Astro Image in the News:
Hubble's Closest Look at Mars
August 28, 2003
NASA's Hubble Space Telescope took this snapshot of Mars 11 hours before the planet made its closest approach to Earth. The two planets are 34,648,840 miles (55,760,220 km) apart. This image was made from a series of exposures taken between 6:20 p.m. and 7:12 p.m. EDT Aug. 26 with Hubble's Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2.
Courtesy NASA, J. Bell (Cornell Univ.), and M. Wolff (SSI).
During the exposures Mars was 34,648,840 miles (55,760,220 kilometers) away from Earth. With a resolution of 8 miles per pixel, the view shows numerous impact craters, many of which have dark floors. The murky swath on the left side of the disk is Sinus Meridiani; the triangular one on the right is Syrtis Major. The Hellas impact basin lies just below the dark features.

