Largest Crater In Solar System Revealed By NASA Spacecraft

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/06/080625223036.htm

ScienceDaily (June 26, 2008) — New analysis of Mars' terrain using NASA 
spacecraft observations reveals what appears to be by far the largest 
impact crater ever found in the solar system.

NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter and Mars Global Surveyor have 
provided detailed information about the elevations and gravity of the 
Red Planet's northern and southern hemispheres. A new study using this 
information may solve one of the biggest remaining mysteries in the 
solar system: Why does Mars have two strikingly different kinds of 
terrain in its northern and southern hemispheres? The huge crater is 
creating intense scientific interest.

The mystery of the two-faced nature of Mars has perplexed scientists 
since the first comprehensive images of the surface were beamed home by 
NASA spacecraft in the 1970s. The main hypotheses have been an ancient 
impact or some internal process related to the planet's molten 
subsurface layers. The impact idea, proposed in 1984, fell into disfavor 
because the basin's shape didn't seem to fit the expected round shape 
for a crater. The newer data is convincing some experts who doubted the 
impact scenario.

"We haven't proved the giant-impact hypothesis, but I think we've 
shifted the tide," said Jeffrey Andrews-Hanna, a postdoctoral researcher 
at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge.

Andrews-Hanna and co-authors Maria Zuber of the Massachusetts Institute 
of Technology, and Bruce Banerdt of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in 
Pasadena, Calif., report the new findings in the journal Nature this week.

A giant northern basin that covers about 40 percent of Mars' surface, 
sometimes called the Borealis basin, is the remains of a colossal impact 
early in the solar system's formation, the new analysis suggests. At 
8,500 kilometers (5,300 miles) across, it is about four times wider than 
the next-biggest impact basin known, the Hellas basin on southern Mars. 
An accompanying report calculates that the impacting object that 
produced the Borealis basin must have been about 2,000 kiolometers 
(1,200 miles) across. That's larger than Pluto.

"This is an impressive result that has implications not only for the 
evolution of early Mars, but also for early Earth's formation," said 
Michael Meyer, the Mars chief scientist at NASA Headquarters in Washington.

This northern-hemisphere basin on Mars is one of the smoothest surfaces 
found in the solar system. The southern hemisphere is high, rough, 
heavily cratered terrain, which ranges from 4 to 8 kilometers (2.5 to 5 
miles) higher in elevation than the basin floor.

Other giant impact basins have been discovered that are elliptical 
rather than circular. But it took a complex analysis of the Martian 
surface from NASA's two Mars orbiters to reveal the clear elliptical 
shape of Borealis basin, which is consistent with being an impact crater.

One complicating factor in revealing the elliptical shape of the basin 
was that after the time of the impact, which must have been at least 3.9 
billion years ago, giant volcanoes formed along one part of the basin 
rim and created a huge region of high, rough terrain that obscures the 
basin's outlines. It took a combination of gravity data, which tend to 
reveal underlying structure, with data on current surface elevations to 
reconstruct a map of Mars elevations as they existed before the 
volcanoes erupted.

"In addition to the elliptical boundary of the basin, there are signs of 
a possible second, outer ring -- a typical characteristic of large 
impact basins," Banerdt said.

JPL manages the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter for NASA's Science Mission 
Directorate, Washington. For more information about the mission, visit: 
http://www.nasa.gov/mro.

-- 

Gregory S. Williams
gregwilliams(at)knology.net
k4hsm(at)knology.net

http://www.etskywarn.net
http://www.twiar.org
http://www.icebearnation.com


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