City
Epaper

UAE's mission Hope captures first up-close images of Mars moon Deimos

By IANS | Updated: April 26, 2023 20:10 IST

New Delhi, April 26 The United Arab Emirates' spacecraft Hope probe has taken the first high-resolution images of ...

Open in App

New Delhi, April 26 The United Arab Emirates' spacecraft Hope probe has taken the first high-resolution images of Mars's little known Moon Deimos.

The images, which capture the farside of the 12.4-km-wide Deimos, were taken during a fly-by performed on March 10, Nature reported.

Instead of the carbon-rich rock often found in asteroids, the scientists found a flat spectrum which is suggestive of the type of material seen on Mars' surface. This shows that Deimos was formed from the same material as the planet.

"If there were carbon or organics, we would see spikes in specific wavelengths," EMM science lead Hessa Al Matroushi was quoted as saying.

Similar to the Earth's Moon, Deimos is tidally locked to Mars.

This means that always the same side of the moonlet is visible to any observations from a low Mars orbit or the planet's surface.

However, Hope's unusually high and elongated orbit, reaching more than 40,000 km above Mars' surface at its highest point, enabled it to observe Deimos from above and to image its farside, Al Matroushi explained.

"Mars was in the background and that was just mind blowing, honestly," she added. Al Matroushi shared the results at the recent European Geosciences Union meeting held in Vienna.

The 1.35-tonne, $200-million Hope spacecraft, formally known as the Emirates Mars Mission (EMM), entered Mars orbit on February 9, 2021.

It has since then been studying the relationship between the upper layer and lower regions of the Martian atmosphere. It has given the science community full access to a holistic view of the planet's atmosphere at different times of the day, through different seasons.

But once that phase was concluded with propellant to spare, mission control fired the onboard thrusters in a manoeuvre that allowed the spacecraft to intersect with Deimos' orbit multiple times, the report said.

"We don't want to get a one-time observation of Deimos," Al Matroushi said. "We knew we wanted more."


rvt/pgh

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: European Geosciences UnionAl matroushiNew DelhiViennaThe new delhi municipal councilDelhi south-westNew-delhiNew delhi municipal committeeSouth zone committeeDelhi municipal house
Open in App

Related Stories

EntertainmentAjith Kumar Injured in Fan Frenzy After Padma Bhushan Award Ceremony, Actor Hospitalized In Chennai

MaharashtraOver 10,000 Pakistani Nationals Traced in Maharashtra and Delhi Post-Palgham Terror Attack

NationalNew Delhi Railway Station Sees ‘Stampede-Like’ Chaos Due to Train Delays (Watch)

NationalAmit Shah Reviews Delhi’s Law & Order Situation, Says Illegal Intruders Will Be Identified and Deported

NationalDelhi: Speaker Vijendra Gupta Responds To LoP Atishi’s Letter, Says, “Surprising That Opposition Is Not Aware Of Rules”

Technology Realted Stories

Technology'WAVES 2025' promises bright future for creative economy, sees multi-crore deals

TechnologyData breach: Nearly 20 million SKT subscribers sign up for USIM protection

TechnologyMOIL kicks off FY 26 with highest-ever production of manganese ore in April

TechnologyPM Modi’s vision driving growth of science and technology: Ajay Kumar Sood

TechnologyWAVEX 2025 aims to build dedicated angel network for media and entertainment startups