Thursday, August 5, 2010

The appearance of 'Bull's Eyes' on Mars

Images 'bull eyes' post was taken by the HiRISE camera on the orbiting satellite
An appearance of 'bull's eye' on Mars sent to Earth from the camera's high-tech U.S. space agency, NASA's orbiting the red planet.
Photos unusual crater was taken by a camera High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HiRISE) is mounted on the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter satellite.

NASA released this photo recently. Although the actual photographing Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter's unique crater on July 9, 2010 last. Its location at 46.6 degrees latitude and 194.9 degrees east longitude on the surface of Mars.

Now the task of scientists to uncover what exactly is causing the bulge in the center of the crater on Mars.

Whether it is a product of the layer below the surface of Mars or created due to the impact of collision.
"Collision on Mars could result from the material layer is strong or weak, for instance rich with no non-ice-ice-rich, resulting in a terracing, as seen between the holes inside and outside," wrote Sarah Milkovich, HiRISE science team member at the University of Arizona, like a loaded Space.

Previously, scientists have examined the terraced craters to estimate the thickness of lava flows on the Moon and in several other places.

"Sublimation is equitable and periglacial erosion of ice-rich material is open on the inside of the crater may explain why relatively few bumps it off, not right in the middle, from the terrace and the edge of a larger crater," writes Milkovich.
Bulge in the middle of the crater 'bull eyes' can also be explained by the theory that it was the impact of collision.
Previously, HiRISE reveals the appearance of the face of Mars taken by Viking 1 satellite owned by the United States on July 25, 1976. The appearance sparked thousands of conspiracy theories.

HiRISE shows a human face on Mars is a large rock in the middle of the desert.
HiRISE images are images generated from the nearest object was phenomenal. HiRISE images taken from the Reconnaissance satellite orbiting 300 miles above Mars - much closer than the position in 1976, 1873 miles.

YDH

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