Mars ionosphere shaped by crustal magnetic fields

135896main_pnas_102_42_connerney_fig1_origMarsExpress_Aurora_detections_275Scattered pockets of magnetism across the surface of Mars have a significant influence on the planet’s upper atmosphere, according to observations from ESA’s Mars Express. Understanding these effects may be crucial for ensuring safe radio communications between Mars and Earth and, eventually, between explorers on the surface of the planet.

Earth’s magnetic field is dominated by a single, strong source: the dynamo deep below the planet’s surface. However, the same cannot be said for Mars. Rather than possessing a single source of magnetic field, Mars has many.

The Red Planet has numerous pockets of strong magnetism locked up within its crust, remnants from its earliest days. Modern-day Mars may be known for its relative lack of magnetism but young Mars was likely a different world; it was probably warmer and wetter, with a denser atmosphere and a hotter core. Scientists believe the young planet also had a sizeable magnetic field, driven by the circulating motion of molten material within its core (known as a planetary dynamo).

This global field switched off long ago – likely as the core cooled and solidified, freezing the dynamo in place – but the planet still boasts anomalous patches of strong remnant magnetism spread across its surface, known as ‘crustal fields’. [More at link]

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Opportunity: Farewell, Spirit Mound

4544-pancam1R531767018EFFCTGTP1311R0M1Sol 4546, November 7, 2016. The rover completed its final survey of Spirit Mound and the downslope area beyond (false-color Pancam by Holger Isenberg; 2.5 MB) on Sol 4544.

Then it was commanded to drive 31 meters (about 100 feet) to the south-southwest, with its track going partially upslope. Both Hazcam views at right were taken post-drive on Sol 4546. (All images enlarge when clicked.)

1F531762060EFFCTGTP1212R0M1Opportunity raw images, its latest mission status, a location map. and atmospheric opacity, known as tau.

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THEMIS: Crater & caldera on Elysium Mons

Crater and caldera at Elysium Mons (THEMIS_IOTD_20161107)THEMIS Image of the Day, November 7, 2016. This VIS image shows two circular features. The flat floored feature at the top of the image is the summit caldera of Elysium Mons and was formed by volcanic activity. The bowl-shaped feature next to the caldera is an impact crater.

More THEMIS Images of the Day by geological topic.

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Curiosity update: Brushing Penobscot

NLB_531465186EDR_F0591260NCAM00353M_Sol 1511-13, November 4, 2016, update by USGS scientist Ken Herkenhoff: After driving over 40 meters on Sol 1509, MSL is ready for the 3-sol weekend plan.  There are a couple of good-sized outcrops in the arm workspace, so we’re planning contact science on Sol 1511.  But first, Navcam will look for clouds and ChemCam will observe bedrock targets named “Pemetic,” “Jordan Pond,” and “Penobscot.”  The Right Mastcam will then image Jordan… [More at link]

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HiRISE: Dark slope streaks on a mound

tumblr_og385e97za1rlz4gso1_1280O small martian mound! Beautiful Mars series.

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THEMIS: Gasa Crater nestled inside bigger crater

Gasa Crater (THEMIS_IOTD_20161104)THEMIS Image of the Day, November 4, 2016. The smaller crater within the larger crater is called Gasa Crater (the larger crater is unnamed). Gullies dissect the inner rims of both craters.

More THEMIS Images of the Day by geological topic.

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HRSC: A record of ancient tectonic stress

Perspective_view_in_Acheron_Fossae_node_full_image_2Sets of ridges and troughs some 1000 km north of the giant Olympus Mons volcano contain a record of the intense tectonic stresses and strains experienced in the Acheron Fossae region on Mars 3.7–3.9 billion years ago.

This scene, captured by ESA’s Mars Express on 4 May, focuses on the western part of Acheron Fossae, an isolated block of ancient terrain that covers an area about 800 km long and 280 km wide and stands up to 2 km higher than the surrounding plains.

Acheron Fossae is part of a network of fractures that radiates from the Tharsis ‘bulge’ some 1000 km to the south, home to the largest volcanoes on Mars. As the Tharsis region swelled with hot material rising from deep inside Mars as the volcanoes formed, it stretched and pulled apart the crust along lines of weakness over a wide area. (…)

The pattern of cross-cutting faults seen in various places in Acheron Fossae implies the region experienced stresses from different directions over time, suggesting a complex history. [More at link]

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Opportunity: Looking at Chamois in color

1P531310250ESFCTC2P2576L5M1_L4L5L5L5L61N531311290EFFCTC2P0787L0M1Sol 4541, November 1, 2016. The rover’s Pancam took a series of filtered images of a target dubbed Chamois (false-color version by Holger Isenberg). The target (arrow) lies just ahead of Opportunity’s solar panel in the image at right. Both images enlarge when clicked.

Opportunity raw images, its latest mission status, a location map. and atmospheric opacity, known as tau.

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Curiosity update: No contact science

NLB_531368358EDR_F0590936NCAM00375M_Sol 1509-10, November 2, 2016, update by USGS scientist Ken Herkenhoff: MSL drove another 44 meters on Sol 1508, ending up in an area that again is partly covered by dark sand.  There aren’t any very compelling targets within the arm workspace, so we decided again to forgo contact science, and focused instead on remote observations.  Planning is restricted, so we are planning 2 sols today.  On Sol 1509, Navcam will search for dust devils and ChemCam will acquire passive spectra of “Ellsworth,” another target in the area about 500 meters away where orbital data indicate the presence of clay minerals.  ChemCam and the Right… [More at link]

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ExoMars: Schiaparelli crash site in color

PIA21132Editor note: See also HiRISE and Photojournal posts

New high-resolution images taken by a NASA orbiter show parts of the ExoMars Schiaparelli module and its landing site in colour on the Red Planet.

Schiaparelli arrived in the Meridiani Planum region on Mars on 19 October, while its mothership began orbiting the planet. The Trace Gas orbiter will make its first science observations during two of its highly elliptical circuits around Mars – corresponding to eight days – starting on 20 November, including taking its first images of the planet since arriving.

The new image of Schiaparelli and its hardware components was taken by NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, or MRO, on 1 November. The main impact site is now captured in the central portion of the swath that is imaged by the high-resolution camera through three filters, enabling a colour image to be constructed.

In addition, the image of 1 November was taken looking slightly to the west, while the earlier image was looking to the east, providing a contrasting viewing geometry. [More at links]

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