Guide To Mars
Guide To Mars
gigantic mountains,
ancient water courses, canyons and vol-
canoeshave been revealed for the first
time. 'Soil' analyses have so far not
confirmed any form of life, but have not
entirely ruled it out. Mars, indeed, is far
from being a totally inhospitable planet
and the days of Earth colonization may
not be many centuries away.
This work, written by one of our best-
known astronomers, who holds a vast
public audience through his books and
television series, traces our knowledge of
Mars throughout history and brings us
up-to-date with the latest American find-
ings. Patrick Moore, with his facility for
recording relevant personal experience,
and for his informed deductions made from
existing data, has provided us with all the
essential information we require for an
intelligent understanding of the subject. It
makes compelling reading, and with its
considerable recourse to observational
detail, is at the same time a valuable
practical aid to the amateur astronomer.
L
1 3 ^1987 Xi
ISBN o7t8 93168
5-95
tut
GUIDE
TO
MARS
by
Patrick Moore, o.b.e., d.sc,(hon.), f.r.a.s.
LUTTERWORTH PRESS
GUILDFORD AND LONDON
First published iqjj
ME ROPOLITAN
BOROUGH OF WICAN
L^rT. OF LEISURE
.;. rt utes
Ace. No.
0.-: J
Claw No.
203989
IU0T?
^fi
vijo
ISBN o 7188 S316 8
COPYRIGHT
1977 PATRICK MOORE
All Rights Reserved. No part of this publication
may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system,
or transmitted, in any form or by any means,
electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording
or otherwise, without the prior permission of
Lutterworth Press, Farnham Road, Guildford, Surrey.
Printed in Great Britain
by Ehtnezm Baylis & Son Ltd.
Tlte Trinity Press, Worcester, and London
CONTENTS
Foreword 9
MARS AS A WORLD II
MARS IN THE SOLAR SYSTEM 19
EYE AND TELESCOPE
33
THE STORY OF THE CANALS
49
MARS BEFORE MARINER: ATMOSPHERE,
CLOUDS AND DUST-STORMS 69
6 MARS BEFORE MARINER: ICE-CAPS, PLAINS
AND DESERTS
82
7
MARS AS SEEN FROM EARTH 92
8 SPACE-SHIPS TO MARS
IO3
9
MARINER
g
AND OTHERS .
1 16
10 THE VIKINGS 13$
11 THE SEARCH FOR LIFE I5I
12 MARSAFTER VIKING 159
13 PHOBOS AND DEIMOS 167
14 MARS IN THE FUTURE 1 7^
Appendices
I Observing Mars 187
II Oppositions of Mars 193
III Numerical Data 195
IV Mars Probes, 1962-197
7
198
V Named Features on Mars 200
Indexes 207
LIST OF PLATES
(Plates I to XVI between pages g6 and
97)
I TELESCOPIC VIEWS OF MARS
II AMERICAN AND RUSSIAN VIEWS OF MARS
(left)
from Mariner
4
(right) from Mars-5
III MARS FROM MARINER 7
IV PROCTOR, THE 'SAND-DUNE
5
CRATER
V PART OF THE 'VALLES MARINERIS'
VI MARS FROM VIKING I
VII OLYMPUS MONS
VIII ARSIA MONS
IX FAULT ZONES ON MARS
X VIKING I PICTURES
(top) First view from Lander
(bottom) Polar cap from Orbiter
XI CRATERS AND BASINS
(top) The crater Yuty, in Ghryse
(bottom) Argyre Planitia
XII THE SURFACE OF MARS
(top) The Ghryse scene
(bottom) Utopia
LIST OF PLATES
XIII LAVA-FLOWS AND WATERCOURSES
(top) WNW of the original site selected for landing
(bottom) Utopia
XIV SOIL SAMPLING
(top) Collecting soil samples
(bottom) Trench dug by Viking i Lander
XV PHOBOS
(top) From Viking i Orbiter
(bottom) View from only
545
miles
XVI DEIMOS
(top) From Mariner
9
(bottom) From Viking 1 Orbiter
FOREWORD
Of ALL OUR neighbour worlds, the planet Mars is
probably the most fascinating. In many ways it is not so very
unlike the Earth, and there has always been the suggestion that
it might support life. Yet until the last few years, our ideas about
it were badly wide of the mark.
