Perspective view of the Ausonia Mensa massif. Image credit: ESA Click to enlarge
These images, taken by the High Resolution Stereo Camera (HRSC) on board ESA’s Mars Express spacecraft, show the Ausonia Mensa massif on Mars.
The HRSC obtained these images during orbit 506 with a ground resolution of approximately 37.6 metres per pixel. The scenes show the region of Hesperia Planum, containing the massif, at approximately 30.3 South and 97.8 East. North is to the right in these images.
Ausonia Mensa is a large remnant mountain with several impact craters, rising above basaltic sheet layers. The mountain stretches over an area of about 98 kilometres by 48 kilometres and has an elevation of 3700 metres.
A large crater, approximately 7.5 kilometres in diameter and 870 metres deep, has been partially filled with sediment. The northern flank of the crater is broken by a large gully caused by erosion.
Numerous branched channels, also resulting from erosion, run along the edge of top of the plateau toward the plains at the foot of the mountain.
The western flank of the mountain is dominated by a large crater, about six kilometres in diameter, which clearly shows an ejecta blanket and secondary cratering.
Aeolian, or ‘wind-created’, structures are visible about 50 kilometres to south-east of the massif, indicating channeling of atmospheric flow. They are clearly visible because of their different colour.
***image4:left***A heavily eroded, partially filled crater of approximately six kilometres diameter is visible to the north of the massif. The crater is characterised by numerous, smaller and younger craters.
The colour scenes have been derived from the three HRSC-colour channels and the nadir channel.
The perspective views have been calculated from the digital terrain model derived from the stereo channels.
The 3D anaglyph image was calculated from the nadir and one stereo channel.
Original Source: ESA Portal
In 2015, the United Nations adopted the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development—the Sustainable Development Goals…
Astronomers have been battling threats to their clear skies on all fronts lately. One of…
If you were Captain of the first USS Enterprise, where would you go!? Humanity is…
Now is the best time to observe Mars in 2025. Mars from 2014. Credit: Paul…
Scheduled for launch in 2027, the Nancy Grace Roman Telescope is slowly being readied for…
Few places in the solar system are better suited to a balloon than Titan. The…