Christmas craterscape by Staff Writers Paris (ESA) Dec 27, 2022
This beautifully crisp icy scene with a swirling ribbon of rusty red and white striped terrain connecting two large craters wraps up the year on Mars. The High Resolution Stereo Imaging camera on board ESA's Mars Express captured this frosty scene in the Ultimi Scopuli region near the south pole of Mars on 19 May 2022. While it may look like a winter wonderland, it was southern hemisphere spring at the time and ice was starting to retreat. Dark dunes are peeking through the frost and elevated terrain appears ice-free. Two large impact craters draw the eye, their interiors striped with alternating layers of water-ice and fine sediments. These 'polar layered deposits' are also exposed in exquisite detail in the rusty red ridge that connects the two craters.
Frosty dunes
Carbon dioxide jets
Ice scoop
Clouds During the seasonal cycle, carbon dioxide ice is deposited at the poles in winter, which sublimates in the springtime. Between 12 to 16% of the planet's atmosphere is deposited in the poles during winter, with the release of gas the following spring boosting the atmospheric pressure and generating strong winds. This ongoing process creates a huge exchange of material between surface and atmosphere throughout the martian year.
Happy New Year, Mars!
Exploring Mars
NASA May Have Landed on a Martian Megatsunami Deposit Nearly 50 Years Ago Tucson AZ (SPX) Dec 02, 2022 When NASA's Viking 1 lander touched down on the surface of Mars nearly 50 years ago, its cameras imaged a boulder-strewn surface of elusive origin. New research led by Planetary Science Institute Senior Scientist Alexis Rodriguez shows the landing site may be on the margins of a megatsunami deposit, formed when a 3-kilometer asteroid impacted a northern Martian ocean about 3.4 billion years ago. "The lander was designed to seek evidence of extant life on the Martian surface, so to select a suitabl ... read more
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