Orbiting Piles of Rubble

Where Do They Come From?

Phobos as seen by Mars Express
Phobos as seen by Mars Express

Not everything in the solar system is as solid as it looks at first glance. Take Phobos, the larger moon that orbits Mars. It looks solid, but it may well be an orbiting pile of rubble. Now where would that rubble come from?  Most likely a collision of some kind.

The European Space Agency’s Mars Express mission passed by Phobos this past summer and took a series of high-definition stereo images and data. That information got fed into a 3D modeling program that is letting astronomers measure this moon’s characteristics, including its volume and the interacting gravitational tugs between Mars and Phobos.

The analysis suggests that Phobos may be more of an asteroid than a body that evolved as a single piece.

The closest match that scientists can make for Phobos is with D-class asteroids, which are highly fractured and riddled with caverns. They are really more like pieces of rock that stick together by gravity. Scientists refer to these loosely grouped rock piles as “rubble piles.”

So, if it’s likely that Phobos didn’t form around Mars, how did this orbiting rocky junkyard get into its current equatorial orbit around Mars?  There are two ideas. First, Mars gravitationally “captured” a passing rubble pile, which settled into orbit as Phobos. Deimos, the other moon, was likely captured the same way.

Phobos: an orbiting rubble collection?
Phobos: an orbiting rubble collection?

The other possibility is that a meteorite (a chunk of rock from an asteroid) smashed into early Mars and pieces of it got blasted back into space. Eventually, they clumped together into a rubble pile of rocks bound together by gravity, forming what we know today as Phobos.

In the near future the Russian space agency will send a probe called Grunt to Phobos to do study this moon and collect samples of rock for further study.  Studies of rocks and continuing studies of Phobos’s subsurface structure (done using radars onboard the Mars Express spacecraft) will help astronomers figure out at least some of Phobos’s past and possibly even its origin.

As they say: stay tuned!

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Counting Stars and Seeing the Light

The Great World-wide Star Count

Want to help track the effects of light pollution?  Can you see the night sky from your location?  Can you count?  If you can answer “Yes” to all three questions, the Great World-wide Star Count needs you.

It’s the second year of this effort to use stars to tell how much light pollution is obliterating the night sky view. Scientists use the data that comes from schoolchildren, families and citizen scientists over the period of October 20 through November 3 about which constellations they can see.

It’s pretty simple to do.  First, visit the Great Star Count web site and read the instructions about what to look for and how to report your counts to Star Count HQ. Anybody can do it, and I read last year about how student teams ranging from public and private schools to home-schoolers did the count as part of their classwork.

Those of you in the Northern Hemisphere will look for the constellation Cygnus, while folks in the Southern Hemisphere will look for Sagittarius. Once you find your assigned constellation, you match what you see with charts you download from the Great World Wide Star Count site.

You can observe from the comfort of your back yard or make your way to dark-sky sites where more stars are visible. If you happen to get cloudy nights during the observation period, you will share data about cloud conditions instead.  Every bit of data is important.

Why do this?

Bright outdoor lighting at night is a growing problem for astronomical observing programs around the world and it has an effect on quality of life for people and nature. By participanting in the Great World Wide Star Count you will be able to comparew what you see with what others see. It gives a very clear picture about how star visibility varies from place to place and how light pollution affects all of us (including astronomers). It’s one step toward controlling light pollution (and saving energy in the process).

Hubble Update: According to CNN, there have been some problems implementing the Side B switchover on Hubble Space Telescope. This means that the planned restart of science observations is put off for the time being until engineers figure out how to get around the problems.

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Exploring Science and the Cosmos

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