Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Solar Energy News .




MARSDAILY
Impact atlas catalogs over 635,000 Martian craters
by Staff Writers
Washington DC (SPX) Jun 12, 2012


The assembly of the new Mars crater database was tedious, said Robbins. "We have all this new information coming from Mars orbiters and landers that have helped generate far better maps illustrating the planet's topography and surface details. I basically analyzed maps and drew crater rim circles for four years."

It's no secret that Mars is a beaten and battered planet - astronomers have been peering for centuries at the violent impact craters created by cosmic buckshot pounding its surface over billions of years. But just how beat up is it? Really beat up, according to researchers who recently finished counting, outlining and cataloging a staggering 635,000 impact craters on Mars that are roughly a kilometer or more in diameter.

As the largest single database ever compiled of impacts on a planet or moon in our solar system, the new information will be of help in dating the ages of particular regions of Mars, said Stuart Robbins, a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Colorado, Boulder (CU-Boulder), who led the effort.

The new crater atlas also should help researchers better understand the history of water volcanism on Mars through time, as well as the planet's potential for past habitability by primitive life, he said.

"This database is a giant tool that will be helpful in scores of future Mars studies ranging from age-dating and erosion to planetary habitability and to other applications we have not even thought of yet," said Robbins, who is affiliated with the university's Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics (LASP).

A paper on the subject by Robbins and Brian Hynek, also of CU Boulder, appeared last week in the Journal of Geophysical Research - Planets, a publication of the American Geophysical Union. A companion study by the two researchers was published in a recent issue of the same journal.

The assembly of the new Mars crater database was tedious, said Robbins.

"We have all this new information coming from Mars orbiters and landers that have helped generate far better maps illustrating the planet's topography and surface details. I basically analyzed maps and drew crater rim circles for four years."

Hynek said knowing more about the history and extent of Martian cratering has implications for better understanding the potential for past life on Mars. Hynek is a LASP research associate and assistant professor in the geological sciences department.

"Many of the large impact craters generated hydrothermal systems that could have created unique, locally habitable environments that lasted for thousands or millions of years, assuming there was water in the planet's crust at the time," said Hynek.

"But large impacts also have the ability to wipe out life forms, as evident from Earth's dinosaur-killing Chicxulub impact 65 million years ago."

Robbins said most of the smaller diameter craters on Mars are younger than the largest craters and form the bulk of the planet's crater population.

"The basic idea of age dating is that if a portion of the planet's surface has more craters, it has been around longer," said Robbins. Much of the planet has been "resurfaced" by volcanic and erosional activity, essentially erasing older geological features, including craters.

The new database also is expected to help planetary scientists better understand erosion on the planet, said Robbins.

"Our crater database contains both rim heights and crater depths, which can help us differentiate between craters that have been filled in versus those that have eroded by different processes over time, giving us a better idea about long-term changes on the planet's surface."

Having a better handle on the size and distribution of Martian impact craters also has implications for future, manned missions to the planet, said Hynek. NASA wants to know where the craters are and their particular features both from a safety and research standpoint. "Craters act as a 'poor man's drill' that provide new information about the subsurface of Mars," he said.

Since the most complete databases of lunar craters include only those roughly 10 to 15 kilometers in diameter or larger, and databases on Mercury's craters contain only those over roughly 20 kilometers in diameter, it is difficult to compare them with the Martian crater database, said Robbins.

While there are only about 150 to 200 known impact craters left on Earth, both the moon and Mercury are still peppered with craters due to their lack of atmosphere and plate tectonic activity, he said.

Cataloging the cratering of Mars and the moon is helping scientists understand a time a few hundred million years after the inner solar system formed, including an event about 3.9 billion years ago known as the "Late Heavy Bombardment" in which asteroids as large as Kansas rained down on Earth.

"Although Earth has lost most of its geologic record due to tectonic plate movements and erosion, understanding the impact crater history on the moon and Mars can help us reconstruct our early days," said Hynek.

NASA's Mars Data Analysis Program funded the crater study. "A new global database of Mars impact craters =1 km: 2. Global crater properties and regional variations of the simple-to-complex transition diameter" Stuart J. Robbins and Brian M. Hynek: Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics, University of Colorado Boulder, Boulder, Colorado, USA

.


Related Links
AGU
Mars News and Information at MarsDaily.com
Lunar Dreams and more






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








MARSDAILY
Wind may have driven avalanches on Martian dunes
Pasadena CA (JPL) Jun 01, 2012
In the sand dunes in the north polar sand sea of Mars, sand avalanches that appear as wedge-shaped alcoves can be seen above fan-shaped deposits. The avalanches, which are typically several meters across, are currently actively forming, with new alcoves showing up in recent images taken in consecutive Mars years. Some scientists have proposed that these sand avalanches occur when frozen ca ... read more


MARSDAILY
Environmental benefit of biofuels is overestimated, new study claims

Steel-Strength Plastics That Are Clean And Green

Bigger refuges needed to delay pest resistance to biotech corn

Gasification may convert mesquite and juniper wood to a usable bioenergy

MARSDAILY
Robotics helps us become more competitive

Robotic jellyfish could one day patrol oceans, clean oil spills, and detect pollutants

Graphene-control cutting using an atomic force microscope-based nanorobot

Rescue robot tested at So. Calif. beach

MARSDAILY
Change in air as Africa's biggest wind farm set for Kenya

Wind Powering An Island Economy

China Leads Growth in Global Wind Power Capacity

US slaps duties on Chinese wind towers

MARSDAILY
US battery maker claims electric car breakthrough

Sao Paulo struggles to upgrade creaking transport system

China auto sales rise 16% in May

Chinese and Japanese investors bid for Saab

MARSDAILY
US exempts India, but not China, from Iran sanctions

Iraq looks to raise profile with OPEC candidate

Oil slick threatens drinking water supply of Canadian town

Philippine churches turn on Manila over US troops

MARSDAILY
20,000 tonnes of uranium found in Jordan: joint venture

Japan's PM wants nuclear reactor restarts

Japan PM renews plea for nuclear restart

Russia supports 'peaceful' nuclear drive in Iran

MARSDAILY
TEPCO to buy 1 million tons LNG a year from Qatar

Nuclear and coal-fired electrical plants vulnerable to climate change

American Electric Power Pulls Billion Dollar Big Sandy Request

US and European energy supplies vulnerable to climate change

MARSDAILY
Forests could be global warming factor

Teaching tree-thinking through touch

EO consortium to help fight global deforestation

Bamboo points way to green construction in Indonesia's Bali




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement