Frosty Mars

A Cool Place to Be

Mars is a lot like Earth in some ways. Sure it’s a barren desert planet now, whereas Earth is not. But, like Earth, it has seasonal changes, and if you look at some of its landforms, they look disturbingly familiar. Take this image that the Mars Curiosity rover sent back.

 

This panorama is a mosaic of images taken by the Mast Camera (Mastcam) on the NASA Mars rover Curiosity while the rover was working at a site called “Rocknest” in October and November 2012. Courtesy NASA/JPL-Caltech. Click to enlarge.

Looks a lot like some places here on Earth, doesn’t it? You can see mountains off in the distance (actually part of the crater that the spacecraft landed in), and lots of sand dunes and rock outcrops nearby. When I see a picture like this, I want to go on a geology field trip — which is what Curiosity is doing for us!

The folks at the European Space Agency have a mission called Mars Express, and it’s doing a bang-up job of sending back high resolution images of Mars from orbit.

A High-Resolution Stereo Camera (HRSC) nadir and colour channel data taken during revolution 10778 on 18 June 2012 by ESA’s Mars Express have been combined to form a natural-colour view of Charitum Montes. The heavily cratered region in this image is at the edge of the almost 1,000-km-long mountain range, which itself wraps around the boundary of the Argyre impact basin, the second largest on Mars. Courtesy ESA.

The whiter-looking regions here are covered with something most of us are familiar with if we live in climates where winter brings snow and cold weather: frost. In this case, it’s carbon dioxide frost, which forms when the atmosphere gets cold enough to freeze it into particles of ice that coat the ground.

Wondering how cold it is on Mars?  It has a very thin atmosphere, so even though Mars does get sunlight, the temps on the ground are pretty darned cold, usually well below zero (-55 C or -67 F for an average). At its coldest, Mars temps can plunge down to -110 C (-170 F).  I’ve seen suggestions that Mars temperatures can rise above zero on warm summer days; how far they rise depends on the local heating and how much sunlight the ground is getting.

There are more cool images of this cratered region at the link above. They show just how rugged the terrain of Mars is, and remind us that some worlds can look (and sometimes feel) just like home, even if they’re more than 100 million kilometers apart right now!

 

 

 

 

Sir Patrick Moore, 1923-2012

Another One Returns to the Stars

Sir Patrick Moore, well-known in Britain as an astronomer and broadcaster, died today at his home. (Here is the official BBC obituary.) He brought astronomy alive through his writing, radio, and television shows. I had several chances to meet Sir Patrick at various events throughout the years, and he always seemed to be a kind man, a bit eccentric, and with a phenomenal memory. After the first chance meeting with him, I didn’t see Sir Patrick for a few years, but acquired several of his books and thoroughly enjoyed them. The next time we met, he reminded me of where we’d met and what we had chatted about.  He will be sorely missed, but I’m sure he’ll live on through his “Sky at Night” program, and through his many books.

I’m aware that Sir Patrick also had a bit of a controversial side, with many people citing his views on immigration and other political topics as grist for the mill. It’s unfortunate that such a brilliant communicator could also hold closed-minded opinions, but then again, people are complex. I don’t condone his views on women and immigrants, but I do salute his amazing accomplishments in communicating astronomy.  Perhaps that will be his best and final legacy.

Sir Patrick’s passing also brings to mind another science popularizer, Dr. Carl Sagan. He died on December 20, 1996, far too soon. He was MY inspiration to take up astronomy and to communicate it to others, as was Sir Patrick Moore. There are many of us out there sharing the stars with others, and digging deeply into the secrets of the cosmos, all because of these two people.

If you have the chance, check out “Sky at Night” and “Cosmos”, two works by these phenomenally gifted astronomers.Let them continue to inspire you, even as their creators have moved on. If they succeed, it’s the best tribute to their unceasing work to share the cosmos.