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Author Topic: Mars Deimos Eclipse  (Read 4636 times)

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Offline blobranaTopic starter

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Mars Deimos Eclipse
« on: March 06, 2004, 11:38:05 AM »
A rare solar crossing of the Sun by the martian moon Deimos on the 4 th March was captured by the Panoramic Camera of Opportunity Mars rover.

The solar transit of the martian moon occurs only twice per Mars year (one Mars year is equivalent to roughly two Earth years).

Deimos is a dark body that appears to be composed of C-type surface materials, similar to that of asteroids found in the outer asteroid belt (so is probably captured).
 Named after the Roman God of dread, Deimos is the smaller of Mars' two moons. Deimos whirls around Mars every 30 hours. The natural moon is 10 by 7.5 miles (16 by 12 kilometres) in size...



Hum, anybody getting ready for the transit of Venus?

Offline blobranaTopic starter

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Re: Mars Deimos Eclipse
« Reply #1 on: March 07, 2004, 10:25:43 PM »
I know what you mean...
i think that the governing body has a rough guide of classing satellites smaller that a few miles big as planetesimal's or rocks..

 Like its sister moon Phobos ( Greek for "Fear")  is non-spherical in shape. Probably , and it is also a captured asteroid.
i hope that nasa manages to catch a similar transit with the larger and closer orbiting `Phobos`, which could blot out half the sun for 40-30 seconds or more.

Somewhere on a planet far, far away, near the martian equator, Phobos eclipses the sun nearly every day.

Offline blobranaTopic starter

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Re: Mars Deimos Eclipse
« Reply #2 on: March 09, 2004, 05:32:41 AM »
Well nasa is a bit short on the cash front,
but, they certainly came up with the goods...