Australian Sky & Telescope - April 2016__

(Martin Jones) #1
http://www.skyandtelescope.com.au 59

Albedo features
The Martian surface markings — the dark ‘maria’ and
bright ‘terrae,’ with their picturesque classical names
given by Mars mappers in the late 19th and early 20th
centuries — are merely differences in the average
reflectivity (albedo) of the surface rock, sand and dust.
Windstorms sometimes move the dust, resulting in
both seasonal and long-term changes. Syrtis Major,
the most prominent dark marking, has undergone a
dramatic, long-term widening since the 1950s. It also
shows lesser seasonal changes in width: it tends to be
widest in the northern hemisphere’s mid-summer,
meaning now.
The area around Solis Lacus, sometimes called
the ‘Eye of Mars,’ is notorious for changes in surface
markings. So is the Elysium region.

Clouds and hazes
The Martian atmosphere is ever-changing. Look for
white water-ice clouds and bluish limb hazes. Bright
surface frosts also occur; these are hard to tell from
clouds. As ice in the North Polar Cap sublimates
through the northern summer, the atmosphere gains

ARCADIA

MARE BOREUM

UTOPIA

THARSIS

AMAZONIS

NILIACUS
LACUS

CHRYSE

AURORAE
MARGARI-TIFER SINUS
SINUS SINUS
MERID-
IANI

Protonilus NILOKERAS

MARE ERYTHRAEUM

HELLAS

ELYSIUM SYRTIS MAJORAERIA
ARABIAMOABEDEN
MARE
ACIDALIUM

SIN
USS
ABAEUS

MARE SERPENTIS

LIBYA

Tritonis
Sinus

Hyblaeus

Tithonius
Lacus Noctis
Lacus

Phoenicis
Juventae Lacus
Fons

Solis
Lacus

Clar-
itas

Nix Olympica
(Olympus Mons)

Trivium
Charontis

Gomer
Sinus

Curiosity

Idaeus
Fons
Propontis

Achillis
Fons

Sigeus
Portus
Osidis Pr.

HA
DR
IAT
ICUM

MA
RE

MAREC
IMME
RIU
M
MA
RE
TYR
RHE
NUM

MARES
IRENUM
Tha

umasia

0 °

180 ° 200 ° 220 ° 240 ° 260 ° 280 ° 300 ° 320 ° 340 ° 0 ° 20 ° 40 ° 60 ° 80 ° 100 ° 120 ° 140 ° 160 ° 180 °

180 ° 225 ° 270 ° 315 ° 0 ° 45 ° 90 ° 135 ° 180 °

+20°

+40°

+60°

0 °

+20°


–20° –20°


+40°


+60°


Oxia
Palus

Alcyonius
Nodus Ismenius^ Lacus

–40° –40°


Use this map to identify surface features you see. South is up, and
Martian west longitude is labelled along the bottom. Damian Peach
assembled the map from images he took in 2009– 1 0. The globes,
from Hubble images, are tipped about as much as Mars will appear
this year. Each globe displays the central-meridian longitude that is
directly below it on the map.

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