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Can anyone suggest why the (probable) frozen sea on Mars recently reported
by ESA's Mars Express orbiter wasn't spotted earlier by Mars Global Surveyor? Also would it have appeared oddly flat in laser altimetry data? |
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On 2005-02-25, Andrew Wright wrote:
Can anyone suggest why the (probable) frozen sea on Mars recently reported by ESA's Mars Express orbiter wasn't spotted earlier by Mars Global Surveyor? Also would it have appeared oddly flat in laser altimetry data? Note that the Mars Express pictures were taken in January 2004; it's quite possible no-one's got around to analysing any MGS images of the area yet. In addition, they resemble already-known formations thought to be lava flows; it's quite possible that any photographs of the area with sufficient resolution to pick out the plates were looked at, noted as being another example of a known phenomenon, and thus not something that leaped out as important. Here, the key seems to have been someone noticing that they a) looked like pack-ice and b) were too large for basalt rafts. The area was definitely imaged by MGS; the abstract that's floating around contains at least one photo from the MOC, and there's reference to crater-counting using these images as well. It also notes the use of MOLA data, so presumably either no-one noticed or it was just written off as an anomalously flat area. Note that whilst it's very horizontal it's not very flat - it still has craters and irregular surfaces - so this wouldn't have been quite as much of a red flag as it may seem. -- -Andrew Gray |
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