A round face, two round craters for the eyes and a geological formation that strangely resembles a bear's muzzle and mouth... Nasa's HiRISE project shared a surprising snapshot of the red planet, Wednesday January 25, accompanied by this question: "A bear on Mars?

»

HiPOD: A Bear on Mars?



This feature looks a bit like a bear's face.

What is it really?



More: https://t.co/MpLQBg38ur



NASA/JPL-Caltech/UArizona#Mars #science #NASA https://t.co/2WUNquTUZH pic.twitter.com/1k2ZnLcJ5o

— HiRISE: Beautiful Mars (NASA) (@HiRISE) January 25, 2023

Access to this content has been blocked to respect your choice of consent

By clicking on "

I ACCEPT

", you accept the deposit of cookies by external services and will thus have access to the content of our partners

I ACCEPT

And to better remunerate 20 Minutes, do not hesitate to accept all cookies, even for one day only, via our "I accept for today" button in the banner below.

More information on the Cookie Management Policy page.


Intriguing, the photograph was taken last month by the US space agency's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter satellite, which orbits the Red Planet with the HiRISE high-resolution on-board camera, the most powerful ever sent by humans in the solar system.

The optical illusion

According to scientists from the University of Arizona, who are leading the project, the animal's face is actually formed by “two craters”, which form the eyes and a disembowelled “hill” which resembles a snout.

These elements are surrounded by a "circular fracture", which delimits the contours of the head and could be formed by a deposit of lava or mud.

The whole thing gives the impression of seeing the smiling face of a teddy bear.

Quite a coincidence, to give a geological formation that stretches over two kilometres.

But above all, an optical illusion called pareidolia.

Recognizing shapes in clouds or everyday objects — like a power outlet — allows our brains to make sense of ambiguous visual cues.

Avalanches, Dark Tracks and Star Trek Badge

The HiRISE camera is one of the six instruments on board this NASA satellite, which has been orbiting Mars since 2006. Ultra-precise, it allows very detailed shots to be taken to map the surface of the red planet for future missions carried out by robots or humans.

For ten years, the scientists who manage it have, for example, been able to photograph avalanches on Mars, and have discovered dark traces which could be salt water flowing along gullies.

They also spotted dust devils on the planet's surface, and another geological formation that looks suspiciously like the insignia of the Starfleet force tasked with exploring space in the Star Trek television series.

But even with high definition images, the little green men supposed to populate Mars in the popular imagination have so far proved untraceable.

Science

Space: A truck-sized asteroid passed very close to Earth

Science

ISS: For the future Emirati astronaut, "fasting is not obligatory" during Ramadan

  • Science

  • March

  • Nasa

  • star trek

  • Space