By now space-ships have reached Mars, and sent back
information direct from the surface. Therefore, this seems to
be the moment to produce what I hope is a comprehensive
guide, outlining what we thought about Mars in what may be
called the 'canal period' and coming on to modern times.
My most grateful thanks are due to Dr. Garry Hunt, who
has read through the whole of the manuscript and made many
invaluable suggestionsthough I must stress that any errors or
deficiencies are my responsibility, not his
!
Also, I am most grateful to Lawrence Clarke, for bis expert
line drawings; to John Burm, who helped so much in seeing
the book through the press; and to Paul Doherty, for allowing
me to use bis splendid drawings of Mars. Also, I must thank
the authorities at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California,
for permission to use the Mariner and Viking pictures of Mars,
without which this book would have seemed very bare indeed.
Finally, there is Michael Foxell, of Lutterworth Press, who
must surely be an author's ideal publisher, and whose help and
encouragement have been unfailing.
PATRICK MOORE
Selsey. April igyy
Chapter One
MARS AS A WORLD
That Mars is inhabited by beings of some sort or other we may
consider as certain as it is uncertain what those beings may be.
SO WROTE THE AMERICAN ASTRONOMER Percival Lowell ill
his book Mars and its Canals, published in 1906. Let it be said
at once that Lowell's opinions were not shared by all astrono-
mers of the time, and there were many who were decidedly
sceptical about the brilliant-brained Martian canal-builders
who had covered their planet with a network of artificial
waterways. Yet the idea of Mars as an inhabited world was by
no means discounted, and even today, when rocket vehicles
have landed there, it remains probably the most fascinating of
all the worlds in the Solar System.
Events have moved very quickly in recent years, and so far
as Mars is concerned we have had to do some drastic re-
thinking. In 1964 I remember writing an article in which I
made a dozen positive statements, every one of which was fully
supported by the best available evidence and every one of
which has since been proved to have been wrong. Mars is not
the sort of world we believed it to be, and each new mission
raises a host of unexpected puzzles.
The Vikings of 1976 have been no exception. For the first
time, it has been possible to receive intelligible messages from
the Martian surface; some ofthem are clear-cut, but others are
frankly difficult to interpret. The canals have vanished into
the realm of science fiction, but the problem of 'life or no life?'
is still with us. What the Vikings have told us has been
spectacular enough, but the last word remains to be said.
Quite apart from the possibility of life, admittedly in lowly
form, Mars is of special interest to us because it is bound to be
the first world to be reached beyond the Earth-Moon system.
Before the Space Age, Venus was regarded as a serious rival,
but we have now learnedrather to our disgustthat Venus
is intolerable by any standards, so that Mars is the only planet
11
GUIDE TO MARS
to hold out serious hope. It is no longer heresy to talk about
Martian colonies, even though anything of the kind lies well in
the future, and it is not likely that 'the first man on Mars' has
yet been born.
What I propose to do, in the present book, is to give an
account of Mars as we believe it to be today. New findings are
coming to hand all the time, but it does seem that we have
learned the basic essentials, even though we cannot yet inter-
pret them as well as we would like to do. By this I mean that
when I make positive statements in
1977,
I am not likely to be
as wrong as I was in 1964. First, however, let me give a few
facts and figures, so that Mars can be put in its proper place in
the Solar System.
