Monday, March 22, 2010

All About Mars, and the Tumbling Potato in the Sky

Note: I almost didn’t do this post, figuring pretty much everybody already knows everything about Mars already, right? But I ended up doing it because a) I’ve been following Mars* across the sky for months now and b) the stuff about Mars’ moons turned out to be way freaky cool.

*Speaking of following Mars… Though these Astro-posts may seem a bit random, I’m actually going somewhere with it. My goal is to continue East across the Southern sky, filling in blanks, until I make a complete “wrap-around.” Then someone who’s been following this blog would have a complete map across the sky, with a bunch of neat stories about stars and such along the way. Wouldn’t that be cool? Anyway, that’s the idea- we’ll see where it goes. Got my eye on Hydra and Saturn next…

I usually camp down in the desert a handful of times over the winter, but this past season only did so once, back in January with Arizona Steve. As is my habit I slept out under the stars, and as I often do when camping, woke briefly every few hours, and glanced quickly at the sky each time. My feet were pointed West, and gradually, next to Gemini, a bright orange star tread its way across the sky, setting by the foot of my sleeping bag around 4:30. As we know by now, there are many orange stars in the sky- Betelgeuse, Aldebaran, Pollux- but Mars is brighter than them all.

Southern Sky Mid March 8PM Mars is fascinating because it’s both so similar to and different from Earth at the same time. It’s (usually*) the 2nd closest planet to Earth, and, when visible, is either the 2nd or 3rd brightest planet in the sky**. In size and mass, it’s pretty much mid-way between the Earth and the Moon. If Earth were a softball, the moon would be a ping-pong ball, and Mars would be (roughly) a racquetball. As Mars has about 1/10th the mass of Earth, the Moon has about 1/10th the mass of Mars. The Earth’s surface gravity is about 2 ½ times that of Mars’ (0.38g) which is in turn roughly 2 ½ times that of the Moon’s.

*It can be 1st, 2nd or 3rd depending on where it, Venus and Mercury are in their orbits relative to Earth.

**Usually Jupiter is brighter.

Relative Sizes Extra Detail: Mars’ gravity is so much less than Earth’s primarily because it is less massive, but also because it is less dense. Surface gravity is dependent on both mass and density, which is why Mercury, which is less massive but denser, has a higher surface gravity than Mars.

What I love most about Mars is that it’s the only thing you can look up at which has- like Earth- both ground and sky.

Mars And My Family

My father was* an electrical engineer. He worked for 4 companies in his entire career, a number I beat by age 30. In the mid-1970’s he worked for Itek Optical Systems Division, a subsidiary of Litton Industries, the company that developed and produced the cameras for the Viking Lander program. After the successful completion of the mission, my father and the rest of his team received as a gift a bound coffee-table book full of color photos of the Martian landscape and sky. Today this doesn’t sound like a big deal, but in 1977, to a sci-fi-obsessed 13 year old kid, before Internet or (in our house at least) color TV, it was amazing. One day my dad just brought home a picture book from another planet. I’d seen pictures from the Moon of course, but Mars was way different. The surface was that striking orange, compared to the endless gray of the lunar surface, but the big difference was sky. It wasn’t just a rock in space- the place had sky. It may have been the wrong color, but it was really sky.

*The past tense in this instance indicates his career, not his life. My dad is alive, healthy and happily retired.

Mars-panorama Every other planet in the solar system besides Earth and Mars has either no sky or no surface (or neither of either.) The small planets and dwarf planets- Mercury, Pluto, Ceres, Sedna, Eris et al- are all too small to retain atmospheres; their “sky” is the permanent inky black of space. The big planets- Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune- may well have a sky, if you’re up high enough in the atmosphere, but no surface on which to stand and view it. Venus has a hard surface, but is forever wrapped in a shroud of super-heated, crushingly-dense cloud cover*. Only Mars and Earth have ground and sky.

*I once read (forget the source) that Venus’ atmosphere is so dense that if it were clear, light at the surface would be bents such that you could see clear around the planet in the sky above.

mars_spiritcolour_PIA05015_c1 Mars has sky because it has an atmosphere, though it’s only 0.6% as dense as Earth’s, so thin that- as anyone who saw Total Recall knows- a human would require a pressurized spacesuit to survive. The atmosphere is overwhelmingly composed of carbon dioxide (95%), with a small amount of nitrogen (2.7%) and traces of other gases. Mars’ “air” is so thin not just because of its lower gravity, but because it lacks a magnetic field to shield the planet from cosmic radiation, which gradually ionizes and strips gases from the atmosphere.

