A European spacecraft orbiting Marshas acquired some of the most detailed images yet of a region at the Red Planet's south pole known as "Inca City."
How this mysterious place earned its nickname is pretty obvious: From space, the natural grid-like pattern of pin-straight ridges, right angles, and polygons looks like the ruins of Machu Picchu in Peru. Though NASA's Mariner 9 spacecraft discovered this area— more formally referred to as Angustus Labyrinthus — 50 years ago, planetary scientists are still unsure what natural phenomenon drove its formation.
"It could be that sand dunes have turned to stone over time," according to the European Space Agency, which runs the Mars Expressorbiter. "Perhaps material such as magma or sand is seeping through fractured sheets of Martian rock."
Or, in another possible theory, the ridges could be winding structures related to glaciers, the agency said. The German Aerospace Centre, whose High Resolution Stereo Camera shot the photos, believes the most compelling explanationis that the narrow ridges are solidified lava.
SEE ALSO: NASA asks: Can anyone help us get our Mars samples back?This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
The features that resemble walls appear to trace part of a 53-mile-wide circle. Scientists think perhaps the "city" sits in a large crater from an ancient asteroid collision. The impact may have caused faults to spread through the surrounding plain, filled with magma bubbling up.
"Later, the softer material surrounding the polar plains was eroded, leaving behind ridges of the harder components of magmatic rock," the German Aerospace Centresaid.
Mars Express has taught scientists a lot about the Red Planet over the past 20 years. The spacecraft has been observing the Martian surface, mapping its minerals, revealing its composition and other aspects of its environment.
The new photos also found hints of spidery formations scattered over the polar region — features that are better understood by researchers than Inca City. Dark splotches seen in the image below are buried "spiders," or so-called araneiform terrain.
The spiders tend to emerge when spring sunlight shines on layers of carbon dioxide deposited over the dark winter. The sun causes the dry ice trapped below the ice cap to turn into gas, which eventually breaks through the ice.
If those don't look like spiders to you, take a look at the image below, taken by another European spacecraft known as the ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter. These ice spiders are lying just outside the region captured in the new Mars Express images. NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiterhas also repeatedly photographed the spiders.
"The emerging gas, laden with dark dust, shoots up through cracks in the ice in the form of tall fountains or geysers, before falling back down and settling on the surface," according to ESA.
The geysers make blotches about 50 yards to a half-mile wide. These patterns — when seen beneath the ice, as photographed recently by Mars Express — are a sign that "spiders'' will eventually pop out. Scientists think this process, which doesn't happen on Earth, is a key mechanism for carbon dioxide exchange between the polar ice cap and the Martian atmosphere.
文章
161
浏览
67
获赞
486
LinkedIn says its extra intense clipboard snooping in iOS is a bug
LinkedIn's iOS app has taken the ongoing issue of snooping at users' clipboards to whole, new level.The Apple Watch is likely getting a major redesign in 2024
Big changes are coming to the Apple Watch... but not until at least 2024.According to Mark Gurman'sAz4angela reflects on her viral Bath & Body Works candle rant ten years later
"Hello, everybody. This is going to be extremely explicit, so if you don't like swearing or angry peRyzen 5 1600X vs. 1600: Which should you buy?
The answer to that question may seem obvious to many of you, not least because our Ryzen 5 review saInstagram's 'Hashtag Mindfulness' boom: The good, the bad, and the ugly
March Mindfulness is our new series that examines the explosive growth in mindfulness and meditationOpenAI launches webcrawler GPTBot, and instructions on how to block it
OpenAI has launched a web crawler to improve artificial intelligence models like GPT-4. Called GPTBoHow to switch to Mastodon from Twitter
Twitter – now known as X – is going through some turmoil at the moment...to say the leasTesla recalls 16,000 Model S and X cars over seat belt issue
Tesla has issued a recall for some of its Model S and Model X issues. Unlike some of the company's pEvery 2020 candidate's 404 error page, ranked
UPDATE: May 16, 2019, 3:36 p.m. EDT Since this story was published, three more candidates -- Bill deHow to block a number on iPhone
Maybe you're annoyed with relentless spam calls, or there's someone in your life you never want toAz4angela reflects on her viral Bath & Body Works candle rant ten years later
"Hello, everybody. This is going to be extremely explicit, so if you don't like swearing or angry peApple's Emergency SOS iPhone feature saved a woman caught in a flash flood
A woman and her dog were rescued after a flash flood in Utah thanks to an emergency feature on her iTwitter admits it went too far with '5G causes COVID
Even Twitter admits it was too heavy-handed with its misinformation labels for posts about COVID-19,Tinder's Year in Swipe identifies 'situationships' as a valid relationship status
2022 is, somehow, inching closer to its end, which means it's time for a flood of retrospectives. SpiOS 17 moves the button to end phone calls
Phone calls on iPhones are about to get slightly more annoying.By "slightly," I mean veryslightly. T