Google has extended its
mapping operations outside Earth's orbit with the launch of
Google Mars.
Users can scroll over the surface of the
Red Planet
and it look at it with a colour coded relief map, an infrared display or an
estimation of how the surface would look to the naked eye.
"We here on Earth have long held a fascination with the planet Mars," writes
the
Google
blog.
"From
Percival
Lowell's sketches of its surface, to the countless books and movies that
revolve around it, we've spent millennia studying and day-dreaming about our
nearest neighbour in the
solar system.
"In that tradition, Nasa
researchers Noel Gorelick and Michael Weiss-Malik from
Arizona State University
worked with us to combine
Google Maps technology
with some of the most detailed scientific maps of Mars ever made."
In addition to general maps the user can search for particular craters and
mountains, and for the landing sites of probes, including
Beagle 2.
Fans of science fiction can also see features on the planet mentioned in
fictional accounts of landings.
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