|
The Planetary Society WeblogBy Emily LakdawallaWhite Rock through the ages: Mars Global Surveyor (1997-2006)Feb. 22, 2008 | 10:24 PST | 18:24 UTC
We first spotted the strange bright feature colloquially known as "White Rock" in Mariner 9 images from 1972, and revisited it, without learning much more, in Viking images from the late 1970s. The subsequent decades were dark ones for Mars exploration. No spacecraft was launched to Mars between 1975 and 1988. That long launch hiatus was followed by a series of disasters. Two Russian missions launched in 1988 failed: Phobos 1 just two months after launch, and Phobos 2 two months after Mars arrival. Four years later, NASA's Mars Observer vanished just three days before it was to enter orbit. Three years after that, Russia's Mars 96 suffered a launch failure. Mars earned a reputation as the "Death Planet."
I entered grad school toward the end of Mars Global Surveyor's aerobraking period, and I remember that Mars scientists were still gaga over the detail visible in Mars Orbiter Camera (MOC) images. And no wonder. The sharp details in MOC images turned Mars from an enigmatic, alien world to an arrestingly Earth-like landscape, at least in some places. White Rock is an example of one of those places. I'll remind you of what it looked like to the Viking orbiters. Scientists could be forgiven for initially thinking that White Rock was actually an ice deposit.
MOC took many, many photos of the White Rock area; if you'd like to explore more of them, visit ASU's global mars mapping facility and zoom in on a point near 8°S, 25°E. I'm showing the one above, which was released by the MOC team, because it contains several features that illuminate the geologic history of the White Rock deposit and Pollack crater, in which it sits. Here's a detail from the image, annotated by the MOC team:
But wait, there's more. Mars Global Surveyor carried more than one instrument. As important as the MOC images were, the mission produced another data set that was at least as important: the first direct measurements of Mars' topography, from the Mars Orbiter Laser Altimeter. MOLA bounced a laser off the surface and waited for the return flash, firing shots ten times a second. Nowadays, most people use the MOLA data in the form of a global gridded topographic map. You can download these maps from the PDS Geosciences Node, and open them with NASAView.
Sort of. Mars Global Surveyor had another instrument, the Thermal Emission Spectrometer or TES. The first instrument of its kind sent to Mars, TES employed the thermal infrared portion of the electromagnetic spectrum to study the planet. Mars rotates just like Earth does, and its surfaces heat up when they are bathed in sunlight and cool down when they are shadowed on the night side of the planet. However, that heating and cooling happens at different rates depending on what the surface is made of. The largest influence on this rate of cooling -- described by scientists using a property called "thermal inertia" -- is whether the surface is largely bedrock or is mantled in dust. Dust is made of many many fine particles, which means dusty surfaces have high surface area, so they radiate the day's accumulated heat away quickly after sundown, and warm quickly upon sunrise. Bedrock, on the other hand, has much higher thermal inertia, taking longer to cool at night and heat in the day. Wiggles in the TES spectra could also be used to diagnose the presence or absence of certain minerals, though the low spatial resolution of the TES instrument -- individual pixels spanned areas about three by five kilometers in size -- tended to average out local compositional variations. In a paper published in the Journal of Geophysical Research by the TES team in 2001, lead author Steve Ruff had the following to say. The "White Rock" feature on Mars has long been viewed as a type example for a Martian playa [deposit of material from an evaporated lake] largely because of its apparent high albedo along with its location in a topographic basin (a crater). Data from the Mars Global Surveyor Thermal Emission Spectrometer (TES) demonstrates that White Rock is not anomalously bright relative to other Martian bright regions, reducing the significance of its albedo and weakening the analogy to terrestrial playas.I feel I should note here that close examination of Viking images had already proven that White Rock only appears anomalously bright because it's totally surrounded by anomalously dark material, the dark sand that makes those ripples. Its thermal inertia value indicates that it is not mantled by a layer of loose dust, nor is it bedrock. The thermal infrared spectrum of White Rock shows no obvious features of carbonates or sulfates and is, in fact, spectrally flat. Images from the Mars Orbiter Camera show that the White Rock massifs are consolidated enough to retain slopes and allow the passage of saltating grains over their surfaces [that is, sand dunes blow across them without disturbing their component materials]. Material appears to be shed from the massifs and concentrated at the crests of nearby bedforms. One explanation of these observations is that White Rock is an eroded accumulation of compacted or weakly cemented aeolian sediment.In other words, White Rock is not a sedimentary rock deposited in pooled water; it's a deep pile of windblown sand that was cemented, by some unknown mechanism, into a resistant rock. This conclusion was based on the absence of evidence, in the TES data, of minerals that form in evaporative environments, such as chlorides (salts), sulfates, and carbonates, and the argument that "there is no definitive observation that demonstrates what White Rock is. However, the ubiquity and abundance of aeolian sediments on Mars and the evidence that they can form indurated [cemented] deposits suggest that these may be the materials composing White Rock. In this scenario the unusual appearance of the White Rock feature results largely from its proximity to very dark material and its novel erosional form rather than its composition or mode of origin." Yet, as any scientist knows, the absence of evidence is not evidence of absence; the TES team conclusion, based mostly on the absence of strong water-related chemical signatures in the rock, failed to satisfy some Mars researchers. So, despite the order-of-magnitude improvement in image quality represented by MOC, and the return of two novel and unique data sets from the MOLA and TES teams, experts still disagreed about the origins of White Rock. Would the next generation of Mars orbiters be able to help resolve the disagreement? Next up: 2001 Mars Odyssey... |
||||||||||