A mile-deep ice crater on Mars – and marsquakes

Although it looks like a beautiful mound of snow on the Red Planet, the Korolev crater would be more suited for ice skating than building a snowman. The European Space Agency released an image taken by its Mars Express mission on Thursday, showing the crater filled with water ice.

The Rotation and Interior Structure Experiment, or RISE, is active on the spacecraft, using a radio to track the wobble of the Martian north pole as the sun tugs on its orbit. This will provide more information about the planet’s core. The heat probe will be hammered into the surface by the lander in late January.

The mission scientists are ready for the data that SEIS will send their way.

“We look forward to popping some Champagne when we start to get data from InSight’s seismometer on the ground,” Banerdt added. “I have a bottle ready for the occasion.”

Read more at edition.cnn.com

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Comments (2)

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    Dan

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    The ice in the crater/tunnel, is it H2O?

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  • Avatar

    K. Kaiser

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    @Dan
    My idea as well.
    With 96% CO2 and only traces of water in the atmosphere of Mars, it’s more likely than not just DRY ICE (solid carbon dioxide).

    Reply

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