Everyone knows that the Earth is a planet, moving round the
Sun at a mean distance of 93,000,000 miles in a period of one
year. Almost everyone knows that the Sun is an ordinary star,
but it is not so generally appreciated that 93,000,000 miles is
not very far on the scale of the universe. The nearest star beyond
the Sun lies at a distance of over 24 million million miles, so
that even light, moving at the rate of 186,000 miles per second,
takes over four years to do the journey. In astronomical
parlance, the nearest star (Proxima Gentauri, a faint Red
Dwarf too far south to be seen from England) is more than
four light-years away. Most of the other stars are much more
remote. Even Barnard's Star, another Red Dwarf which is
distinguished by the fact that it seems to be attended by a
couple of planets, is six light-years away. The distance of Sirius
is
ty
light-years; Vega in Lyra 27 light-years, Rigel in Orion
about 900 light-years, and so on. Look at Rigel tonight, and
you will see it not as it is now, but as it used to be in the time of
William the Conqueror. And when we consider other star-
systems, we find that the distances have to be reckoned in
millions, hundreds of millions, and even thousands of millions
of light-years. Once we look beyond our own local area, our
view of the universe is bound to be very out of date.
Things are different within the Solar System, which is ruled
by the Sun, and whose main members are the nine planets
(Fig.
1 )Mercury and Venus, closer to the Sun than we are;
Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune and Pluto further
away. We see the Sun after a lapse of a mere 8A minutes, and
12
A Sun
B Mercury
C Venus
D Earth
E Mars
F Asteroids
G Jupiter
H Saturn
l Uranus
J Neptune
K Pluto
Fig, 1, Plan of the Solar System
light (or radio waves) can reach us from Neptune or Pluto in
about five hours. So far as rockets are concerned, our useful
investigations are limited strictly to the Sun's kingdom. True,
at least one of our probesPioneer 10, which by-passed
Jupiter in late 1 972is on its way out of the Solar System for
good, but there is not the slightest chance of keeping in touch
with it. If we are ever to contact beings in other planetary
systems, we must do so by some method which is so far removed
from our current knowledge that we cannot even speculate
about itand we may be as far away from interstellar contact
as King Canute was from television. The only loophole is to
'3
GUIDE TO MARS
pick up radio transmissions from some remote planetary
system, but this is a very long shot indeed.
I suppose that the burning question is always: "What are
the chances of finding intelligent life within range of us?" So
far as the Solar System is concerned, I am afraid that the
answer must be 'Nil', and to drive this home it may be as well
to give a lightning survey of the other planets, after which it
should be a distinct relief to come back to Mars.
Reckoning outward from the Sun, we come first to Mercury,
which has a diameter of around 3000 miles, and takes only 88
days to complete one circuit. It is never brilliant in our skies,
because with the naked eye it is visible only on relatively rare
occasions either low in the west after sunset or low in the east
before dawn. One rocket probe, Mariner 10, has flown past it,
and has sent back pictures of a crater-scarred surface which is
very like that of the Moon. But Mercury has a negligible
atmosphere; the temperatures are extreme, and as a potential
colony it may safely be ruled out.
Venus is very different. It is about the same size as the Earth,
and at its distance from the Sun of 67,000,000 miles it might
be expected to be reasonably welcoming. Before the Space
Age we knew very little about it, because it is permanently
covered with a dense, cloudy atmosphere which our telescopes
cannot pierce. There were suggestions that the surface might
be largely ocean-covered, in which case primitive life might
have appeared therejust as happened in the warm oceans of
Earth thousands of millions of years ago.
Then, in the 1960s, came rocket probes which showed that
this attractive picture was very wide of the mark. The radar
mapping of the 1970s showed that there are craters on the
surface, and in
1975
the Russians achieved a notable triumph by
soft-landing two vehicles and obtaining one picture from each.
Instead of being a friendly place, Venus has turned out to be
what can only be called a psychedelic planet. The atmosphere
is composed mainly of carbon dioxide, while the clouds contain
quantities of sulphuric acid; the ground atmospheric pressure
is 90 to 100 times that of the Earth's air at sea-level; the
temperature is over 900 degrees Fahrenheit. Anyone incautious
enough to go to Venus and step outside his (or her) space-craft
would at once be poisoned, squashed and fried, quite apart
14
MARS AS A WORLD
from die corrosive effects of sulphuric acid. It is not an inviting
prospect.
