Watch first ever 'livestream' from Mars by European Space Agency
The European Space Agency (ESA) live-streamed imagery from its Mars Express orbiter in near-real time on Friday (2 June), and you can watch it live.
The event, held to celebrate the 20th anniversary of Mars Express' launch, began at 12pm EDT (1600 GMT) and lasted about an hour.
"This will be the closest you can get to a live view from the Red Planet," ESA officials said in a statement.
Mars Express' images will get to Earth today 18 minutes after they're snapped if all goes according to plan, they added. It will take 17 minutes for them to get to our planet from Mars, then another minute or so to make it through servers and wires on the ground.
Mars Express team members have spent the last few months preparing for today's live stream — for instance, developing the tools needed to get the VMC photos online as soon as possible.
Mars Express launched with a lander called Beagle 2 on June 2, 2003. The duo arrived in orbit around the Red Planet on Christmas Day of that year.
Beagle 2 touched down on Mars that same day but never phoned home, apparently because one or more of its four solar panels failed to deploy properly and ended up blocking the lander's communications antenna.
Mars Express, however, got up and running as planned, studying the Red Planet in detail with seven different science instruments.
The orbiter has accomplished a great deal during its two decades away from Earth. For example, it detected methane in the Martian atmosphere, mapped the composition of ice near the planet's poles and spotted a possible subsurface lake near Mars' south pole. And Mars Express is still going strong, as today's event shows.
The live stream showcased images snapped by the probe's Visual Monitoring Camera (VMC), which was originally designed to monitor the separation of Beagle 2. Once it did that, the VMC was turned off — but it was turned back on in 2007 to snap imagery for education and outreach activities, and for science work as well.
"We developed new, more sophisticated methods of operations and image processing, to get better results from the camera, turning it into Mars Express' eighth science instrument," VMC team member Jorge Hernández Bernal said in the same statement.