by bystander » Sat Mar 21, 2020 5:29 pm
Week of 09 Feb 2020
Leah Sacks, Livio Leonardo Tornabene, Vidhya Ganesh Rangarajan, and Chimira Andres wrote:A T Party on Mars (ESP_062151_2540)
The dunes of Mars clearly sent out an invitation to a “T Party,” but it looks like none of us were invited. Forming a veritable maze of sand and rock, these unusually shaped dunes are located in the north polar region.
The shape and the form of the dunes serve as weathervanes. In crescent or “barchan” dune forms, the pointed tips of the sand dunes align with the dominant wind direction. The sand grains move with the wind, progressing the dunes forward over time. The T Party dunes are similar to “barchan” dunes, but they deviate from the characteristic crescent shape, thus it is less clear which direction is indicated. They may be suggesting varying wind conditions and perhaps the dunes are in the process of changing directions.
These polar dunes form as piles of basaltic sands that are covered with bright carbon dioxide frost as the Martian winter descends every year. In
this early northern summer image, the dunes have thawed, the frost has sublimated to gas, and the underlying dark sand is exposed. Small ripples on the dunes and the underlying polygonized surface and boulders are also visible in
this enhanced color cutout.
Sharon Wilson wrote:The Devil is in the Details (ESP_061787_2140)
The HiRISE camera has done it again: here is yet another stunning image of an active dust devil on Mars.
Dust devils are rotating columns of dust that form around low-pressure air pockets, and are common on both Earth and Mars. This Martian dust devil formed on the dust-covered, volcanic plains of Amazonis Planitia. The dust devil is bright, and its core is roughly 50 meters across. The dark streak on the ground behind the dust devil is its shadow. The length of the shadow suggests the plume of rotating dust rises about 650 meters into the atmosphere!
There are several HiRISE images of tracks left behind by dust devils, but it is rare to catch one in motion. Check out
this amazing image of a nearby dust devil.
Alfred McEwen wrote:Exposing Colorful Deep Bedrock (ESP_062877_1690)
Large impacts produce uplifted central structures, either peaks, or pits, or an uplifted peak with a central pit. This crater south of Aurorae Chaos has a central pit exposing bedrock units with diverse colors, indicating diverse rock compositions.
This crater includes clay-rich minerals identified by the CRISM instrument on MRO.
See this enhanced-color cutout over the eastern half of the central pit.
This is a stereo pair with
ESP_044930_1690.
Sharon Wilson wrote:Pollywog Craters on Mars (ESP_061768_2200)
This crater is approximately 2.3 kilometers across and is located in northern Arabia Terra near where the cratered highlands meets the northern lowlands (called a “dichotomy boundary”). Small craters with an exit channel, such as this one, are nicknamed “pollywog” craters, as they resemble tadpoles.
The channel is consistent with flow *out of* the crater, rather than flow *into* the crater, because 1) the valleys do not cut down to the level of the interior crater floor, and 2) there are no deposits of material on the floor associated with the mouth of the valley.
This small crater was probably once filled with an ice-covered lake that overflowed, forming the exit channel. Young craters with exit channels are intriguing because they record a relatively recent (during the
Amazonian epoch) wet environment on Mars.
This is a stereo pair with
ESP_062045_2200.
Alfred McEwen wrote:A Candidate Landing Site in Utopia Planitia (ESP_062898_2060)
This image samples the smooth plains within one of the areas being considered for setting down China’s lander and rover, expected to launch in 2020.
While smooth on large scales, HiRISE reveals small-scale roughness elements, including craters, boulders, and other features. Such hazards may be avoided by using “terminal hazard avoidance,” a technology China has demonstrated on the Moon.
Utopia Planitia may have been extensively resurfaced by mud flows, so it is an interesting place to investigate potential past subsurface habitability.
Chimira Andres, Livio Leonardo Tornabene, Leah Sacks, and Vidhya Ganesh Rangarajan wrote:A Slice of Polar Layer Cake (ESP_062216_2660)
The Martian ice cap is like a cake with every layer telling a story. In this case, the story is one of climate change on Mars.
In this image is an exposed section of the north polar layered deposits (NPLD). Like a delicious slice of layered tiramisu, the NPLD is made up of water-ice and dust particles stacked one on top of the other. However, instead of icing, layers are topped with seasonal carbon dioxide frost.
We can observe lingering frost adhering to one of the layers.
The high-resolution and color capabilities of HiRISE provide details on the variations in the layers.
Scientists are also using radar data, which show us that they have continuity in the subsurface. During deposition, these complex layers might encapsulate tiny air pockets from the atmosphere which, if sampled, could be studied to understand linkages to previous climates.
In the end, it’s not always a piece of cake studying NPLD on Mars but, where there is cake, there is hope!
Will Yingling, Eric Pilles, and Livio L. Tornabene wrote:An Oblong Impact Crater in Terra Cimmeria (ESP_062344_1910)
Here we observe a portion of an impact crater that is elliptical rather than circular. How do we know this is a crater and not a volcanic or tectonic feature?