Number 3 in the planetary sequence is the Earth, attended
by its satellite, the Moon. I do not propose to say a great deal
about the Moon here, but I cannot gloss over it completely,
because of inevitable comparisons with Mars; after all, both
have cratered surfaces, together with high mountains and deep
valleys. But the two worlds differ in many respects, and
comparisons should not be taken too far.
The Moon is our companion in space; its mean distance from
us is rather less than a quarter of a million miles, and its
diameter {2160 miles) is more than one quarter of that of the
Earth. I suspect that the Earth-Moon system should be re-
garded as a double planet rather than as a planet and a
satellite, but the Moon has only 1/81 of the Earth's mass, and
this means that its gravitational pull is too weak for it to retain
an atmosphere. To call the Moon 'an airless world' is sub-
stantially correct, and there is no longer any doubt that it has
been sterile throughout its long history. Rocks and surface
materials brought home by the Apollo astronauts and by the
Russian automatic probes have shown absolutely no trace of
any organic material, and the strict quarantining of returned
samples (including astronauts!) was abandoned as unnecessary
after the first couple of expeditions. The same cannot be said
of Mars ; but of this, more anon.
There has been tremendous controversy about the origin of
the Moon's walled formations, some of which are well over
100 miles in diameter. Broadly speaking, what we have to
decide is whether they are of external origin, or whether they
are due to internal forces within the Moon itself. According to
the first theory, the craters were produced by plunging meteo-
rites, and at any rate there can be no doubt that impact
craters exist there, if only because there are some on the
Earth. The Arizona Grater, not far from the Lowell Observa-
tory at Flagstaff, was undoubtedly produced by a mcteoritic
fall in prehistoric times. Alternatively, it may be that most of
the Moon's craters are 'volcanic*, using the term in a very
wide sense. Everyone has his own ideas, and mine are clear-cut
;
I believe that vulcanism was the main crater-building process,
with impact playing a minor role, I have discussed this in detail
GUIDE TO MARS
elsewhere,* but I must refer to it here, because it is highly
relevant when we come to consider the craters on Mars.
There is another important point, too. Originally it was
thought that the Earth and the Moon used to be one body, and
that the Moon was literally thrown off because of the rapid
axial rotation. This idea was proposed by G. H. Darwin (son of
the great naturalist) and was popular for many years before the
mathematicians attacked it and more or less destroyed it. It is
now generally believed that the two worlds have always been
separate, but recently there have been suggestions of an original
union between the Earth, the Moon and Marsso that when
Mars was thrown off, the Moon was left in between as a sort
of casual droplet. I doubt whether this theory has many
supporters, though it cannot be absolutely ruled out.
According to current thinking, the planets were built up by
accretion from a 'solar nebula* or cloud of material ; the process
was a gradual one, but at least we know, with fair certainty,
that the age of the Earth is of the order of 4,700 million years
(or 4-7 eeons, one &on being equal to a thousand million years).
Analysis of the lunar samples shows that the age of the Moon is
approximately the same, and no doubt this is also true of Mars.
The fact that Earth, Mars and the Moon have evolved differ-
ently is because their masses arc different. In particular, the
Earth has retained a dense atmosphere, Mars a thin one, and
the Moon virtually none at all.
Mars is the outermost of the inner or terrestrial group of
planets, all of which are of modest size and have solid globes.
Beyond we come to the minor planets or asteroids, all of which
are below 1 000 miles in diameter, and which may be either the
remnants of a larger disrupted planet or (more probably)
debris left over when the main planets were formed. There is a
distinct chance that Phobos and Deimos, the two dwarf atten-
dants of Mars, are captured asteroids rather than bona-fide
satellites, though again this is something which lacks positive
proof.
Next come the four giant planets (Fig. 2) : Jupiter, Saturn,
Uranus and Neptune, which are completely different in nature.
