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Inizio > MARS > Walking on Mars with Spirit and Opportunity
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Mars Night-Sky
The bright star Aldebaran and some of the stars in the constellation Taurus are visible on the right. Spirit acquired this image the evening of martian day, or sol, 590 (Aug. 30, 2005). The image on the right provides an enhanced-contrast view with annotation. Within the enhanced halo of light is an insert of an unsaturated view of Phobos taken a few images later in the same sequence. 

On Mars, Phobos would be easily visible to the naked eye at night, but would be only about one-third as large as the full Moon appears from Earth. Astronauts staring at Phobos from the surface of Mars would notice its oblong, potato-like shape and that it moves quickly against the background stars. Phobos takes only 7 hours, 39 minutes to complete one orbit of Mars. That is so fast, relative to the 24-hour-and-39-minute sol on Mars (the length of time it takes for Mars to complete one rotation), that Phobos rises in the west and sets in the east. Earth's moon, by comparison, rises in the east and sets in the west. The smaller martian moon, Deimos, takes 30 hours, 12 minutes to complete one orbit of Mars. That orbital period is longer than a martian sol, and so Deimos rises, like most solar system moons, in the east and sets in the west.
Parole chiave: Mars Moons - Deimos and Phobos

Mars Night-Sky

The bright star Aldebaran and some of the stars in the constellation Taurus are visible on the right. Spirit acquired this image the evening of martian day, or sol, 590 (Aug. 30, 2005). The image on the right provides an enhanced-contrast view with annotation. Within the enhanced halo of light is an insert of an unsaturated view of Phobos taken a few images later in the same sequence.

On Mars, Phobos would be easily visible to the naked eye at night, but would be only about one-third as large as the full Moon appears from Earth. Astronauts staring at Phobos from the surface of Mars would notice its oblong, potato-like shape and that it moves quickly against the background stars. Phobos takes only 7 hours, 39 minutes to complete one orbit of Mars. That is so fast, relative to the 24-hour-and-39-minute sol on Mars (the length of time it takes for Mars to complete one rotation), that Phobos rises in the west and sets in the east. Earth's moon, by comparison, rises in the east and sets in the west. The smaller martian moon, Deimos, takes 30 hours, 12 minutes to complete one orbit of Mars. That orbital period is longer than a martian sol, and so Deimos rises, like most solar system moons, in the east and sets in the west.

SOL621-5-Everest_L257atc-A622R1.jpg SOL594-phobos_deimos_585-A585R1.jpg SOL594-phobos_deimos_585txt-A585R1.jpg SOL594-P_D_Timelapse_594Atxt-A585R1.jpg SOL519-Husband4-PIA04180.jpg
Informazioni sul file
Nome del file:SOL594-phobos_deimos_585txt-A585R1.jpg
Nome album:Walking on Mars with Spirit and Opportunity
Valutazione (8 voti):55555(Mostra dettagli)
Parole chiave:Mars / Moons / - / Deimos / and / Phobos
Copyright:NASA/JPL/Cornell/ Texas A&M
Dimensione del file:451 KiB
Data di inserimento:Set 10, 2005
Dimensioni:1091 x 1161 pixels
Visualizzato:59 volte
URL:https://www.lunexit.it/gallery/displayimage.php?pid=7241
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