First, a raised rim around the edge of the depression is characteristic of all impact craters. Secondly,
in this image from MRO’s Context Camera, there is a distinct ejecta blanket deposited to the northwest and southeast of the cavity, referred to as
“butterfly” ejecta.
Why is the crater so oblong and the ejecta distributed thus? Most craters are generally circular. The ejecta distribution and oblong crater shape are due to a lower impact angle. Most impactors hit the surface around 45 degrees, yet they still form circular craters. Models show at the lowest impact angles (less than 15 degrees) that we get an elliptical shape and ejecta that is not equally distributed around the entire cavity.
The impactor likely originated from the southwest. A lack of ejecta, referred to as a “forbidden zone,” tells us which direction the impactor came from. However, in this case ejecta is lacking in both the southwest and northeast. Fortunately, another indicator that tells us about the impact direction is the smaller more circular cavity that comprises the northeast portion of the crater. This cavity likely formed when a piece of the impactor broke off, referred to as a “decapitated impactor,” and struck the surface downrange.
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/University of Arizona
[size=120][b][i]Week of 09 Feb 2020[/i][/b][/size]
[quote="Leah Sacks, Livio Leonardo Tornabene, Vidhya Ganesh Rangarajan, and Chimira Andres"][float=left][attachment=0]ESP_062151_2540[1].jpg[/attachment][/float][size=110][b][i][url=http://www.uahirise.org/ESP_062151_2540]A T Party on Mars[/url] [url=http://www.uahirise.org/ESP_062151_2540](ESP_062151_2540)[/url][/i][/b][/size]
The dunes of Mars clearly sent out an invitation to a “T Party,” but it looks like none of us were invited. Forming a veritable maze of sand and rock, these unusually shaped dunes are located in the north polar region.
The shape and the form of the dunes serve as weathervanes. In crescent or “barchan” dune forms, the pointed tips of the sand dunes align with the dominant wind direction. The sand grains move with the wind, progressing the dunes forward over time. The T Party dunes are similar to “barchan” dunes, but they deviate from the characteristic crescent shape, thus it is less clear which direction is indicated. They may be suggesting varying wind conditions and perhaps the dunes are in the process of changing directions.
These polar dunes form as piles of basaltic sands that are covered with bright carbon dioxide frost as the Martian winter descends every year. In [url=https://static.uahirise.org/images/2020/details/cut/ESP_062151_2540.jpg]this early northern summer image[/url], the dunes have thawed, the frost has sublimated to gas, and the underlying dark sand is exposed. Small ripples on the dunes and the underlying polygonized surface and boulders are also visible in [url=https://static.uahirise.org/images/2020/details/cut/ESP_062151_2540-2.jpg]this enhanced color cutout[/url]. [/quote]
[quote="Sharon Wilson"][float=left][attachment=1]ESP_061787_2140[1].jpg[/attachment][/float][size=110][b][i][url=http://www.uahirise.org/ESP_061787_2140]The Devil is in the Details[/url] [url=http://www.uahirise.org/ESP_061787_2140](ESP_061787_2140)[/url][/i][/b][/size]
The HiRISE camera has done it again: here is yet another stunning image of an active dust devil on Mars.
Dust devils are rotating columns of dust that form around low-pressure air pockets, and are common on both Earth and Mars. This Martian dust devil formed on the dust-covered, volcanic plains of Amazonis Planitia. The dust devil is bright, and its core is roughly 50 meters across. The dark streak on the ground behind the dust devil is its shadow. The length of the shadow suggests the plume of rotating dust rises about 650 meters into the atmosphere!
There are several HiRISE images of tracks left behind by dust devils, but it is rare to catch one in motion. Check out [url=https://www.uahirise.org/ESP_026051_2160]this amazing image[/url] of a nearby dust devil. [/quote]
[quote="Alfred McEwen"][float=left][attachment=2]ESP_062877_1690[1].jpg[/attachment][/float][size=110][b][i][url=http://www.uahirise.org/ESP_062877_1690]Exposing Colorful Deep Bedrock[/url] [url=http://www.uahirise.org/ESP_062877_1690](ESP_062877_1690)[/url][/i][/b][/size]
Large impacts produce uplifted central structures, either peaks, or pits, or an uplifted peak with a central pit. This crater south of Aurorae Chaos has a central pit exposing bedrock units with diverse colors, indicating diverse rock compositions.
This crater includes clay-rich minerals identified by the CRISM instrument on MRO. [url=https://static.uahirise.org/images/2020/details/cut/ESP_062877_1690.jpg]See this enhanced-color cutout[/url] over the eastern half of the central pit.
This is a stereo pair with [url=https://www.uahirise.org/ESP_044930_1690]ESP_044930_1690[/url]. [/quote]
[quote="Sharon Wilson"][float=left][attachment=3]ESP_061768_2200[1].jpg[/attachment][/float][size=110][b][i][url=http://www.uahirise.org/ESP_061768_2200]Pollywog Craters on Mars[/url] [url=http://www.uahirise.org/ESP_061768_2200](ESP_061768_2200)[/url][/i][/b][/size]
[url=https://static.uahirise.org/images/2020/details/cut/ESP_061768_2200.jpg]This crater[/url] is approximately 2.3 kilometers across and is located in northern Arabia Terra near where the cratered highlands meets the northern lowlands (called a “dichotomy boundary”). Small craters with an exit channel, such as this one, are nicknamed “pollywog” craters, as they resemble tadpoles.