Jupiter, much the most massive of them, moves round the Sun
at a mean distance of 483,000,000 miles, and is so large that
* Guide la the Moon (Lutterworth Press, 1976).
16
#
Mercury
9Venus
Earth*
,
Mars*
Neptune
Uranus
Jupiter
Saturn
Fig. a. Comparative sizes of the planets
its huge globe could swallow up more than a thousand bodies
the volume of the Earth. It has a gaseous surface, and is now
thought to have a solid core which is overlaid by layers of
liquid hydrogen. In any case, it and the other giants are so
unlike Earth or Mars that they need not concern us further
for the moment. Yet we must not forget their numerous
satellites, some of which are large. Jupiter has four really
sizeable satellites, Saturn one and Neptune one. Titan, No. 6
in the Saturnian family, is almost certainly larger than Mercury,
and may not be a great deal smaller than Mars; according to
one estimate its diameter is 3500 miles, though admittedly this
may be rather too high. Moreover, Titan has an atmosphere
whose ground pressure is approximately ten times that at the
surface of Mars, though the atmosphere is of different type and
there is no prospect of our finding any advanced fife-forms
there. Titan, remember, is bitterly cold, quite apart from its
other disadvantages.
Finally we come to Pluto, which is generally regarded as the
outermost planet, even though for some years around 1989,
the
time of its next perihelion passagethat is to say, its closest
point to the Sunit will actually be nearer to us than Neptune,
Pluto is an enigma. Logically it ought not to be there; it seems
to be smaller than Mars, and it has a curiously eccentric orbit
which takes it round the Sun only once in 248 years. From it,
the Sun would look only the same size as Jupiter does to us,
though the light-intensity in daytime would still be quite
strong.
Probes have been sent out to the further reaches of the Solar
System. Pioneer ro by-passed Jupiter in December
1973,
'7
GUIDE TO MARS
sending back dramatic pictures as well as a tremendous amount
of miscellaneous information, and has now started a ntver-
ending journey into the space between the stars ; it will never
come back, and we have seen the last of it. Pioneer 1 1 made its
pass ofJupiter a year later, and is now on its way to Saturn,
which it will fly by in 1979. By then two Voyagers will be
en route first to Jupiter
{1979)
and then Saturn
{1981), possibly
going on to Uranus (1985}. It is all most intriguing, but because
of the immense distances involved these journeys take a very
long time, and any ideas of sending manned expeditions are
highly premature. Whether such flights can ever be achieved
remains to be seen.
In short: Venus is lethal in every way, the giants are not
solid in an Earth-like sense, and the satellites (apart from
Titan) are virtually devoid of atmospheres. So too is Mercury.
In our search for what we may term 'local life', only Mars
remains.
To show how ideas have altered in our own era, it is amusing
(and instructive) to look back at the Guzman Prize, which was
announced on 17 December 1900. This was quite substantial
df-
VK
CYGNUS ^
Fig. 7. Position of Deneb,
the nearest bright star to the
Martian North Celestial
Pole
GUIDE TO MARS
nearest naked-eye object being the obscure Sigma Octantis.)
Mars is well served. The north polar star there is Deneb or
Alpha Cygni (Fig,
7),
which is of the first magnitude and will
make a splendid marker for future explorers. This is just as well,
because the magnetic field of Mars is so weak that conventional
compasses will not work.
However, Deneb will not retain its title indefinitely, because
the axial tilt of Mars is not constant. The same is true of the
Earth, because of the phenomenon known as the precession of
the equinoxes. Our world is not a perfect sphere; it is somewhat
flattened at the poles, and the equatorial diameter is about
26 miles greater than the polar (7926 miles, as against 7900).
Mars is flattened to a slightly greater extent, since the dis-
crepancy amounts to more than forty miles, and the shape is
rather less regular. Effects of this lead to a precession which
makes the axial inclination range between
35
degrees and only
14 degrees. Obviously the shift is slow, but it may have very
important effects upon the Martian climate, as we will see
later.
