Title: Astronomy 330
1Astronomy 330
Image of Mars taken from Hubble Space Telescope
http//solarsystem.nasa.gov/planets/profile.cfm?Ob
jectMars
2Astronomy 330
- 4th planet from the sun
- Mars, of the all the planets, is probably the
most like Earth on its surface - Length of day is almost identical to Earths,
Mars also has seasons like Earth - Maybe had and does have some liquid water???
- Maybe life???
3Astronomy 330
- Mars has 1/10th the mass of the Earth, so we
expect it to be less active than Earth
geologically - Mars is 1.5 AU from the Sun, it has a colder
surface - The atmosphere is very thin, U.V. light from the
Sun reaches Mars surface - The water on Mars is mostly frozen ice, also much
CO2 ice (dry ice). - The atmospheric pressure is so low that liquid
water cannot exist for very long on the surface,
it boils or freezes immediately
4Astronomy 330
http//cmex-www.arc.nasa.gov/CMEX/index.html
5Astronomy 330
- Mars, it is thought was much different, in the
past - Evidence for large volcanoes, which could have
released huge amounts of gases (water included) - River channels indicate that water once flowed
freely on the surface - Recent missions to the surface also show
unequivocal evidence for surface water - Mars shows climate cycles (only other planet
besides Earth to show this)
6Astronomy 330 Gusev crater
See http//cmex-www.arc.nasa.gov/CMEX/index.html
7Astronomy 330
- Mars color is red and it is one of the most
bright objects in the sky - Little can be seen telescopically except light
and dark features when Mars is near opposition
(closest to the Earth). - Mars also shows polar caps which grow and shrink
with the seasons on Mars - Mars also can show transient yellow or white
clouds
8Astronomy 330 Mars from Hubble
See http//solarsystem.nasa.gov/planets/profile.c
fm?ObjectMars
9Astronomy 330 The Canal Controversy
- Giovanni Schiaperelli (1877) identified linear
features he called canali, in Italian this means
channels, but was translated into English as
canals - Percival Lowell, by eye, sketched what he thought
were these canals, developed a whole story about
a dying civilization on Mars
10Astronomy 330 Lowells canals
http//www.wanderer.org/references/lowell/Mars/cha
p05.html
11Astronomy 330
- Tilt of Mars axis is 25o. This means Mars has
seasons similar to Earths (recall the tilt of
the Earths rotational axis is 23.5o). - Seasons on Mars last twice as long as on Earth
due to the longer orbital period of Mars - Polar cap forms and expands in the hemisphere
undergoing winter phase. Cap also covered in
clouds. Maximum extent to a a latitude of 65o - Polar caps recede with onset of summer, a
permanent cap remains which is only a few hundred
kilometers across
12Astronomy 330 Variations of Mars orbit,
rotation axis
http//cmex-www.arc.nasa.gov/CMEX/index.html
13Astronomy 330 Missions
- Many observers using telescopes also thought they
saw seasonal changes in the light and dark
patches on the surfacedarkening in summer,
thought this may be due to plant growth, melting
of a water polar cap - Mariners 2,4 (first flyby) of Mars (1965)
shattered this perception
14Astronomy 330 Seasonal Changes from Hubble
http//cmex-www.arc.nasa.gov/CMEX/index.html
15Astronomy 330 Missions
- Mariners showed many impact craters, similar to
the Moon - Sending radio signals through Mars atmosphere
also helped during an occultation of the
spacecraft showed that the surface pressure was
0.01 bar, much lower than expected - Mariners 6, 7 mapped much of the surface, also
showed Mars to be heavily cratered, but didnt
map the whole surface and missed very important
features. Also determined that polar caps have a
large amount of CO2 ice
