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15 March 2010
Images from the recent flyby of Phobos, on 7 March 2010, are released
today. The images show Mars rocky moon in exquisite detail, with a
resolution of just 4.4 metres per pixel. They show the proposed landing
sites for the forthcoming Phobos-Grunt mission.
ESA's Mars Express spacecraft orbits the Red Planet in a highly
elliptical, polar orbit that brings it close to Phobos every five
months. It is the only spacecraft currently in orbit around Mars whose
orbit reaches far enough from the planet to provide a close-up view of
Phobos.
Like our Moon, Phobos always shows the same side to the planet, so it
is only by flying outside the orbit that it becomes possible to observe
the far side. Mars Express did just this on 7, 10 and 13 March 2010.
Mars Express also collected data with other instruments. |
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Phobos
is an irregular body measuring some 27 x 22 x 19 km. Its origin is
debated. It appears to share many surface characteristics with the
class of 'carbonaceous C-type' asteroids, which suggests it might have
been captured from this population. However, it is difficult to explain
either the capture mechanism or the subsequent evolution of the orbit
into the equatorial plane of Mars. An alternative hypothesis is that it
formed around Mars, and is therefore a remnant from the planetary
formation period. |
3d image of Phobos |
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The Phobos-Grunt landing site |
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The Phobos-Grunt landing site |
In
2011 Russia will send a mission called Phobos-Grunt (meaning Phobos
Soil) to land on the martian moon, collect a soil sample and return it
to Earth for analysis.
For operational and landing safety reasons, the proposed landing sites
were selected on the far side of Phobos within the area 5S-5N,
230-235E. This region was imaged by the HRSC high-resolution camera of
Mars Express during the July-August 2008 flybys of Phobos. But new HRSC
images showing the vicinity of the landing area under different
conditions, such as better illumination from the Sun, remain highly
valuable for mission planners.
It is expected that Earth-based ESA stations will take part in
controlling Phobos-Grunt, receiving telemetry and making trajectory
measurements, including implementation of very long-baseline
interferometry (VLBI). This cooperation is realized on the basis of the
agreement on collaboration of the Russian Federal Space Agency and ESA
in the framework of the Phobos-Grunt and ExoMars projects.
Mars Express will continue to encounter Phobos until the end of
March, when the moon will pass out of range. During the remaining
flybys, HRSC and other instruments will continue to collect data. |
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