SpaceExploration Wednesday, November 17, 2004 . This is a SciScoop post by Ricky James
Images of Phobos as shown here had already been taken at lower resolution in previous orbits (413, 649, 682, 715 and 748). In the coming months, these first pictures will be followed by a series of images taken in subsequent fly-bys.
The HRSC provided an unprecedented near-simultaneous group of 10 different images of the surface, enabling the moon’s shape, topography, colour, `regolith’ light-scattering properties, and rotational and orbital states to be determined. The regolith is the small-grained material covering most non-icy planetary bodies, resulting from multiple impacts on the body’s surface.
These HRSC images show new detail that will keep planetary scientists busy for years, working to unravel the mysteries of this moon. These images have surpassed all previous images from other missions in continuous coverage of the illuminated surface, not blurred and at the highest resolution. The US Viking Orbiter obtained a few small areas sampled at an even higher resolution of a few metres per pixel, but these were not so sharp due to the close and fast fly-by.
The global `groove’ network is seen in sufficient detail to cover the Mars-facing surface continuously from near the equator up to the north pole with regular spacing between the grooves. It now may be possible to determine whether the grooves existed before the large cratering events, and exist deep within Phobos, or came after the cratering events and were superimposed on them.
Much more detail is seen inside the various-sized craters, showing some with marked albedo variations. Some craters have dark materials near the crater floors, some have regolith that slid down the crater walls, and some have very dark ejecta, possibly some of the darkest material in our Solar System.
This tiny moon is thought to be in a `death spiral’, slowly orbiting toward the surface of Mars. Here, Phobos was found to be about five kilometres ahead of its predicted orbital position. This could be an indication of an increased orbital speed associated with its secular acceleration, causing the moon to spiral in toward Mars.
Eventually Phobos could be torn apart by Martian gravity and become a short-lived ring around Mars, or even impact on the surface. This orbit will be studied in more detail over the lifetime of the Mars Express.
The 3D anaglyph image was generated from a combination of the nadir and the blue channel. The colour image was calculated from the three colour channels and the nadir channel. Due to geometric reasons the scale bar is only valid for the centre of the image.
Text from this article (except for the first two paragraphs) comes from an ESA press release.
Previously: « The SMART Way To The Moon
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3 Responses to Astronauts To Luna Or Mars: Why Not The Third Option?
phred14
November 17th, 2004 at 5:59 pm
Just don’t let some company called UAC get involved in operations there. That and don’t wait too long to send in the Marines – with a roll of duct tape.
On a slightly more serious note, the Mars Direct proposal by Zubrin at least has provisions to manufacture return fuel at Mars. Any sort of mission to Phobos would need to take return fuel with it. On second thought, take the fuel-generation part of Zubrin’s plans, and strip it to JUST fuel generation. If there were a base on Phobos, the fuel depot could take off from Mars and bring the fuel there. An advance base on Phobos would give the chance to pick the best spots to land, and perhaps allow better differentiation between lander and transit vehicles. Heck, we could use multiple unmanned missions to stockpile gear at Phobos, as well as fuel depots on Mars, before ever sending people. That’s taking the spirit of Zubrin’s idea farther.
apsmith
November 18th, 2004 at 7:40 am
You can make your return fuel on Phobos or Deimos, without going to Mars’ surface – at least according to this they are similar to carbonaceous chondrite asteroids and made up of about 20% water, and lots of carbon too.
Anonymous
January 14th, 2005 at 12:25 am
Until now only the major makers have offered
boards for AMD’s hot Socket 939 Athlon 64 processor,
and they were relatively pricey. But now the motherboards for this platform
have finally arrived en masse, and can be found most anywhere.
Socket 939 systems work with dual-channel
memory and offer high performance at an acceptable
cost, making them very attractive. Unfortunately, by focusing at first only
on high-end models, AMD ruined what could have been a dream launch for the
platform. The reason they did this is understandable,
though. At 144 and 193 mm2 for the 512 KB and 1 MB L2 cache versions respectively,
the Athlon 64 chips are not exactly small. Unlike Intel, so far AMD
can only manufacture on 200mm wafers, compared
to Intel’s 300mm, which naturally limits the production runs. That means that
AMD probably had somewhat low yield per
wafer, and may not have been able to accommodate
a sudden surge in demand.