16Astronomy 330 South Pole topography, many craters
http//cmex-www.arc.nasa.gov/CMEX/index.html
17Astronomy 330 Mariner 4
- First spacecraft to fly by Mars
- Discovered first evidence of running water
- Studied interplanetary fields, particles
- First close up pictures of Mars, surprisingly
like Moon (impacts) - Studied atmosphere of Mars by beaming radio
signals through atmosphere
http//solarsystem.nasa.gov/missions/profile.cfm?S
ortTargetTargetMarsMCodeMariner_04
18Astronomy 330 Mariner 6 7
- Identical spacecraft which flew by Mars in 1969
- Took more pictures
- Revealed surface features such as depressions not
related to impacts, deserts
http//solarsystem.nasa.gov/missions/profile.cfm?S
ortTargetTargetMarsMCodeMariner_06
19Astronomy 330 Mariner 9
- First spacecraft to orbit another planet (1971)
- Atmosphere very dusty on arrival, but being in
orbit allowed it to wait - Imaged 80 of surface
- Discovered river beds, craters, Vallis Marinaris
- Evidence of wind and water erosion, fog, weather
fronts
http//solarsystem.nasa.gov/missions/profile.cfm?S
ortTargetTargetMarsMCodeMariner_09
20Astronomy 330 Missions
- Mariner 9, first orbiter
- Discovered first volcanoes on Mars
- Discovered the largest volcano in the Solar
System - Discovered the largest canyon and largest canyon
system - Discovered vast drainage channels
- Repeated occultations allowed to make detailed
observations of the structure of Mars atmosphere.
21Astronomy 330 Vallis Marinaris
http//cmex-www.arc.nasa.gov/CMEX/index.html
22Astronomy 330 Viking 1 2
- Viking 1 and Viking 2 launched within weeks of
each other in 1975, landed 1976 - Consisted of orbiter and lander
- Imaged entire planet
- Water vapor measurements, infrared thermal
mapping - Landers collected and analyzed soil (rich in
iron, devoid of life) - Monitored temperature, winds
- Seismometers did not function
http//solarsystem.nasa.gov/missions/profile.cfm?S
ortTargetTargetMarsMCodeViking_02
23Astronomy 330 Viking
http//nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/planetary/viking.html
24Astronomy 330 Missions
- Several Soviet and U.S. missions failed (e.g.
Mars Observer) in the 80s and early 90s - 1996, Mars Pathfinder landed Sojourner rover,
obtained data on elemental composition of rocks - Mars Global Surveyor obtained high resolution at
very high resolution, first topographic map of
Mars
25Astronomy 330 Missions
- The next two U.S. missions in 1999 failed due to
the mixups of units (some people were using
English system, others using metric!). - Mars Odyssey successfully in orbit in 2001,
discovered large amounts of subsurface ice.
26Astronomy 330 Fobos 1 2
- Russian orbiters and landers (1988)
- Designed to orbit and study Mars and moons of
Mars (Phobos and Deimos) - Mission lost due to programming error
27Astronomy 330 Mars Observer
- Mission to study geology, geochemistry (1992)
- Mission lost due to fuel line rupture (most
likely cause) 2 days before orbit insertion
http//solarsystem.nasa.gov/missions/profile.cfm?S
ortTargetTargetMarsMCodeMarsObserver
28Astronomy 330 Pathfinder (Sojourner)
- First rover mission (1996-1997)
- Consisted only of a self-righting, tetrahedral
lander - Landed in Ares Vallis, found evidence of running
water from images of rocks - Showed rocks are similar in composition to
terrestrial volcanic rocks - Also collected weather data
http//solarsystem.nasa.gov/missions/profile.cfm?S
ortTargetTargetMarsMCodePathfinder
29Astronomy 330 Nozomi
- Japanese orbiter (1998)
- Orbiter lost due to malfunctions, ran out of
fuel, placed in solar orbit
http//solarsystem.nasa.gov/missions/profile.cfm?S
ortTargetTargetMarsMCodeNozomi
30Astronomy 330 Mars Climate Orbiter
