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" ... At that location, it is currently early autumn. The weather reported on February 18th at that location is shown above. On Sol 3035, the high temperature was 18 degrees F, and the low temperature was -101 degrees F. If you look at the previous days, this was actually the warmest day of the week. By the way, a “sol” is a Martian day (24 hours, 39 minutes, 35 seconds), and it is a bit longer than our day One year on Mars is roughly 668 sols. ... "
" ... Both Kepler 62 and sol's inner planetary systems were likely richer in the past. All we can see... [+] today are the survivors. Image credit: NASA Ames/JPL-Caltech. ... "
" ... But over the course of a year, one path will be the longest and reach the highest point, while another path will be the shortest and reach the lowest maximum height above the horizon. These correspond to the solstices: winter and summer solstice, to be precise. The reason it's called the solstice is because — for approximately a week on either side of the solstices — the apparent change in motion of the Sun is largely imperceptible. The Sun appears to "stand still," and the word solstice comes from the Latin "sol" (for Sun) and the verb "stare" (to be fixed/rigid/unmoving). ... "
" ... Curiosity took its latest selfie on February 26, the 2,687th Martian day (or sol) of Curiosity’s mission; a few days later, the rover started up the steep slope of Greenheugh Pediment. At one point in the climb, the rover tilted at 31⁰ (just shy of the now-dormant Opportunity rover’s 32⁰ record). Curiosity can safely tilt up to 45⁰ without falling over, but 31⁰ is a steep enough drive to cause the rover’s wheels to spin in place. It was a tough climb, but 9 days and 3.4 meters (11 feet) later, Curiosity reached the top of the pediment on March 6 (sol 2,696). And we have a selfie to mark the moment. ... "
" ... The chart below shows the normalized values for nominal GDP in terms of U.S. dollars between 2001 (index value = 100) and 2018 for six Latin American countries. Three – Panama, Ecuador, and El Salvador – are officially dollarized, while Peru has a dual currency system (read: both the Peruvian sol and USD are legal tender). In the three officially dollarized countries, GDP growth in terms of U.S. dollars has been more stable than growth in the countries that issue their own domestic currencies. Peru, with its dual currency system, displays less stability than the fully dollarized countries, but has relatively strong growth. When it comes to Colombia, its growth rate is highly variable and modest. Indeed, thanks to the plunge in the peso after 2013, Colombia’s GDP has, well, plunged. ... "