First Picture from Mars Reconnaisance Orbiter
The HiRISE camera can take 40,000-by-20,000-pixel (about 800-megapixel) images through its 0.5-meter (20-inch) f/24 telescope. The craft will spend the next six months delicately aerobraking its way down to a low orbit. It will then begin mapping in earnest.
MRO is far more capable than any previous Mars mapper. The test images were shot from an altitude of 2,489 kilometers (1,547 miles); once in its final orbit at about a tenth this height, MRO should have a resolution of 30 centimeters (1 foot) per pixel on the ground. And its extremely large view will cover much more land area at high resolution than possible before. Great improvements are sure to result in our knowledge of Mars's geology, history, and a wide variety of surface conditions all over the planet.
"These images provide the first opportunity to test camera settings and the spacecraft's ability to point the camera with Mars filling the instruments' field of view," said Steve Saunders, the mission's program scientist, in a press statement. "The information learned will be used to prepare for the primary mission next fall." The test will help the camera team develop calibration and image-processing procedures, such the precise corrections needed for color imaging and for high-resolution surface measurements from stereo pairs of images.
For more information and the full-resolution view, see NASA's news release. More images from the test run should be released in the coming days.





