The Mars Global Surveyor's Mars Orbiter Camera has found that meteorites
are hitting the Martian surface and forming new craters all the time. If
you were living on Mars, chances are that within 10 or 20 years, an impact
would occur close enough to where you live that you'd notice it -- perhaps
you'd hear the impact and it would startle you out of your seat.
A year ago, it had not occurred to the camera team that they could find
places on Mars where meteorites had impacted the surface during the course
of the mission. Such craters, if they were forming at all, would be a few
meters to a few tens of meters across; much too small to notice (or so
they thought) in the wide-angle camera coverage. But, on Jan. 9, 2006,
they began to realize that not only could we find such craters, we might
also be able to characterize the present-day impact cratering rate on
Mars. Surveying for fresh craters formed during the mission would provide
the first direct observation -- for any body in the solar system,
including Earth and its Moon -- of the present-day cratering rate. This in
turn can help test models used all the time by members of the scientific
community to estimate the age of features on planetary surfaces.
The first fresh impact site, shown on this page, was first noticed on Jan.
9, 2006, in an image acquired three days earlier. The image was acquired
by the wide-angle camera at its highest possible spatial resolution, about
240 meters (262 yards) per pixel. To the northwest of the area imaged by
the narrow-angle camera, the red, wide-angle context frame showed a dark
spot. This spot was not present in any previous image acquired by any
spacecraft, from Mariner 9 (which arrived in 1971) on down through Mars
Express (which arrived in 2003).
Figure A: The first figure shows two red, wide-angle camera context
images. The first was taken on June 9, 2001, several years before the
impact occurred. The second is the "discovery" image, acquired on January
6, 2006. In both cases, a white box indicates the location of the Mars
Orbiter Camera narrow-angle image for which the context image was
obtained. For scale, the white boxes are 3 kilometers (1.9 miles) wide.
Figure B: In this image, North is up in this map-projected view. The
single, broad dark streak that emanates from the impact site and points
toward the southwest (lower left) may indicate either the direction that
the meteor came from, or its opposite. If it represents the direction that
the impactor came from, then the streak results from disruption of dust on
the Martian surface as the object came in. If the opposite, then it
represents the direction that material was blasted from the impact site,
away from the direction that the meteor came. In either case, the impactor
came in at a somewhat oblique angle, and broke up just before hitting the
ground, because it formed multiple small craters. The 300-meter scale bar
represents 328 yards.
The Mars Global Surveyor mission is managed for NASA's Office of Space
Science, Washington, by NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena,
Calif., a division of the California Institute of Technology, also in
Pasadena. Lockheed Martin Space Systems, Denver, developed and operates
the spacecraft. Malin Space Science Systems, San Diego, Calif., built and
operates the Mars Orbiter Camera.
For more information about images from the Mars Orbiter Camera, see
http://www.msss.com/mgs/moc/index.html.