Extra Detail: Interestingly, it appears that Mars had a magnetic field in the distant past and that, like our magnetic field, it periodically reversed polarity. Scientists theorize that a few billion years back Mars’ outer core cooled and solidified enough to shut down the convection currents producing the field.

When I first saw color photos of the Martian surface, I was reminded of the American Southwest, which I’d only seen in photos at the time, and when I eventually made to places like Moab- but before I knew much about Mars- I wondered if I was seeing something like Mars, but the resemblance is purely coincidental.* The orange of the Martian surface isn’t the orange of (sedimentary) slickrock, but rather the orange of rust- ferrous oxide (FeO).

Martian sunset1*Well, mostly coincidental. Really red slickrock- like much of the Entrada formation- has that color because it has a fair amount of iron in it, and the iron has oxidized. But the formation processes of Utah slickrock and Martian surface-rock are way, way, completely different.

The ferrous oxide dusts in the atmosphere give the Martian sky its strange and lovely orange/pink hue, making for spectacular sunsets. Mars has sunsets and sunrises about as often as we do; the Martian day is 24 hours and 40 minutes long. Mars also has seasons; its axis is tilted 25 degrees, compared with 23.5 degrees for Earth. Of course the seasons are each about twice as long as ours, as the Martian year is about 687 (Earth) days long.

Mars has polar ice caps (pic left) up to 2 miles thick, and over the long seasons these caps grow and recede annually. mars-warming_polar-cap-2008The ice of the caps is primarily water. Though liquid H2O on the Martian surface appears to be extremely rare*, it’s still abundant in the ice caps. In winter, another layer of ice forms atop the ice caps and surrounding polar areas, but this ice is dry ice, frozen CO2 condensed out of the atmosphere, and fallen as snow. In the spring as these “snows” sublimate**, huge winds blow off the ice caps, giving rise to dust storms hundreds of miles across. Every few decades*** dust storms develop on such a scale that they envelope the entire planet, which has a surface area roughly equivalent to all the landmasses of Earth.

*It’s still unresolved as to whether liquid water ever flows on the Martian surface nowadays, though there have been tantalizing hints in recent years.

** Sublimate = convert from solid to gas, with no intermediate liquid phase.

Mars2001GlobalDustStormHubble ***Observed in 1971 and 2001 (pic above).

Side Note: Although the winds in such storms can reach speeds of a couple hundred miles per hour, they don’t pack the punch of Earth-winds at that speed, due to the low density of the Martian atmosphere.

Speaking of ice, Mars has clouds. Not the wet, cumulus-style clouds I blogged about up in Montana, but cirrus clouds, like we get here way up high in the stratosphere on Earth and are composed not of water droplets, but of ice crystals. But on Mars, there are 2 types of cirrus clouds: H2O and CO2, with CO2 clouds typically occurring at higher (and colder) altitudes.

Mars is superlative in other ways. It boasts a canyon, Valles Marineris, that is 2,500 miles long and 4 miles deep- 9 times as long and 4 times as deep as the Grand Canyon- and which was apparently formed by ancient water flows. Mars’ highest peak- Olympus Mons- is an extinct volcano 3 times the height of Everest. If such a peak stood on Earth, it would tower far into the stratosphere, higher than any jetliner could fly.

But when I look at Mars at night, I’m most fascinated by what an observer there would see looking back. With air so thin, the night sky must be fantastic. Under ideal conditions far from cities, a human observer can see some 2,000* stars on a clear night. How many could one see from Mars? 10,000? 50,000? And which “star” would be the brightest?

*At one time. About 6,000 are visible total.

All About Phobos

This one’s a little tricky, because probably the brightest “star” would the smaller of its 2 moons. Mars has 2 moons, Deimos and Phobos. Both are far smaller than our moon, and irregularly shaped. Phobos, the larger, is only 17 miles in diameter at its widest point. Our own, freakishly-large, moon is more than 2,000 miles in diameter! But Phobos appears fairly large in the Martian sky- about 1/3 the size of our own moon- because- and this is the coolest thing about Phobos- it orbits only ~3700 miles above the planet’s surface (compared with ~238,000 miles for our own moon.) This closeness has 3 weird effects. The first is that to a Martian observer, a “Phobean month” is only 11 hours long. And weirder still, Phobos rises in the West, and sets in the East.

