Inizio Registrati Login

Elenco album Ultimi arrivi Ultimi commenti Più viste Più votate Preferiti Cerca

Inizio > MARS > Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO)
Ritorna alla pagina delle miniature FILE 22536/25353 Torna all'inizio Guarda foto precedente Guarda foto successiva Salta alla fine
South Polar Residual Cap Monitoring (Natural Colors; credits: Lunexit)
As on Earth, the seasonal frost caps of Mars grow and recede each year. But seasonal frost on Mars is composed of Carbon Dioxide Ice (also known as Dry Ice), not water ice as on our Planet.

Near the South Pole of Mars, the seasonal CO2 frost never completely disappears, leaving a residual ice cap of CO2 ice throughout the Summer. This HiRISE image shows part of the South Polar Residual Cap, with many shallow Pits dubbed "Swiss Cheese Terrain". Because the Sun is always low in the sky at this latitude, the steep walls of the Pits receive more solar energy than the high-standing, flat areas between the Pits. 
This causes the walls of the Pits to retreat several meters per year as Sunlight causes the CO2 ice to evaporate directly to gas, a process called "sublimation".

In some depressions, ridges or blocks of material a couple of meters (several feet) across are visible at the base of the depression walls, likely fallen from the walls during the sublimation and retreat process. At this rate, the layer of Carbon Dioxide ice could completely disappear in about 100 years from now, if not replenished.

Nota Lunexit: interessanti annotazioni. Peccato che la maggiore implicazione da esse derivante (quote: "...lo strato di CO2 che ricopre la Regione Sud Polare di Marte SCOMPARIRA' entro 100 anni da oggi, se non reintegrato...") non è stata minimamente toccata. 
Stile NASA, of course. Nihil sub Sole novi, quindi...
Parole chiave: Mars from orbit - South Pole - South Polar Residual Cap

South Polar Residual Cap Monitoring (Natural Colors; credits: Lunexit)

As on Earth, the seasonal frost caps of Mars grow and recede each year. But seasonal frost on Mars is composed of Carbon Dioxide Ice (also known as Dry Ice), not water ice as on our Planet.

Near the South Pole of Mars, the seasonal CO2 frost never completely disappears, leaving a residual ice cap of CO2 ice throughout the Summer. This HiRISE image shows part of the South Polar Residual Cap, with many shallow Pits dubbed "Swiss Cheese Terrain". Because the Sun is always low in the sky at this latitude, the steep walls of the Pits receive more solar energy than the high-standing, flat areas between the Pits.
This causes the walls of the Pits to retreat several meters per year as Sunlight causes the CO2 ice to evaporate directly to gas, a process called "sublimation".

In some depressions, ridges or blocks of material a couple of meters (several feet) across are visible at the base of the depression walls, likely fallen from the walls during the sublimation and retreat process. At this rate, the layer of Carbon Dioxide ice could completely disappear in about 100 years from now, if not replenished.

Nota Lunexit: interessanti annotazioni. Peccato che la maggiore implicazione da esse derivante (quote: "...lo strato di CO2 che ricopre la Regione Sud Polare di Marte SCOMPARIRA' entro 100 anni da oggi, se non reintegrato...") non è stata minimamente toccata.
Stile NASA, of course. Nihil sub Sole novi, quindi...

ZZ-Mercury-Terminator-PIA12279.jpg SOL2026-1_copia2.jpg PSP_004650_0975_RED_abrowse.jpg ESP_014424_1845_RED_abrowse.jpg Saturnafterthe_Equinox.jpg
Informazioni sul file
Nome del file:PSP_004687_0930_RED_abrowse.jpg
Nome album:MareKromium / Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO)
Valutazione (2 voti):55555(Mostra dettagli)
Parole chiave:Mars / from / orbit / - / South / Pole / - / South / Polar / Residual / Cap
Copyright:NASA/JPL/Univ. of Arizona e Lunar Explorer Italia per il processing addizionale e la colorizzazione
Dimensione del file:909 KiB
Data di inserimento:Nov 08, 2009
Dimensioni:3137 x 2440 pixels
Visualizzato:55 volte
URL:https://www.lunexit.it/gallery/displayimage.php?pid=25673
Preferiti:Aggiungi ai preferiti
 
 

Powered by Coppermine Photo Gallery