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NASA
Orbiter Finds Possible Cave Skylights on Mars
Friday, September 21, 2007
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Temperature
Behavior of Possible Cave Skylight on Mars
Image
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/ASU/USGS
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Seven
Possible Cave Skylights on Mars
Image
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/ASU/USGS
NASA's Mars Odyssey
spacecraft has discovered entrances to seven possible caves on
the slopes of a Martian volcano. The find is fueling interest in
potential underground habitats and sparking searches for caverns
elsewhere on the Red Planet.
Very dark, nearly circular
features ranging in diameter from about 328 to 820 feet puzzled
researchers who found them in images taken by NASA's Mars Odyssey
and Mars Global Surveyor orbiters. Using Mars Odyssey's infrared
camera to check the daytime and nighttime temperatures of the
circles, scientists concluded that they could be windows into
underground spaces.
Evidence that the holes may be
openings to cavernous spaces comes from the temperature
differences detected from infrared images taken in the afternoon
and in the pre-dawn morning. From day to night, temperatures of
the holes change only about one-third as much as the change in
temperature of surrounding ground surface.
"They are
cooler than the surrounding surface in the day and warmer at
night," said Glen Cushing of the U.S. Geological Survey's
Astrogeology Team and of Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff,
Ariz. "Their thermal behavior is not as steady as large
caves on Earth that often maintain a fairly constant temperature,
but it is consistent with these being deep holes in the
ground."
A report of the discovery of the possible
cave skylights by Cushing and his co-authors was published online
recently by the journal Geophysical Research Letters.
"Whether
these are just deep vertical shafts or openings into spacious
caverns, they are entries to the subsurface of Mars," said
co-author Tim Titus of the U.S. Geological Survey in Flagstaff.
"Somewhere on Mars, caves might provide a protected niche
for past or current life, or shelter for humans in the
future."
The discovered holes, dubbed "Seven
Sisters," are at some of the highest altitudes on the
planet, on a volcano named Arsia Mons near Mars' tallest
mountain.
"These are at such extreme altitude, they
are poor candidates either for use as human habitation or for
having microbial life," Cushing said. "Even if life has
ever existed on Mars, it may not have migrated to this
height."
The new report proposes that the deep holes
on Arsia Mons probably formed as underground stresses around the
volcano caused spreading and faults that opened spaces beneath
the surface. Some of the holes are in line with strings of
bowl-shaped pits where surface material has apparently collapsed
to fill the gap created by a linear fault.
The
observations have prompted researchers using Mars Odyssey and
NASA's newer Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter to examine the Seven
Sisters. The goal is to find other openings to underground spaces
at lower elevations that are more accessible to future missions
to Mars.
"The key to finding these was looking for
temperature anomalies at night -- warm spots," said Phil
Christensen of Arizona State University, Tempe, principal
investigator for the Thermal Emission Imaging System on Mars
Odyssey. That instrument produced both visible-light and infrared
images researchers used for examining the possible caves.
"No
other instrument at Mars could give the thermal information
crucial to this research," said the project scientist for
Mars Odyssey, Jeffrey Plaut of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory,
Pasadena, Calif. "This is a great example of the exciting
discoveries Odyssey continues to make." Mars Odyssey reached
Mars in 2001, years before any of the other spacecraft currently
examining the planet. Its predecessor, Mars Global Surveyor,
ended its mission last year.
The Jet Propulsion Laboratory
manages Mars Odyssey and Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter for the NASA
Science Mission Directorate, Washington. Arizona State University
operates the Mars Odyssey's Thermal Emission Imaging System.
Source:
NASA

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