Phobos (Moon Of Mars)
(Phobos: Moon Of Mars,structure,discovery,exploration)
Phobos
(/ˈfoʊbəs/ FOH-bəs or /ˈfoʊbɒs/ FOH-bos, from the Greek Φόβος.)
(systematic designation: Mars I) is the innermost and larger of the two
natural satellites of Mars, the other being Deimos. Both moons were
discovered in 1877 by American astronomer Asaph Hall.
Phobos
is a small, irregularly shaped object with a mean radius of 11 km (7
mi), and is seven times as massive as the outer moon, Deimos. Phobos is
named after the Greek god Phobos, a son of Ares (Mars) and Aphrodite
(Venus), and the personification of horror (cf. phobia).
Phobos
orbits 6,000 km (3,700 mi) from the Martian surface, closer to its
primary body than any other known planetary moon. It is indeed so close
that it orbits Mars much faster than Mars rotates, and completes an
orbit in just 7 hours and 39 minutes. As a result, from the surface of
Mars it appears to rise in the west, move across the sky in 4 hours and
15 minutes or less, and set in the east, twice each Martian day.
Phobos
is one of the least reflective bodies in the Solar System, with an
albedo of just 0.071. Surface temperatures range from about −4 °C (25
°F) on the sunlit side to −112 °C (−170 °F) on the shadowed side. The
defining surface feature is the large impact crater, Stickney, which
takes up a substantial proportion of the moon's surface.
Images
and models indicate that Phobos may be a rubble pile held together by a
thin crust, and that it is being torn apart by tidal interactions.
Phobos gets closer to Mars by about 2 meters every one hundred years,
and it is predicted that within 30 to 50 million years it will either
collide with the planet, or break up into a planetary ring.
Discovery
Phobos
was discovered by astronomer Asaph Hall on 18 August 1877, at the
United States Naval Observatory in Washington, D.C., at about 09:14
Greenwich Mean Time (contemporary sources, using the pre-1925
astronomical convention that began the day at noon, give the time of
discovery as 17 August at 16:06 Washington mean time). Hall had
discovered Deimos, Mars's other moon, a few days earlier on 12 August
1877 at about 07:48 UTC. The names, originally spelled Phobus and Deimus
respectively, were suggested by Henry Madan (1838–1901), Science Master
of Eton, based on Greek mythology, in which Phobos is a companion to
the god Ares.
Physical characteristics
Phobos
has dimensions of 27 km × 22 km × 18 km, and retains too little mass to
be rounded under its own gravity. Phobos does not have an atmosphere
due to its low mass and low gravity.
It is one of the least reflective bodies in the Solar System, with an
albedo of about 0.071. Spectroscopically it appears to be similar to the
D-type asteroids, and is apparently of composition similar to
carbonaceous chondrite material. Phobos's density is too low to be solid
rock, and it is known to have significant porosity. These results led
to the suggestion that Phobos might contain a substantial reservoir of
ice. Spectral observations indicate that the surface regolith layer
lacks hydration, but ice below the regolith is not ruled out.
Phobos
is heavily cratered. The most prominent of these is the crater,
Stickney, (named after Asaph Hall's wife, Angeline Stickney Hall,
Stickney being her maiden name) a large impact crater some 9 km (5.6 mi)
in diameter, taking up a substantial proportion of the moon's surface
area. As with Mimas's crater Herschel, the impact that created Stickney
must have nearly shattered Phobos.
Many
grooves and streaks also cover the oddly shaped surface. The grooves
are typically less than 30 meters (98 ft) deep, 100 to 200 meters (330
to 660 ft) wide, and up to 20 kilometers (12 mi) in length, and were
originally assumed to have been the result of the same impact that
created Stickney. Analysis of results from the Mars Express spacecraft,
however, revealed that the grooves are not in fact radial to Stickney,
but are centered on the leading apex of Phobos in its orbit (which is
not far from Stickney). Researchers suspect that they have been
excavated by material ejected into space by impacts on the surface of
Mars. The grooves thus formed as crater chains, and all of them fade
away as the trailing apex of Phobos is approached. They have been
grouped into 12 or more families of varying age, presumably representing
at least 12 Martian impact events.
Faint
dust rings produced by Phobos and Deimos have long been predicted but
attempts to observe these rings have, to date, failed. Recent images
from Mars Global Surveyor indicate that Phobos is covered with a layer
of fine-grained regolith at least 100 meters thick; it is hypothesized
to have been created by impacts from other bodies, but it is not known
how the material stuck to an object with almost no gravity.
The
unique Kaidun meteorite that fell on a Soviet military base in Yemen in
1980 has been hypothesized to be a piece of Phobos, but this has been
difficult to verify because little is known about the exact composition
of Phobos.
A 68 kg (150 lb) person standing on the surface of Phobos would weigh the equivalent to about 60 g (2 oz) on Earth.
Exploration
Phobos
has been photographed in close-up by several spacecraft whose primary
mission has been to photograph Mars. The first was Mariner 7 in 1969,
followed by Viking 1 in 1977, Mars Global Surveyor in 1998 and 2003,
Mars Express in 2004, 2008, and 2010, and Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter in
2007 and 2008. On August 25, 2005, the Spirit Rover, with an excess
of energy due to wind blowing dust off of its solar panels, took
several short-exposure photographs of the night sky from the surface of
Mars. Phobos and Deimos are both clearly visible in the photograph.
The
Soviet Union undertook the Phobos program with two probes, both
launched successfully in July 1988. Phobos 1 was accidentally shut down
by an erroneous command from ground control issued in September 1988 and
lost while the craft was still en route. Phobos 2 arrived at the Mars
system in January 1989 and, after transmitting a small amount of data
and imagery but shortly before beginning its detailed examination of
Phobos's surface, the probe abruptly ceased transmission due either to
failure of the on-board computer or of the radio transmitter, already
operating on the backup power. Other Mars missions collected more data,
but the next dedicated mission attempt would be a sample return mission.
The
Russian Space Agency launched a sample return mission to Phobos in
November 2011, called Fobos-Grunt. The return capsule also included a
life science experiment of The Planetary Society, called Living
Interplanetary Flight Experiment, or LIFE. A second contributor to this
mission was the China National Space Administration, which supplied a
surveying satellite called "Yinghuo-1", which would have been released
in the orbit of Mars, and a soil-grinding and sieving system for the
scientific payload of the Phobos lander. However, after achieving Earth
orbit, the Fobos-Grunt probe failed to initiate subsequent burns that
would have sent it off to Mars. Attempts to recover the probe were
unsuccessful and it crashed back to Earth in January 2012.
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