
| NASA Center: |
Jet Propulsion Laboratory |
| Image # : |
PIA01035 |
| Date : |
06/22/2000
|
|---|
|
Title
Evidence for Recent Liquid Water on Mars
Full Description
Gullies eroded into the wall of a meteor impact crater in Noachis Terra. This
high resolution view (top left) from the Mars Global Surveyor (MGS) Mars Orbiter
Camera (MOC) shows channels and associated aprons of debris that are interpreted
to have formed by groundwater seepage, surface runoff, and debris flow.
The lack of small craters superimposed on the channels and apron deposits
indicates that these features are geologically young. It is possible that these
gullies indicate that liquid water is present within the martian subsurface
today. The MOC image was acquired on September 28, 1999.
The scene covers an area approximately 3 kilometers (1.9 miles) wide by 6.7 km
(4.1 mi) high (note, the aspect ratio is 1.5 to 1.0). Sunlight illuminates this
area from the upper left. The image is located near 54.8S, 342.5W. The context
image (above) shows the location of the MOC image on the south-facing wall of an
impact crater approximately 20 kilometers (12 miles) in diameter. The context
picture was obtained by the Viking 1 orbiter in 1980 and is illuminated from the
upper left.
The large mound on the floor of the crater in the context view is a sand dune
field. The Mars Orbiter Camera high resolution images are taken black-and-white
(grayscale); the color seen here has been synthesized from the colors of Mars
observed by the MOC wide angle cameras and by the Viking Orbiters in the late
1970s.
A brief description of how the color was generated: The MOC narrow angle camera
only takes grayscale (black and white) pictures. To create the color versions
seen here, we have taken much lower resolution red and blue images acquired by
the MOC's wide angle cameras, and by the Viking Orbiter cameras in the 1970s,
synthesized a green image by averaging red and blue, and created a pallete of
colors that represent the range of colors on Mars. We then use a relationship
that correlates color and brightness to assign a color to each gray level. This
is only a crude approximation of martian color.
It is likely Mars would not look like this to a human observer at Mars.
Keywords
Mars Global Surveyor MGS Mars Orbiter Camera MOC Noachis Terra Gullies Viking Orbiter Water
Subject Category
Planet-Mars, Mars Global Surveyor,
Reference Numbers
- Center:
JPL
- Center Number:
PIA01035
- GRIN DataBase Number:
GPN-2000-001434
Source Information
- Creator/Photographer: NASA, JPL, Malin Space Science Systems ODEvidence for Recent Liquid
- Original Source: DIGITAL
| Resolution | Format | Width (Pixels) | Height (Pixels) | Size (KBytes) |
Thumbnail |
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77 |
95 |
11 |
Small |
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549 |
823 |
441 |
Medium |
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1286 |
1928 |
2,024 |
Large |
.jpg |
857 |
1285 |
1,195 |
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Updated October 31, 2002
History Questions: NASA History Office
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Author: Michael Hahn. Editor: Dwayne A. Day
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