- U.S., 1998 mission
- Orbiter to study surface and atmosphere,
communications relay for Mars Polar lander and
Deep Space 2 - Burned up in Mars atmosphere, incorrect units
used resulting in navigation error
http//solarsystem.nasa.gov/missions/profile.cfm?S
ortTargetTargetMarsMCodeMCO
31Astronomy 330 Mars Polar Lander
- 1998 U.S. mission
- Supposed to land near pole
- Communications lost as descent begun
http//solarsystem.nasa.gov/missions/profile.cfm?S
ortTargetTargetMarsMCodeMPL
32Astronomy 330 Deep Space 2
- U.S. 1998
- Twin micro-probes released from Mars Polar Lander
- Intended to penetrate surface at high speed and
take sub-surface data - Mission lost
http//solarsystem.nasa.gov/missions/profile.cfm?S
ortTargetTargetMarsMCodeDS2
33Astronomy 330 Beagle 2
- European, 2003
- Release from European orbiter Mars Express
- Was to have landed on surface to look for signs
of life-past or present - Mission lost
http//solarsystem.nasa.gov/missions/profile.cfm?S
ortTargetTargetMarsMCodeBeagle_02
34Astronomy 330 Mars Global Surveyor
- First success in more than 2 decades !
- U.S. 1997
- Polar orbit, observed Mars from low altitude
orbit - Observed evidence for recent liquid water flows
- 3-d profiles of North pole
- Still in operation
http//solarsystem.nasa.gov/missions/profile.cfm?S
ortTargetTargetMarsMCodeMGS
35Astronomy 330 Mars 2001 Odyssey
- U.S., 2001
- Mission to map surface, search for signs of water
ice - Found a vast amount of subsurface ice, results
suggest that 10 of near surface could be water - Radiation levels 2-3 times those near Earth
- Still in operation, serves as communications
relay for Spirit and Opportunity
http//solarsystem.nasa.gov/missions/profile.cfm?S
ortTargetTargetMarsMCodeOdyssey
36Astronomy 330 Mars Express
- European, 2003
- Search for subsurface water, study atmosphere
- Dramatic evidence of methane (life?)
- Was supposed to work with Beagle 2
- Mission still operating
http//solarsystem.nasa.gov/missions/profile.cfm?S
ortTargetTargetMarsMCodeMarsExpress
37Astronomy 330 Spirit and Opportunity Rovers
- U.S. 2004
- Currently operating
- Designed to move and examine mineralogy of rocks
- Look for evidence of water (have found a lot of
evidence!)
38Astronomy 330 Bulk Properties of Mars
- Diameter, 6,787 km, half the size of the Earth
- Surface area is equal to all the continents on
Earth - Mass is 11 the Earths, 9 times the Moon
- Therefore, Mars has geologic activity roughly
half way between the Earth and the Moon
39Astronomy 330
- Mars density is 3.9 g/cm3 and its uncompressed
density is about 3.8 g/cm3 - This indicates that Mars is probably deficient in
metals. - Maybe Mars is more representative of the Silicate
to Metal ratio in the early Solar nebula
(remember that we think that the Earth suffered a
giant impact) - Or maybe the part of the Solar Nebula where Mars
formed had less metals
40Astronomy 330
- Spacecraft orbital data indicates that Mars
probably has a somewhat dense core - Core is probably composed of FeS (not iron nickel
as on Earth) (Iron Sulfide) with a diameter of
2400 km, 40 of total diameter. - The core takes up a similar volume relative to
the total as does the Earths core - Core is probably solid, not liquid as deduced
from calculations - Mars has no strong magnetic field (not
surprising), but does show a primordial field
41Astronomy 330
- Magnetometers do detect some residual fields
coming from specific areas of Mars - This indicates Mars probably did have a strong
field in its past and a liquid core - Magnetism is found where rocks on Mars are the
oldest - The Solar wind interacts directly with the
Martian atmosphere
42Astronomy 330 Reading
- Read Chapter 11 of Morrison and Owen