Relative Orbits No, Phobos isn’t retrograde*; it’s so low/close that its orbit is sub-geosynchronous. A geosynchronous orbit is that distance at which the orbiting object is always “above” the same point on the planet, and appears to be stationary in the sky. Geosynchronous orbit around Earth is at a height/distance of 66,000 miles, and many satellites orbit the Earth at this distance for this reason. Our moon is well above/beyond this distance, and so our day is shorter than our month, and our moon appears to rise in the East, and set in the West, like, well everything else. But Phobos orbits Mars faster than the planet is turning, so it appears to move East across the sky, in a direction opposite to everything else in the sky!

*Pretty much everything in the solar system rotates and orbits in the same direction- counterclockwise, when viewed from above the Earth’s North Pole. There are exceptions, where things rotate or orbit clockwise, and these exceptions are called retrograde. Venus and Uranus, for example, have retrograde (and really weird- though for different reasons) rotations, as does Pluto. Similarly, some number of moons of the outer planets have retrograde orbits. Most of these are really small moons, and are thought to have been asteroids captured by the gravitationals field of the planets which they now orbit. But Neptune’s retrograde moon Triton is pretty respectable-sized- a large marble compared to the ping-pong ball of our moon.

Keep in mind that a retrograde moon might still appear to move East to West across the sky, depending on its orbital radius and speed, and the host-planet’s rotational speed. But that’s all beside the point. Neither of Mars’ moons is retrograde (though both are suspected to be captured asteroids); Phobos is just really low/close.

phobos1 The third weird thing about Phobos (pic right) is that it orbits so low- and roughly around the Martian equator- that it’s quite low in the sky at middle latitudes, and completely invisible in the polar regions, or at any latitude above around 70 degrees. Phobos orbits its planet more closely than any other moon in the solar system. Its orbit is unstable and it’s expected that in about 50 million years it’ll either crash into the surface, or break up and form a ring around the planet.

Side Note: There’s a fourth weird thing about Phobos, which while not directly related to its close-ness, is evident to a Mars-based observer because of it- its shape. It’s not spherical, but rather sorta-kinda elliptical/potato-shaped. So it looks like this giant tumbling potato going the wrong way across the sky.

Deimos is also sorta-kinda elliptical/potato-shaped, but is far/small enough that it wouldn’t be obvious to a naked-eye Mars-based observer.

A Bit About Deimos

deimos1 Deimos, the smaller moon (pic left), is only 9 miles across at its widest, and orbits somewhat further out, around 12,000 miles above the surface. At night it appears as a very bright star, slightly brighter than Venus appears to us. Its orbit is just above/beyond geosynchronicity, so it travels across the sky in the “right” direction (East-to-West), but appears to do so more slowly than it’s really moving. Deimos orbits Mars once every 30 hours, but takes almost 3 days from moonrise to moonset, as it slowly falls behind the planet’s rotation.

So the brightest “star” in the Martian sky is a weird Venus-like thing that travels clear across the sky in just 3 days. But the 2nd brightest star is Earth. Earth is an inferior* planet to Mars, so it only appears in the Eastern or Western skies, near dawn or dusk. It’s a bright bluish star, but often appears white because of the reddish tint of the Martian sky. Our moon is also visible, as a smaller white star close by. Both present phases to Mars as inferior bodies- such as Mercury, Venus, and the (less-than-full) Moon- do to us, and the phases of both are always the same relative to a Martian observer.

*”Inferior” in astronomy means closer to the sun. “Superior” denotes further from the sun.

Martian Night Sky Almost 2 years ago, I blogged about climbing a remote peak out in the West Desert. When I summitted and read the register, I learned that I was the first person to stand there for 462 days. I’ve had that experience several times on peaks, being the first person there to visit in as long as 3 ½ years. Whenever I do, I’m always awed by the thought of so many days and nights having passed in that spot with nothing happening. No one talking or walking or laughing or thinking or anything else. Though perfectly reasonable rationally, on an intuitive level it just seems somehow not quite believable, not quite possible, that nothing could happen in a place for so long.

Of course anywhere on Earth, stuff is happening; birds pass by, bugs crawl past, flies buss, lichens grow. But when you look up at Mars, you’re looking at a world- a real world- with ground and sky and moons and sun and stars, where, really, nothing ever happens, and hasn’t happened for billions or years, if ever. Not just a mountaintop, but a whole planet. Just rocks, sand, ice and wind, an endless succession of days and nights for longer than you can ever imagine. It just boggles my mind.