The channel is consistent with flow *out of* the crater, rather than flow *into* the crater, because 1) the valleys do not cut down to the level of the interior crater floor, and 2) there are no deposits of material on the floor associated with the mouth of the valley.
This small crater was probably once filled with an ice-covered lake that overflowed, forming the exit channel. Young craters with exit channels are intriguing because they record a relatively recent (during the [url=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amazonian_(Mars)]Amazonian epoch[/url]) wet environment on Mars.
This is a stereo pair with [url=https://www.uahirise.org/ESP_062045_2200]ESP_062045_2200[/url]. [/quote]
[quote="Alfred McEwen"][float=left][attachment=4]ESP_062898_2060[1].jpg[/attachment][/float][size=110][b][i][url=http://www.uahirise.org/ESP_062898_2060]A Candidate Landing Site in Utopia Planitia[/url] [url=http://www.uahirise.org/ESP_062898_2060](ESP_062898_2060)[/url][/i][/b][/size]
[url=https://static.uahirise.org/images/2020/details/cut/ESP_062898_2060.jpg]This image samples the smooth plains[/url] within one of the areas being considered for setting down China’s lander and rover, expected to launch in 2020.
While smooth on large scales, HiRISE reveals small-scale roughness elements, including craters, boulders, and other features. Such hazards may be avoided by using “terminal hazard avoidance,” a technology China has demonstrated on the Moon.
Utopia Planitia may have been extensively resurfaced by mud flows, so it is an interesting place to investigate potential past subsurface habitability. [/quote]
[quote="Chimira Andres, Livio Leonardo Tornabene, Leah Sacks, and Vidhya Ganesh Rangarajan"][float=left][attachment=5]ESP_062216_2660[1].jpg[/attachment][/float][size=110][b][i][url=http://www.uahirise.org/ESP_062216_2660]A Slice of Polar Layer Cake[/url] [url=http://www.uahirise.org/ESP_062216_2660](ESP_062216_2660)[/url][/i][/b][/size]
The Martian ice cap is like a cake with every layer telling a story. In this case, the story is one of climate change on Mars.
In this image is an exposed section of the north polar layered deposits (NPLD). Like a delicious slice of layered tiramisu, the NPLD is made up of water-ice and dust particles stacked one on top of the other. However, instead of icing, layers are topped with seasonal carbon dioxide frost. [url=https://static.uahirise.org/images/2020/details/cut/ESP_062216_2660.jpg]We can observe lingering frost[/url] adhering to one of the layers.
The high-resolution and color capabilities of HiRISE provide details on the variations in the layers. [url=https://mars.nasa.gov/resources/3244/north-polar-cap-cross-section-annotated/]Scientists are also using radar data[/url], which show us that they have continuity in the subsurface. During deposition, these complex layers might encapsulate tiny air pockets from the atmosphere which, if sampled, could be studied to understand linkages to previous climates.
In the end, it’s not always a piece of cake studying NPLD on Mars but, where there is cake, there is hope! [/quote]
[quote="Will Yingling, Eric Pilles, and Livio L. Tornabene"][float=left][attachment=6]ESP_062344_1910[1].jpg[/attachment][/float][size=110][b][i][url=http://www.uahirise.org/ESP_062344_1910]An Oblong Impact Crater in Terra Cimmeria[/url] [url=http://www.uahirise.org/ESP_062344_1910](ESP_062344_1910)[/url][/i][/b][/size]
Here we observe a portion of an impact crater that is elliptical rather than circular. How do we know this is a crater and not a volcanic or tectonic feature?
First, a raised rim around the edge of the depression is characteristic of all impact craters. Secondly, [url=http://viewer.mars.asu.edu/planetview/inst/ctx/F03_036933_1907_XN_10N241W#P=F03_036933_1907_XN_10N241W&T=2]in this image from MRO’s Context Camera[/url], there is a distinct ejecta blanket deposited to the northwest and southeast of the cavity, referred to as [url=https://static.uahirise.org/images/2020/details/cut/ESP_062344_1910.jpg]“butterfly” ejecta[/url].
Why is the crater so oblong and the ejecta distributed thus? Most craters are generally circular. The ejecta distribution and oblong crater shape are due to a lower impact angle. Most impactors hit the surface around 45 degrees, yet they still form circular craters. Models show at the lowest impact angles (less than 15 degrees) that we get an elliptical shape and ejecta that is not equally distributed around the entire cavity.
The impactor likely originated from the southwest. A lack of ejecta, referred to as a “forbidden zone,” tells us which direction the impactor came from. However, in this case ejecta is lacking in both the southwest and northeast. Fortunately, another indicator that tells us about the impact direction is the smaller more circular cavity that comprises the northeast portion of the crater. This cavity likely formed when a piece of the impactor broke off, referred to as a “decapitated impactor,” and struck the surface downrange. [/quote]
[b][i]Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/University of Arizona[/i][/b]