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Inizio > THE LUNAR EXPLORER ARCHIVES > A Tribute To Mars Global Surveyor
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MOC Views of Martian Solar Eclipses (Original NASA/MGS/MSSS b/w Frame)
The shadow of the martian moon, Phobos, has been captured in many recent wide angle camera views of the red planet obtained by the Mars Global Surveyor (MGS) Mars Orbiter Camera (MOC). Designed to monitor changes in weather and surface conditions, the wide angle cameras are also proving to be a good way to spot the frequent solar eclipses caused by the passage of Phobos between Mars and the Sun.This picture shows three samples of MOC's global image swaths, each in this case with a shadow of Phobos visible (arrow). The first scene (left) was taken on September 1, 1999 and shows the shadow of Phobos cast upon southern Elysium Planitia. The large crater with dark markings on its floor at the lower right corner is Herschel Basin. The second scene shows the shadow of Phobos cast upon northern Lunae Planum on September 8, 1999. Kasei Valles dominates the upper right and the deep chasms of Valles Marineris dominate the lower third of the September 8 image. The picture on the right shows the shadow of Phobos near the giant volcano, Olympus Mons (upper left), on September 25, 1999. Three other major volcanoes are visible from lower-center (Arsia Mons) and right-center (Pavonis Mons) to upper-middle-right (Ascraeus Mons).
Parole chiave: Mars from orbit - Eclipse

MOC Views of Martian Solar Eclipses (Original NASA/MGS/MSSS b/w Frame)

The shadow of the martian moon, Phobos, has been captured in many recent wide angle camera views of the red planet obtained by the Mars Global Surveyor (MGS) Mars Orbiter Camera (MOC). Designed to monitor changes in weather and surface conditions, the wide angle cameras are also proving to be a good way to spot the frequent solar eclipses caused by the passage of Phobos between Mars and the Sun.This picture shows three samples of MOC's global image swaths, each in this case with a shadow of Phobos visible (arrow). The first scene (left) was taken on September 1, 1999 and shows the shadow of Phobos cast upon southern Elysium Planitia. The large crater with dark markings on its floor at the lower right corner is Herschel Basin. The second scene shows the shadow of Phobos cast upon northern Lunae Planum on September 8, 1999. Kasei Valles dominates the upper right and the deep chasms of Valles Marineris dominate the lower third of the September 8 image. The picture on the right shows the shadow of Phobos near the giant volcano, Olympus Mons (upper left), on September 25, 1999. Three other major volcanoes are visible from lower-center (Arsia Mons) and right-center (Pavonis Mons) to upper-middle-right (Ascraeus Mons).

Mars-03.jpg Marte_Vallis-MGS-PCF-LXTT.jpg Martian_Eclipse-moc2_msss_3shadow100-00.jpg Martian_Eclipse-moc2_msss_3shadow100-01.jpg Martian_Limb-MGS-E23-00100_limb-00.jpg
Informazioni sul file
Nome del file:Martian_Eclipse-moc2_msss_3shadow100-00.jpg
Nome album:A Tribute To Mars Global Surveyor
Valutazione (6 voti):55555(Mostra dettagli)
Parole chiave:Mars / from / orbit / - / Eclipse
Copyright:NASA - Mars Global Surveyor Mission
Dimensione del file:45 KiB
Data di inserimento:Gen 01, 2005
Dimensioni:876 x 512 pixels
Visualizzato:101 volte
URL:https://www.lunexit.it/gallery/displayimage.php?pid=3708
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