On Monday, NASA published "first-of-its-kind footage" of the Perseverance rover's landing, while a microphone on the rover provided the first audio recording of sounds from Mars. Newsweek has contacted Hou for comment on his latest project. Since June 1, 2012, its videos have been watched more than 12.3 million times, according to YouTube analytics. The CreatorUp channel has more than 70,000 subscribers. It was designed for "meditation and relaxation" purposes and a VR headset was also recommended, he said. In a later post, Hou re-shared a CreatorUp video from last March that was based on footage from NASA's Curiosity rover, which landed on Mars in 2012. On Facebook, users can use their cursor to move the image and get a 360-degree view of what the rover recorded from the surface of the planet. The sky does not represent the real sky from Mars. Hou explained: "The original photo does not have the full sky, I edited the sky to have a full 360 experience inside a VR headset like Oculus Quest 2. The sky in Hou's tour has been edited to show it full of stars, so the experience works better on virtual reality headsets, he wrote in a disclaimer on Facebook. It was taken on February 20 by navigational cameras on the Perseverance rover, which had landed on Mars two days earlier, and "stitched together" from six images after they were sent back to Earth, the space agency said. The panorama image that Hou used to create the 360-degree tour was released by NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory on Monday. His "virtual tour" of the Red Planet's barren exterior has since been shared more than 1.2 million times. Hugh Hou, founder of the YouTube channel CreatorUp, shared an interactive video to his Facebook account on Tuesday. ![]() A videographer who specializes in 360-degree imagery is helping people to explore the surface of Mars.
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