by bystander » Mon Sep 30, 2019 7:29 pm
Week of 03 Sep 2019
Ross Beyer wrote:Frost Highlights in the Springtime (ESP_059681_2410) (HiClip)
This image of a crater rim strikingly shows what appear to be bright white flows coming from gullies in the crater wall. However, HiRISE has been watching these gullies for some time (going all the way back to our
first observation in 2012) and the flow features have been there for years. The new aspect is the bright white coloration, which is frost.
This is the earliest in the springtime that this area has been observed, and just like some winter mornings here on Earth, the conditions on Mars can be just right for frost to form. The interesting thing is that the frost appears on the gully deposits and not as much on the surrounding rock, indicating the physical properties of the gully deposits are different.
John Bridges wrote:The Bedrock Riddles of Nili Fossae (ESP_060064_2005) (HiClip)
This image of the Nili Fossae region, to the west of the great Isidis basin, shows layered bedrock with many impact craters.
Nili Fossae is one of the most
mineralogically important sites on Mars. Remote observations by the infrared spectrometer onboard MRO (called CRISM) suggest the layers in the ancient craters contain clays, carbonates, and iron oxides, perhaps due to hydrothermal alteration of the crust. However, the impact craters have been degraded by many millions of years of erosion so the original sedimentary, impact ejecta, or lava flows are hard to distinguish.
The bright linear features are sand dunes, also known as “transverse aeolian dunes,” because the wind direction is at ninety degrees to their elongated orientation. This shows that the erosion of Nili Fossae continues to the present day with sand-sized particles broken off from the local rocks mobilized within the dunes.
This is a stereo pair with
ESP_052389_2005.
Candy Hansen wrote:Avalanche Season (ESP_060176_2640) (HiClip)
Every spring the sun shines on the side of the stack of layers at the North Pole of Mars known as the north polar layered deposits. The warmth destabilizes the ice and blocks break loose.
When they reach the bottom of the more than 500 meter tall cliff face,
the blocks kick up a cloud of dust. (In the cutout, the top layer of the north polar cap is to the lower left.) The layers beneath are different colors and textures depending on the amount of dust mixed with ice.
James Wray wrote:Layers in Danielson Crater (ESP_060331_1880) (HiClip)
This image shows sedimentary rock and sand within Danielson Crater, an impact crater 67 kilometers in diameter, located in the southwest Arabia Terra region of Mars.
The rock was formed millions or billions of years ago when loose sediments settled into the crater, one layer at a time, and were later cemented in place. Cyclical variations in the sediment properties made some layers more resistant to erosion than others. After eons, these tougher layers protrude outward like stair steps. Across these steps, the winds have scattered sand (typically appearing darker and less red, i.e. “bluer” in contrast-enhanced color), giving rise to the zebra stripe-like patterns
visible here.
This image completes a stereo pair over this location, which will allow measurement of the thicknesses of these sedimentary layers. The layer thicknesses and how they vary through time can provide some insight into the processes, possibly linked to ancient climate, that deposited the layers so long ago.
This is a stereo pair with
ESP_027615_1880.
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/University of Arizona
[size=120][b][i]Week of 03 Sep 2019[/i][/b][/size]
[quote="Ross Beyer"][float=left][img3=""]http://www.uahirise.org/images/wallpaper/800/ESP_059681_2410.jpg[/img3][/float][size=110][b][i][url=http://www.uahirise.org/ESP_059681_2410]Frost Highlights in the Springtime[/url] [url=http://www.uahirise.org/ESP_059681_2410](ESP_059681_2410)[/url] [url=https://www.uahirise.org/media/clips/ESP_059681_2410.mp4](HiClip)[/url][/i][/b][/size]
This image of a crater rim strikingly shows what appear to be bright white flows coming from gullies in the crater wall. However, HiRISE has been watching these gullies for some time (going all the way back to our [url=https://uahirise.org/ESP_027598_2410]first observation in 2012[/url]) and the flow features have been there for years. The new aspect is the bright white coloration, which is frost.