Anyway, that’s what you’re seeing when you look up at that bright orange star East of Gemini.

19 comments:

Spencer said...

Thanks for another great post.

I love Mars for its place in the imagination of the 20th century--even in a primarily scientific treatment such as this I think that the 'science fiction' element of Mars deserves a mention.

Where would Mars be without Ray Bradbury? (OK--it would be in exactly the same place--but where would Ray Bradbury be without Mars?)

Watcher said...

Spencer- I almost did a Mars sci-fi tangent, as there were so many great stories. My 2 favorite vignettes from Martian Chronicles BTW were the third expedition (crew lands, finds nice town with their passed-away loved ones, everyone is happy, and then in the middle of the night-yikes!) and, on a lighter note, the guy who thinks he’s the last human on Mars, connects with the last woman, drives all night to meet her, then after a miserable day together takes off into the desert, lives happily ever after (alone) and never answers the phone again.

Venus, BTW, also had awesome sci-fi back in the 30’s, before its pressure-cooker/furnace nature was known. Back then it was thought to be tidally-locked to the sun, and several stories featured a thin, habitable, twilit, eternal sunset zone, bordered by an always-day scorching desert on one side, and an always-night frozen wasteland on the other. (Asimov also used this idea for one of the planets in the Foundation trilogy- he called it a “ribbon world.”)

Enel said...

"How do you like your women? Blonde? Brunette? Redhead?"

Ahnold:"Brunette."

"Slim. Athletic. Voluptuous."

Ahnold:"Athletic."

"Demure. Aggressive. Sleazy. Be honest."

Ahnold:"Sleazy.....Demure."

---------

"you wouldn't hurt me,
would you, sweetheart? Sweetheart, be reasonable.
After all, we're married."

Ahnold: "Consider that a divorce."

ramblingwoods said...

This was a really interesting post. It took me back to my childhood when my father would get out the telescope and my sister and I were enchanted by all the possibilities. We spent summers in the country and slept outside often. On our backs in the sleeping bags pondering the sky. Good memories....Michelle

KanyonKris said...

Excellent post, but then I'm biased, as an astro-fan. I like how you add the relations - comparing to sizes of balls, etc. Thanks to the post I learned several cool things about Mars - thanks.

I have a minor correction:
"Surface gravity is dependent on both mass and density, which is why Mercury, which is less massive but denser, has a higher surface gravity than Mars."

I believe surface gravity is dependent solely on mass, which is determined by density and volume. So in your statement above it is more accurate to substitute "volume" or "size" where you say "mass".

Enel said...

I was surprised that Mars was so small. I had always thought it much closer to the size of Earth.

Kris: The force of gravity will vary with distance, so more dense planets have their surface closer to their center of mass, and therefore more gravitational force at the surface. Two bodies with equal mass have the same overall gravity, the force experienced by the observer varies with how far away they are from the center of mass.

I may be wrong here, but I think that is how it works.

Enel said...

See here:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverse-square_law

KristenT said...

Very cool post-- can't wait to read what you've got on Venus!

Speaking of Sci-fi and planets... try SM Stirling's Lords of Creation series. 2 books. The first one is about Venus and the second one is about Mars. Very interesting stuff.

Of course, it's not like there isn't anything going on around the whole planet Mars-- you forgot about our two rovers, roving around and poking, prodding, scratching in the dirt... wait, that sounds so depressing! A whole planet and the only two things doing anything are robots!

Enel said...

Speaking of sci-fi, I have (of course) always enjoyed CS Lewis' take on it with "Out of the Silent Planet" (Mars) and "Perelandra" (Venus). They are complete fantasy, but interesting (and way before their time) in their take on the conflict between scientific and religious belief systems.

KanyonKris said...

Enel - I see your point and believe you are correct. My bad for the false alarm. And good job explaining it so well.

Ski Bike Junkie said...

I mentioned the other day my enjoyment of natural beauty on earth while recognizing that relatively speaking, it could be rather dull compared to natural beauty on other planets. What you've said about mountains and canyons on Mars seems to confirm that. I'd like to go there. If only...

Also, the fact that one rock over in our solar system there is or has been liquid water convinces me further that with all the billions and trillions of stars and planets out there, ours cannot be the only one with intelligent life. Go SETI!

Watcher said...

Enel- thanks for piping up and the clear (er than mine) explanation. How about you do a guest post sometime?

KristenT- Your description of Mars (“…the only two things doing anything are robots…”) sounds like a couple of the companies I’ve worked for.

