Science and Exploration

Crater Slopes On Mars: The Power of a Repeat Image

By Keith Cowing
Press Release
May 28, 2022
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Crater Slopes On Mars: The Power of a Repeat Image
Crater Slopes On Mars
HiRISE

Why does HiRISE take so many repeat images of the same area?
Repeat coverage actually serves a special purpose, such as detecting seasonal changes (frost deposition and sublimation) and temporal changes (dust devil tracks and avalanches.) These repeat images also give us a “sneak peek” of future pictures to determine any differences.

Such is the case for this observation which we took in June 2014, and covers a small 1-kilometer sized simple crater located in the Southern hemisphere. In this composite and enhanced image, the crater shows frost on all its south-facing slopes (e.g., the crater’s north wall and southern ejecta). This image was taken in late Martian winter as Mars is heading into spring.

With a repeat image, we can now see any changes of the same crater. And what do you know: all the frost that was once present on the south-facing slopes of the crater are now gone, having sublimated and returned to the Martian atmosphere.

ID: ESP_037125_1315
date: 28 June 2014
altitude: 248 km
Larger image

SpaceRef co-founder, Explorers Club Fellow, ex-NASA, Away Teams, Journalist, Space & Astrobiology, Lapsed climber.