From an explosion on the sun to a successful docking of a commercial spacecraft with the International Space Station, to a frog sent accidentally flying by a NASA rocket launch, it was an exciting month in the space biz—unless you’re the frog.
Window on Infinity: Pictures from Space
FU Berlin / DLR / ESA
Prominent patches of wind-blown dust, possibly mixed with volcanic ash, radiate from one Martian crater—the Becquerel—and into another. The streak of dust following a radial path likely traces out a gentle topographic depression, beyond the eroded rim of the neighbouring old crater.