Gusev (krater)
Marskrater | |
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Gusev | |
Mars Global Surveyors bild över kratern sedd uppifrån. | |
Egenskaper | |
Koordinater | 14.5˚ S, 175.4˚ Ö |
Medeldiameter | 158.12 km [1] |
Uppkallad efter | Matvej Gusev, rysk astronom |
Mars - ( ) | |
Gusev är en 158 km stor nedslagskrater på planeten Mars, något söder om ekvatorn. Kratern har fått sitt namn efter den ryska astronomen Matvej Gusev.
Den 3 januari 2004 landade Marsrovern Spirit i kratern.
Referenser
- ^ ”Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature: Gusev”. International Astronomical Union. http://planetarynames.wr.usgs.gov/Feature/2289. Läst 29 juli 2011.
Externa länkar
- Wikimedia Commons har media som rör Gusev (krater).
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Media som används på denna webbplats
NASA's Hubble Space Telescope took the picture of Mars on June 26, 2001, when Mars was approximately 68 million kilometers (43 million miles) from Earth — the closest Mars has ever been to Earth since 1988. Hubble can see details as small as 16 kilometers (10 miles) across. The colors have been carefully balanced to give a realistic view of Mars' hues as they might appear through a telescope. Especially striking is the large amount of seasonal dust storm activity seen in this image. One large storm system is churning high above the northern polar cap (top of image), and a smaller dust storm cloud can be seen nearby. Another large dust storm is spilling out of the giant Hellas impact basin in the Southern Hemisphere (lower right).
Descent from the Summit of 'Husband Hill'
In late November 2005 while descending "Husband Hill", NASA's Mars Exploration Rover Spirit took the most detailed panorama so far of the "Inner Basin", the rover's next target destination. Spirit acquired the 405 individual images that make up this 360-degree view of the surrounding terrain using five different filters on the panoramic camera. The rover took the images on Martian days, or sols, 672 to 677 (23 to 28 Nov. 2005).
This image is an approximately true-color rendering using camera's 750-, 530-, and 430-nanometer filters. Seams between individual frames have been eliminated from the sky portion of the mosaic to better simulate the vista a person standing on Mars would see.
On January 3, Spirit, NASA's 400-pound rover, is scheduled to land on what may be a dried-up lake bed on Mars. "There's not much doubt: this site contained a body of liquid water, at least for some amount of time," says Jim Garvin, NASA's Lead Scientist for Mars Exploration.
The site is Gusev Crater, a 90-mile wide hole in the ground that probably formed three to four billion years ago when an asteroid crashed just south of Mars' equator. There's a channel system that drains into it, which probably carried liquid water, or water and ice, into the crater. "It's hard to imagine the landscape looking this way unless water was somehow involved," says Garvin.
This image was taken by NASA's Viking 1 orbiter.
Right now, inside the crater, researchers expect to find sediments, which may be nearly 3,000 feet thick. These sediments, which, researchers hope were deposited by water, may have been covered by dust and sand that's blown into the crater over the past two billion years. But if there was once water in Gusev, its signature should still be there.