A circular fissure, in the shape of the letter “V”, creates the illusion of a bear’s nose. The circular fissure may have been caused by sediment above a buried impact crater filled with lava or mud.
A camera lens aboard a NASA spacecraft captured a bear’s face as if it was looking at it on the surface of Mars, after the mysterious door image taken in May 2022.
The rover carried out an exploration operation called the “High-Resolution Imaging Experiment”, or “HiRISE”, an image of the exceptional geological formation last December. The circular slit pattern on the surface of Mars is the shape of a bear’s head, while two craters embody the shape of its eyes.
A circular fissure, in the shape of the letter “V”, creates the illusion of a bear’s nose. The circular fissure may have been caused by sediment above a buried impact crater filled with lava or mud.
The nose-like feature is likely a volcanic vent or mud vent.
The American University of Arizona, which developed the camera in cooperation with the company “Ball Aerospace”, which manufactures spacecraft, shared the image on January 25, and the image reminds of another heavenly “face” that a NASA space observatory glimpsed in October 2022, when The sun appeared to be smiling because of the dark spots called coronal holes.
The Curiosity spacecraft spotted rock formations resembling the shape of Venus on Mars in March of last year, and the HiRISE camera has been taking pictures of Mars since 2006, when the Mars Exploration Vehicle began orbiting the red planet.