credit: Caltech.
The most-liked photo of Mars from Week 33 is Arrakis'. Credit: Caltech.
Okay... Do rocks float on Mars? That is just a photo from Week 36. Credit: Caltech.
The perfect place to put a human butt was sent back by Perseverance. Credit: Caltech.
We're looking forward to more from Perseverance.