From the BBC:
The US space agency has issued another of the "selfie" portraits acquired by the Curiosity rover on Mars.
Nasa tries to make one of these mosaics at every location where the robot drills into the surface.
This latest picture was taken by the rover at "Buckskin" - the seventh rock target on the mission to provide a sample for analysis.
The portrait differs from previous ones in that it is taken from a low angle.
Curiosity manages this smart piece of planetary photography in the same way that any human would take a selfie - by holding a camera at arm's length and framing its own form.
The camera used is the "hand lens" known as Mahli. Normally used to study mineral grains in rocks at very close quarters, it can also be focussed on infinity.
Engineers instruct Mahli to send back multiple shots of the rover, after first practising the shoot sequence on a test vehicle kept on Earth.
The pictures must then be stitched together to make the final scene.
Good copies of the 'selfies' were also found on Engadget.
(Score: 2) by Nerdfest on Sunday August 23 2015, @04:52PM
No duckface?
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday August 23 2015, @07:02PM
Don't give the goatse people any new ideas