Astronomical images published in December showed astonishing and unusual aspects of the Martian surface, as the red planet looked like Earth, according to the Houston Chronicle.
The unprecedented images were taken on Mars at altitudes of up to thousands of feet. The mission was accomplished by the Mars Roaction Orbiter, a camera developed at the University of Arizona, which has been sending Red Planet imagery to Earth since 2006.
What is striking in these pictures, their appearance in colors such as blue, pink and red, and the similarity between them and what we see on the planet.
Astronomers are working hard to study the possibility of life on Mars. The Koryosti shuttle, which reached Mars in 2011, still sends images from the Red Planet to Earth.
Last November, NASA's Insight probe landed on Mars and sent the first image of Mars.
The Insight will spend 24 months, equal to one year of Mars, taking seismic and thermal readings for information that helps to know how Mars, the Earth's origin and other rocky planets form the inner solar system.
The United States began its first flights to Mars in the 1960s, while others launched about 24 flights to the planet.