NASA orbiter saw something astonishing peek through Martian clouds
NASA’s longest-running Marsmission has sent back an unprecedented side view of a massive volcano rising above the Red Planet,关键字3 just before dawn.
On May 2, as sunlight crept over the Martian horizon, the Odyssey spacecraft captured Arsia Mons, a towering, long-extinct volcano, puncturing a glowing band of greenish haze in the planet’s upper atmosphere.
The 12-mile-high volcano — nearly twice the height of Mauna Loa in Hawaii — punctures a veil of fog, emerging like a monument to the planet's ancient past. The spacesnapshot is both visually arresting and scientifically enlightening.
"We picked Arsia Mons hoping we would see the summit poke above the early morning clouds," said Jonathon Hill, who leads Odyssey's camera operations at Arizona State University, in a statement, "and it didn't disappoint."
SEE ALSO: An enormous Martian cloud returns every spring. Scientists found out why.
To get this view, Odyssey had to do something it wasn’t originally built for. The orbiter, which has been flying around Mars since 2001, usually points its camera straight down to map the planet’s surface. But over the past two years, scientists have begun rotating the spacecraft 90 degrees to look toward the horizon. That adjustment allows NASA to study how dust and ice clouds change over the seasons.
Though the image is still an aerial view, the vantage point is of the horizon, similar to how astronautscan see Earth's horizon 250 miles above the planet on the International Space Station. From that altitude, Earth doesn’t fill their entire view — there’s enough distance and perspective for them to see the planet's curved edge meeting the blackness of space. Odyssey flies above Mars at about the same altitude.
Arsia Mons sits at the southern end of a towering trio of volcanoes called the Tharsis Montes. The Tharsis region is home to the largest volcanoes in the solar system. The lack of plate tectonics on the Red Planet allowed them to grow many times larger than those anywhere on Earth.
Together, they dominate the Martian landscape and are sometimes covered in clouds, especially in the early hours. But not just any clouds — these are made of water ice, a different breed than the planet’s more common carbon dioxide clouds. Arsia Mons is the cloudiest of the three.
Scientists have recently studied a particular, localized cloud formation that occurs over the mountain, dubbed the Arsia Mons Elongated Cloud. The transient feature, streaking 1,100 miles over southern Mars, lasts only about three hours in the morning during spring before vanishing in the warm sunlight. It's formed by strong winds being forced up the mountainside.
Related Stories
- A NASA Mars rover looked up at a moody sky. What it saw wasn't a star.
- Mars by 2026? The 4 key takeaways from Elon Musk's Starship update
- The best telescopes for gazing at stars and solar eclipses in 2024
- What Mars would look like from an orbiting space station
- An enormous Martian cloud returns every spring. Scientists found out why.
The cloudy canopy on display in Odyssey's new image, according to NASA, is called the aphelion cloud belt. This widespread seasonal system drapes across the planet's equator when Mars is farthest from the sun.
This is Odyssey's fourth side image since 2023, and it is the first to show a volcano breaking through the clouds.
"We're seeing some really significant seasonal differences in these horizon images," said Michael D. Smith, a NASA planetary scientist, in a statement. "It’s giving us new clues to how Mars' atmosphere evolves over time."
(责任编辑:夜尊异世)
- 2025年中山初中排名靠前的学校 入学条件是什么
- 第99章 采菱在家等你来提亲
- 第58章 这就不是个正经府卫
- 第78章 可怕的是人心里有鬼
- 《剑星》角色原型模特喊话:想要MOD同款比基尼
- 第99章 采菱在家等你来提亲
- 第114章 我们姑娘太可怜了
- 第107章 那分明是个针对他设下的陷阱
- ราชกิจจาฯ เผยแพร่ประกาศ กทม."วินฯ" ต้องรายงานตัวทุก 2 ปี เริ่ม พ.ย.นี้
- 第122章 我就让他上门提亲去
- 第42章 倒霉的只有她一个人
- 第28章 惊才绝艳的是起哥儿
- 《乱世烟雨》(游子组合演唱)的文本歌词及LRC歌词
- 第128章 宫里第一滴污血