This is the earliest in the springtime that this area has been observed, and just like some winter mornings here on Earth, the conditions on Mars can be just right for frost to form. The interesting thing is that the frost appears on the gully deposits and not as much on the surrounding rock, indicating the physical properties of the gully deposits are different. [/quote]
[quote="John Bridges"][float=left][img3=""]http://www.uahirise.org/images/wallpaper/800/ESP_060064_2005.jpg[/img3][/float][size=110][b][i][url=http://www.uahirise.org/ESP_060064_2005]The Bedrock Riddles of Nili Fossae[/url] [url=http://www.uahirise.org/ESP_060064_2005](ESP_060064_2005)[/url] [url=https://www.uahirise.org/media/clips/ESP_060064_2005.mp4](HiClip)[/url][/i][/b][/size]
This image of the Nili Fossae region, to the west of the great Isidis basin, shows layered bedrock with many impact craters.
Nili Fossae is one of the most [url=https://static.uahirise.org/images/2019/details/cut/ESP_060064_2005.jpg]mineralogically important sites[/url] on Mars. Remote observations by the infrared spectrometer onboard MRO (called CRISM) suggest the layers in the ancient craters contain clays, carbonates, and iron oxides, perhaps due to hydrothermal alteration of the crust. However, the impact craters have been degraded by many millions of years of erosion so the original sedimentary, impact ejecta, or lava flows are hard to distinguish.
The bright linear features are sand dunes, also known as “transverse aeolian dunes,” because the wind direction is at ninety degrees to their elongated orientation. This shows that the erosion of Nili Fossae continues to the present day with sand-sized particles broken off from the local rocks mobilized within the dunes.
This is a stereo pair with [url=https://www.uahirise.org/ESP_052389_2005]ESP_052389_2005[/url]. [/quote]
[quote="Candy Hansen"][float=left][img3=""]http://www.uahirise.org/images/wallpaper/800/ESP_060176_2640.jpg[/img3][/float][size=110][b][i][url=http://www.uahirise.org/ESP_060176_2640]Avalanche Season[/url] [url=http://www.uahirise.org/ESP_060176_2640](ESP_060176_2640)[/url] [url=https://www.uahirise.org/media/clips/ESP_060176_2640.mp4](HiClip)[/url][/i][/b][/size]
Every spring the sun shines on the side of the stack of layers at the North Pole of Mars known as the north polar layered deposits. The warmth destabilizes the ice and blocks break loose.
When they reach the bottom of the more than 500 meter tall cliff face, [url=https://static.uahirise.org/images/2019/details/cut/ESP_060176_2640.jpg]the blocks kick up a cloud of dust[/url]. (In the cutout, the top layer of the north polar cap is to the lower left.) The layers beneath are different colors and textures depending on the amount of dust mixed with ice. [/quote]
[quote="James Wray"][float=left][img3=""]http://www.uahirise.org/images/wallpaper/800/ESP_060331_1880.jpg[/img3][/float][size=110][b][i][url=http://www.uahirise.org/ESP_060331_1880]Layers in Danielson Crater[/url] [url=http://www.uahirise.org/ESP_060331_1880](ESP_060331_1880)[/url] [url=https://www.uahirise.org/media/clips/ESP_060331_1880.mp4](HiClip)[/url][/i][/b][/size]
This image shows sedimentary rock and sand within Danielson Crater, an impact crater 67 kilometers in diameter, located in the southwest Arabia Terra region of Mars.
The rock was formed millions or billions of years ago when loose sediments settled into the crater, one layer at a time, and were later cemented in place. Cyclical variations in the sediment properties made some layers more resistant to erosion than others. After eons, these tougher layers protrude outward like stair steps. Across these steps, the winds have scattered sand (typically appearing darker and less red, i.e. “bluer” in contrast-enhanced color), giving rise to the zebra stripe-like patterns [url=https://static.uahirise.org/images/2019/details/cut/ESP_060331_1880.jpg]visible here[/url].
This image completes a stereo pair over this location, which will allow measurement of the thicknesses of these sedimentary layers. The layer thicknesses and how they vary through time can provide some insight into the processes, possibly linked to ancient climate, that deposited the layers so long ago.
This is a stereo pair with [url=https://www.uahirise.org/ESP_027615_1880]ESP_027615_1880[/url]. [/quote]
[b][i]Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/University of Arizona[/i][/b]