HiPOD: Thursday, 29 August 2024
Looking for Ice

Looking for Ice
One of MRO’s ongoing campaigns is a search for new impact craters. At high latitudes, such craters often expose ice, which appears bright in HiRISE enhanced-color images. This image was targeted to look at a candidate new crater on a lobate apron. Such aprons are often ice-rich, but the crater shows no bright material that would indicate ice.

Why not? The most likely reason is that the crater simply didn’t dig deeply enough. This crater is barely visible with HiRISE, and probably only excavated down to 10 centimeters or so. At this latitude, ice is often much deeper, first appearing tens of centimeters below the surface. Near the poles, colder temperatures cause ice to be shallower, as NASA’s Phoenix mission discovered in 2008.

ID: ESP_044698_2245
date: 8 February 2016
altitude: 303 km

https://uahirise.org/hipod/ESP_044698_2245
NASA/JPL-Caltech/University of Arizona
#Mars #science #NASA

Black & white is less than 5 km across; enhanced color is less than 1 km. For full observation details, visit the ID link.