ATLAS OF THE UNIVERSE
Satellites of Mars
ATLAS OF THE UNIVERSE
M
ars has two satellites, Phobos and Deimos, both
discovered in 1877 by Asaph Hall, using the large
refractor at Washington Observatory; previous searches,
by William Herschel and Heinrich D’Arrest, had been un-
successful. Both are very small, and are not easy telescopic
objects, because they are so close to Mars. It is interesting
to recall that Jonathan Swift, in his Voyage to Laputa (one
of Gulliver’s Travels), had described how astronomers on
the curious flying island had discovered two Martian satel-
lites, one of which revolved round the planet in a time
less than that of the planet’s axial rotation – as Phobos
actually does. However, Swift’s reasoning was not strictly
scientific. If the Earth had one moon and Jupiter four, how
could Mars possibly manage with less than two?
Phobos moves at less than 6000 kilometres (3700
miles) above the planet’s surface, and the orbital period is
only 7 hours 39 minutes, so that to an observer on Mars
Phobos would rise in the east and set in the east 4^1 ⁄ 2 hours
later, during which time it would go though more than half
its cycle of phases from new to full; the interval between
successive risings would be no more than 11 hours. Yet
Phobos would be of little use as a source of illumination at
night. From Mars it would have an apparent diameter of
less than half that of our Moon seen from Earth, and would
give little more light than Venus does to us; an observer
at a latitude of more than 69° would never see it at all, and
for long periods it would be eclipsed by Mars’ shadow. It
would transit the Sun 1300 times in every Martian year,
taking 19 seconds to cross the solar disk.
Phobos is a dark, irregularly shaped body, with a
longest diameter of 27 kilometres (17 miles). Its surface is
coated with a ‘dusty’ regolith, and spacecraft images show
that it is cratered; the largest crater, 10 kilometres (6 miles)
across, is named Stickney in honour of Asaph Hall’s wife
(this was her maiden name, and it was she who urged her
husband to continue hunting for satellites when he was on
the verge of giving up). Other craters, one of which is
named after Hall, are around 5 kilometres (3 miles) across;
there are also ridges, hills, and strange parallel grooves
inclined to the equator at 30°. These grooves are from
100 to 200 metres (330 to 660 feet) wide, and 10 to
20 metres (33 to 66 feet) deep. It has been calculated that
Deimos
Phobos
Planetary orbit
Phobos.The larger
satellite of Mars; like
Deimos, it is a dark grey
colour with a reflectivity of
around 5 per cent. Its density
indicates that it is made of
carbonaceous chondritic
material similar to that of
some asteroids.
▼ The satellite orbits.
Both Phobos and Deimos
are very close to Mars;
Phobos moves in a circular
orbit 9270 km (5800 miles)
from the centre of Mars.
Deimos orbits at 23,400 km
(14,500 miles).
Map of Phobos.Stickney
is much the largest crater;
it lies close to the sub-Mars
point. From Stickney there
extends a well-marked ridge,
Kepler Dorsum. Of the other
main craters, Roche lies in
the north and Hall in the
south.
–70°
–60°
–30°
0°
270° 240° 210° 180° 150° 120° 90° 60° 30° 0° 330° 300° 270°
30°
60°
70°
0°
0°
180°
180°
270°
225° 135°
225° 135°
315° 45°
315° 45°
90°
270° 90° Roche
Wendell
Sharpless
Todd
D’Arrest
Stickney
Kepler
Dorsum
Sub-
Mars
Point
N
S
Hall
Roche
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