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Phobos is the larger and innermost of
Mars' two moons. Phobos is closer to its primary than any other moon in the solar
system, less than 6000 km above the surface of Mars. It is also one of the smallest
moons in the solar system.
| Phobos Statistics |
| |
| Discovered by |
Asaph Hall |
| Date of discovery |
1877 |
| |
| Mass (kg) |
1.08e+16 |
| Mass (Earth = 1) |
1.8072e-09 |
| Radius (km) |
13.5x10.8x9.4 |
| Radius (Earth = 1) |
2.1167e-03 |
| Mean density (gm/cm^3) |
2.0 |
| |
| Mean distance from Mars (km) |
9,380 |
| Rotational period (days) |
0.31910 |
| Orbital period (days) |
0.31910 |
| Mean orbital velocity (km/sec) |
2.14 |
| |
| Orbital eccentricity |
0.01 |
| Orbital inclination (degrees) |
1.0 |
| |
| Escape velocity (km/sec) |
0.0103 |
| |
| Visual geometric albedo |
0.06 |
| Magnitude (Vo) |
11.3 |
orbit
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9378 km from the center of Mars
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diameter
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22.2 km (27 x 21.6 x 18.8)
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mass
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1.08e16 kg
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In Greek mythology, Phobos is one of the sons of Ares (Mars) and
Aphrodite (Venus). "Phobos" is Greek for "fear".
Discovered 1877 August 12 by Hall; photographed by Mariner 9 in 1971, Viking 1 in 1977,
and Phobos 1 in 1988.
Phobos
orbits Mars below the synchronous orbit radius. Thus it rises in the west, moves
very rapidly across the sky and sets in the east, usually twice a day. It is so
close to the surface that it cannot be seen above the horizon from all points on the
surface of Mars.
And Phobos is doomed: because its orbit is below
synchronous altitude tidal forces are lowering its orbit (current rate: about 1.8 meters
per century). In about 50 million years it will either crash onto the surface of
Mars or (more likely) break up into a ring. (This is the opposite effect to that operating
to raise the orbit of the Moon.)
Phobos and Deimos may
be composed of carbon-rich rock like C-type asteroids.
But their densities are so low that they cannot be pure rock. They are more likely
composed of a mixture of rock and ice. Both are heavily cratered.
The Soviet spacecraft Phobos 2 detected a faint but steady outgassing from Phobos.
Unfortunately, Phobos 2 died before it could determine the nature of the material; water
is the best bet. Phobos 2 also returned a few images (right).
The most prominent feature on Phobos is the
large crater named Stickney, the maiden name of Hall's wife (above). Like Mimas'
crater Herschel (on a smaller scale) the impact that created Stickney must have almost
shattered Phobos. The grooves and streaks on the surface were probably also caused
by the Stickney impact.
Phobos and Deimos are widely believed to be captured asteroids. There is some speculation that they originated in the
outer solar system rather than in the main asteroid belt.
Phobos and Deimos may someday be useful as
"space stations" from which to study Mars or as intermediate stops to and from
the Martian surface; especially if the presence of ice is confirmed.
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