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I was observing Mars tonight with my 8" Dob at powers from 203x to
405x and noticed a couple interesting things. Have you guys noticed: 1. The south polar cap has a small break or rift in it that cuts it in two unequal pieces! 2. Blue haze on the northeast limb. 3. The western limb is slightly softer than the eastern, indicating the start of the gibbous phase. 4. Interesting and prominent hook at the end of Sinus Sabaeus. 5. Two large parallel features (like horns) extending east from Syrtis Major, one vaguer than the other. Also, I spent nearly an hour on Plato on the Moon and sketched all the hints of craterlets I could see. Though the "Big Four" were prominent pits, the rest appeared only as white spots. I later confirmed a total of nine from David Knisely's ASCII craterlet map (A, B, C-D, g, h2, p3, f, q2). "p3" may be questionable because my notes only mention a large white spot in that location. I thought I had a tenth (craterlet "n") but it turns out that I only saw the prominent white spot next to it and couldn't resolve the craterlet itself. Ritesh |
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Hi!
I have seen many of the things you describe...! Axel wrote: I was observing Mars tonight with my 8" Dob at powers from 203x to 405x and noticed a couple interesting things. Have you guys noticed: 1. The south polar cap has a small break or rift in it that cuts it in two unequal pieces! http://home.online.no/~arnholm/astro...831_0117ut.jpg 2. Blue haze on the northeast limb. http://home.online.no/~arnholm/astro...827_2159ut.jpg 3. The western limb is slightly softer than the eastern, indicating the start of the gibbous phase. haven't seen it. 4. Interesting and prominent hook at the end of Sinus Sabaeus. See #1 above. 5. Two large parallel features (like horns) extending east from Syrtis Major, one vaguer than the other. http://home.online.no/~arnholm/astro...901_2340ut.jpg Also, I spent nearly an hour on Plato on the Moon and sketched all the hints of craterlets I could see. Though the "Big Four" were prominent pits, the rest appeared only as white spots. I later confirmed a total of nine from David Knisely's ASCII craterlet map (A, B, C-D, g, h2, p3, f, q2). "p3" may be questionable because my notes only mention a large white spot in that location. I thought I had a tenth (craterlet "n") but it turns out that I only saw the prominent white spot next to it and couldn't resolve the craterlet itself. Ritesh If you saw all that, I'm impressed! This is my best http://home.online.no/~arnholm/astro...14_us5s900.jpg Clear skies Carsten A. Arnholm http://home.online.no/~arnholm/astro/astro.htm N59.776 E10.457 |
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Is it just me, or is Syrtis Major considerably more sharp-pointed than shown
in Mars Previewer and the maps of a few years ago? |
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ritesh wrote:
Have you guys noticed: 1. The south polar cap has a small break or rift in it that cuts it in two unequal pieces! Yes, that is sometimes referred to as "the Mountains of Mitchel", although there are no real mountains there. Its commonly seen as the south polar cap receeds and leaves various outliers along slopes or crater walls. 2. Blue haze on the northeast limb. Well, I see it more along the northern limb, but in any case, that is most probably the north polar hood which forms in the northern winter. 4. Interesting and prominent hook at the end of Sinus Sabaeus. That is Sinus Meridiani, also known as "Dawes Forked Bay". The MER-2 spacecraft ("Opportunity") will be landing near the middle of the marking. 5. Two large parallel features (like horns) extending east from Syrtis Major, one vaguer than the other. I am not certain which end you mean, as Syrtis Major is a pretty big marking. The southern end has several protrusions southeast, with Yaonis Regio along the eastern edge of the brighter Hellas basin, and Mare Serpentis to its east (forms almost an arc-like "hook" from the eastern end of the "pipe" of Sinus Sabaeus). The northern end of Syrtis Major is pointed, but has a faint northeastern extension (a combination of Niliosyrtis and a few other markings like Antigones Fons, Cole Palus, ect.). Clear skies to you. -- David W. Knisely Prairie Astronomy Club: http://www.prairieastronomyclub.org Hyde Memorial Observatory: http://www.hydeobservatory.info/ ********************************************** * Attend the 10th Annual NEBRASKA STAR PARTY * * July 27-Aug. 1st, 2003, Merritt Reservoir * * http://www.NebraskaStarParty.org * ********************************************** |
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Oh, OK. I haven't got a good look of that region yet, so I haven't
noticed the effect. Thanks for the information. -- ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Never be afraid of trying something new for the love of it. Remember... amateurs built the Ark. Professionals built the Titanic! ---------------------------------------------------------------------- "Edward" wrote in message ink.net... "David Nakamoto" wrote in message ... Hi Everyone, I'm just curious if the original poster mistook the Aurora Sinus region for Syrtis Major. Granted, I have not had a chance to image Syrtis Major, so I don't know if there are horns there, but my images of Aurora Sinus do show "horns" on either side, one forming an "eyebrow" for Solis Lacus, appropriately the Eye of Mars. I was observing mars Friday night and saw the dark north rim of Hellas as horns or antenna. Ed |
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Is it just me, or is Syrtis Major considerably more sharp-pointed than shown
in Mars Previewer and the maps of a few years ago? Yes the western side of Syrtis Major curves to a sharp point just like the southeastern coast and Mexican border of Texas! Ritesh |
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If you saw all that, I'm impressed! This is my best
http://home.online.no/~arnholm/astro...14_us5s900.jpg In your excellent image I can see the following craterlets besides the Big Four: f (easy) g, h2 (vague hints) p3 (the white spot that I saw that may harbor a craterlet) e (barely) k or n (vaguely) Ritesh |
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"Michael A. Covington" wrote in message
... Is it just me, or is Syrtis Major considerably more sharp-pointed than shown in Mars Previewer and the maps of a few years ago? Just came in from observing and I noticed that too. Actually, to my eye the maps have (almost) always shown Syrtis Major as too fat and blunt. I thought it might be related to my smaller aperture (6"). Also, I do know that Syrtis Major undergoes seasonal changes. The pointy look may be normal for this time of (Martian) year. Clear Skies, Craig in Tampa |
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