Image of the Day: "Mars Ripped!" --A Multiple Impact Crater 78 Kilometers Long
ESA’s Mars Express continues to provide new views of the martian surface, as in this image of a strikingly elongated crater in the southern hemisphere, south of Huygens crater. (Martian north is to the right in this image.)
The crater is about 78 km long and from 10 to 25 km across. It is up to 2 km deep, but has three deeper areas suggesting several impacts. The ejecta blanket also shows distinct lobes, which may come from two closely spaced impacts; the impactors may have originally been parts of the same body.
As well as providing a snapshot of the impacts that shaped the surface of the planet, this image also shows processes at work on the martian surface. The debris blanket is cut by several small channels, suggesting that at the time of the impact, the surface was rich in volatiles, perhaps even water, that were melted by the heat of impact and flowed away.
The image was created using a Digital Terrain Model (DTM) obtained from the High Resolution Stereo Camera on Mars Express and is colour coded for elevation: purple indicates the lowest lying regions and grey the highest.
The Daily Galaxy via esa.int
Image Credit: ESA/DLR/FU Berlin [G Neukum]
View Today's Hot Tech News Video from IDG -Publishers of PC World, MacWorld, and Computerworld--Top Right of Page
To launch the video click on the Start Arrow. Our thanks for your support! It allows us to bring you the news daily about the discoveries, people and events changing our planet and our knowledge of the Universe.
« Saturn's "UFO Moon" --The Odd, Baffling Pan (Today's Most Popular) | Main | Friday's 'Comment of the Day' --Emergence of the Human 'SuperBrain' 75,000 Years Ago --"AI Could Blur Differences between Humans and Computers in Coming Centuries" »

Comments