Plus, inflatable art transforms Paris’s Pont Neuf.
 

The Beacon

The Beacon

By Kate Turton

Hello Beacon readers! This weekend I have marathons on the brain as my hometown Cape Town hosts one. Eliud Kipchoge and the other runners may soon welcome an unlikely comrade to their ranks: NASA's Perseverance Rover has almost covered the official marathon distance on the surface of Mars. 

The robotic scout has been exploring the Martian surface for over half a decade, looking for signs of ancient life and collecting rock samples. 

These explorations amount to a distance of 26.09 miles (41.99 km) covered. The official marathon distance is 26.22 miles (42.2 km). Perseverance mission manager Robert Hogg expects the rover to exceed that distance in the next month.

Perseverance is not alone on Mars, Curiosity has traveled 22.93 miles (36.91 km), while the rover that logged the most mileage ⁠on the Martian surface was NASA's Opportunity with 28.06 miles (45.16 km) during its mission.

Got any global good news have you read this week that you would like to share? Running tips? Email me at beacon@thomsonreuters.com and I might feature it in a future edition.

 

Perseverance takes a self-portrait against a sweeping backdrop of ancient Martian terrain.

In their own words

"The rover continues in good health with at least a decade left in its power source. The duration of the mission will depend on choices NASA makes," said Ken Farley, Perseverance's deputy project scientist at Caltech.

 

Art transforms NYC garbage trucks into mobile murals

Play 

Art and garbage came together in New York's Union Square, where officials and artists unveiled five sanitation trucks covered in colorful murals. Local artist Allison Bouganim called her design a "love letter" to the city's invisible workers.

 

In other news

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  • Disney sends Baby Yoda to bring 'Star Wars' fans to theaters
  • Andy Garcia's LA noir 'Diamond' reaches Cannes
  • Section of Eiffel Tower staircase fetches over €450,000 at auction
  • Scientists unravel the history of cotton domestication
  • Unusual images from around the world this week
 

Inflatable art turns Paris’s Pont Neuf into a rocky cavern

The temporary artwork "La Caverne du Pont Neuf" conceived by French street artist JR. REUTERS/Benoit Tessier 

This week, Parisians woke up to what looked like a rocky mountain range rising above the River Seine.

The work of artist JR, the inflatable art installation transformed the city’s oldest bridge, the Pont Neuf, into a cave-like structure.

Parisian Alice Faure said: "At first, I was disappointed, but now I find it very beautiful because he manages to create movement with something mineral, to give it volume."

"La Caverne du Pont Neuf" is achieved with printed fabric and air  creating craggy, limestone-like formations that tower above the bridge. From a distance, the installation appears like geology reclaiming the landmark.

JR is known for large-scale visual illusions across Paris landmarks, including a 2021 optical illusion that made it look as if the Eiffel Tower was perched precariously over a rocky ravine.

The temporary installation was privately funded and is free to the public. It opens on June 6 and will remain in place until June 28. Visitors will be able to walk through it once it opens.