SBJ- I agree, the numbers and scale would seem to be on the side of life occurring more than once. But intelligent life, now there’s a whole other question…

Ski Bike Junkie said...

I think intelligent life is more than plausible. Even if the odds are a trillion to one, it has to have happened given all the trillions of planets we don't even know about. If a planet is capable of supporting life--which seems reasonable given that Mars is close to being able to do so, and it's just one planet over from us--and Darwinian principles are applicable there just as they are here, I think it's inevitable that somewhere out there intelligence has been positively correlated with survival and some species is able to communicate, reason, and is self-aware. Doesn't mean they're building supercolliders or rocket ships, but neither were we 100 years ago.

Enel said...

SBJ: The odds are much, much more than a trillion (10exp12) to one. Probably more in line with the 10 to the 100th power. A lot of things need to come together just to have a habitable planet, not to mention the complexity of the processes that go into even the simplest life forms. Mars isn't even close to supporting life.

The fact is, the possibility of life elsewhere in the universe is probably unanswereable. Not that we shouldn't try. There is so much we don't know about the universe that what you believe about this issue will come simply from your biases in regards to origins in general.

If you believe life is a random, undirected process, you will usually also believe that earth and the processes that brought life from it are common and therefore must be common elsewhere in the universe.

If you believe life is a directed process with eternal meaning, you will likely believe in the unique earth perspective.

I don't think either perspectives, honestly, are prove-able (sorta like God) due to the limitations in our observations, and our knowledge.

Enel said...

Watcher:

If you are serious about the guest blog thingy, I would be honored. you would have to do the awesome graphics though cuz that is way beyond my ability.

Ski Bike Junkie said...

Enel: and yet, here we are. And there are a lot more than ten to the hundredth power planets out there. Is intelligent life rare? Yes. Unique? Probably not.

Even if you believe in a supreme being as origin, that being is obviously intelligent and resides somewhere. Where? And did he just create life on this planet and no other? If so, why?

I agree that these questions are at present unanswerable. I just think that regardless of odds and regardless of origin persuasion, given the enormity of the universe, the likelihood that our rock is the only one with intelligent life is less than the alternative. 500 years ago, Europeans didn't know that our continent existed and thought the sun rotated around the earth. Though our cosmological perspective is expanding, it still tends to be provincial.

Watcher said...

Oh boy- good comments on this one! Yes, of course we’ll never know one way or the other till the Dubheans show up, but since we’re on the topic, I’ll share my “gut” and the reasons for it.

My gut is that life is probably pretty common, but that intelligent life- at least life that we would recognize as intelligent- is probably pretty darn rare. My gut stems from the fact that it appears that life occurred pretty early in the history of the planet, suggesting that given the right conditions, it’s likely- or even perhaps bound- to happen. Furthermore, similar organisms, organs, abilities and techniques- everything from eyes to flight to C4 photosynthesis- have occurred multiple times, showing that evolutionary processes often produce similar results given similar environments.

But intelligent life- the kind that builds cities and aircraft carriers and shopping malls and reality TV shows (wait- did I say “intelligent”?-) has only come about here once (so far) and only after the better part of a billion years of multicellular life, and then in the relative blip of an eye, seeming at least like perhaps more of an aberration/unusual event than a given, predictable outcome given the conditions.

Bottom line: given the scale of the universe, I’m almost certain that intelligent life has, does and/or will occur elsewhere, but- again, given the scale of the universe, and probable separation in space and time- it’s likely that we and they would/will never, ever meet up or even encounter a hint of one another.

Again only 1 planet, so not a very robust sample, but lack of little green visitors or alien I Love Lucy broadcasts don’t suggest a busy neighborhood either.

Watcher said...

Enel-

If you are serious about the guest blog thingy, I would be honored.

Know what? I wasn't serious when I wrote it, but now I am. Emailing you separately, and for any other interested readers, keep an eye out for a guest-poster call later this week (probably Friday).

Ski Bike Junkie said...

Watcher: I think we're more or less on the same page. I spoke of the enormity of space in three dimensions and that given that enormity, I can't imagine we're unique. What I didn't discuss was the fourth dimension: time. So while I think intelligent life is bound to happen somewhere else, the likelihood of it happening right now isn't so high. Moreover, even if it did happen concurrently, and we had some way of contacting each other (broadcasting radio waves into space), because radio waves only travel so fast and the universe is so large, by the time someone else got a message from us or we from them, the response lag would render the contact virtually meaningless. Still fun to think about, though.