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Mars moon photos reveil large number 22 on surface

NASA probe pictures Phobos moon

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/shared/spl/hi/pop_ups/08/sci_nat_enl_1207834376/html/1.stm
The 9km-wide Stickney impact crater is the most prominent feature on Phobos


Nasa’s Mars Reconaissance Orbiter (MRO) has captured two stunning images of the Red Planet’s major moon, Phobos.

Stickney Crater, a 9km (5.5 mile) -wide depression that is the largest feature on Phobos dominates the pictures.

The images also show a series of grooves and crater chains; the formation of these features is the subject of

debate among scientists.

MRO was launched from Florida in August 2005 and entered orbit around the Mars in March 2006.

It is mapping the Martian surface with

high-resolution cameras with a view

to choosing landing sites for future missions.

It will also study Mars’ weather,

climate, geology and atmosphere.

MRO’s High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HiRISE) camera acquired two dramatic views of Phobos on 23 March 2008, one at a distance of 6,800km (4,225 miles) from the Martian moon and another at 5,800km (3,603 miles).

The two images were taken within 10 minutes of each other and show roughly the same features, but from a different angle so they can be combined to yield a stereo view.

Phobos was discovered in 1877

by the American astronomer Asaph Hall.

Both Phobos and Mars‘ other moon,

Deimos, are thought to be captured asteroids.

Phobos’ orbit around Mars is dropping by about 1.8m (5.9ft) every 100 years. This means that in 50 million years it will either crash into Mars or break up into a ring.

Russia has been working on an unmanned spacecraft that will return samples of soil and rock from the surface of Phobos. The mission, called Phobos-Grunt, has a provisional launch date of October 2009.

The unique, fist-sized Kaidun meteorite, which fell to Earth at a Russian military base in Yemen in 1980, is claimed by some researchers to be a piece of Phobos.

 

 

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