The virtual absence of a magnetic field brings us on to the
question of what Mars is like inside its globe. The mean density
is less than that of the Earth ; the so-called 'specific gravity' is
only 3-94, so that Mars 'weighs' 3-94 times as much as an equal
volume of water would do. For the Earth, the figure is 5-5,
indicating that there is a much more substantial core made up
of heavy substances such as iron. The Moon, with a specific
gravity rather less than that of Mars
(3-34)
is thought to have
a core with a diameter of about 360 miles, over which lies a
region of 'partial melting' which is in turn overlaid by the
mande and finally by the relatively thin crust, which goes down
to only about 30 to 40 miles below the lunar surface.
Mars is likely to be rather more lunar than terrestrial in
structure, and the space-probe results of the past few years have
at least given some valuable clues. As befits a world with only
one-tenth the mass of the Earth, Mars may have built up rather
quickly from the material of the solar nebula, and one estimate
suggests that it was formed in only about 100,000 years, which
is a mere tick on the cosmical clock. The outer layers then
solidified to form rocks of various types (Fig. 8). The fighter
rocks floated to the top to make a crust, while the lower ones
28
Shield
volcano
Lava
plain
A Crust
B Mantle
C Core
Fig, 8. Probable internal structure of Mars
became hot, and the heavy substances such as iron sank to make
up a core. The internal heating may have been due largely to
radioactivity. Some elements, such as uranium, decay spon-
taneously into lighter elements; uranium, for instance, ends its
career as a form of lead, and this phenomenon causes a sur-
prising amount of heat over a long period when considerable
quantities of radioactive elements are involved. At any rate, it
does seem almost certain that Mars has a substantial iron-rich
core, though it is smaller than the Earth's both reladvely and
absolutely. This may account for the apparent absence of a
measurable magnetic fieldeven though the origin of planetary
magnetic fields is still rather obscure, and it would be dangerous
to be too positive.
Next, there is the all-important question of surface gravity.
Again we may expect a value intermediate between those of the
Earth and the Moon. The surface gravity of a planet (or a
satellite) depends upon a combination of its mass and its
diameter; the greater the mass and the smaller the diameter,
the greater the surface pull. The reason why diameter is impor-
tant is because a body behaves as though all its mass were
concentrated at a point in its centreand the further away you
are from the centre, the weaker the gravitational tug. A very
good case of this is given by the giant planet Uranus, whose
29
GUIDE TO MARS
mass is 14!
times that of the Earth, and whose diameter is
almost 30,000 miles. Anyone standing on the surface of Uranus
would therefore be much further away from the centre of the
planet than anyone standing on the surface of the Earth, and
the surface pull would be unexpectedly slight. Despite the
mass-difference, the surface gravity on Uranus is practically the
same as that on the Earth. (Ofcourse, I am taking an impossible
case, because Uranus has a gaseous surface and nobody could
possibly stand upon it. However, I think that the principle is
clear.)
With the Moon, the surface gravity is approximately one-
sixth of that on Earth, so that an astronaut seems to have only
one-sixth of his 'normal' weight, and when he walks about
everything appears to happen in slow motion. Most people will
have seen this on television during the Apollo missions.
Fortunately, it has been found that the sensation is neither
uncomfortable nor dangerous, and the situation will be quite
satisfactory on Mars, where the surface gravity is approximately
one-third ofour own. (Note, by the way, that the surface gravity
on Mercury is almost exactly the same as that on Mars.
Mercury is much the smaller of the two planets, but it is also
much denser, with a larger heavy core.)
Escape velocity also depends upon mass, but here the
diameter is not so important when we are considering bodies
of planetary size. By now 'escape velocity' has become part of
our everyday language, but it may be as well to give a brief
account ofit, because it is so vital in any discussion of conditions
on Mars.
Throw an object upward, and it will rise to a certain height,
stop, and fall back. Throw it harder, and it will travel further
upward before returning. If it were possible to throw the object
upward at a velocity of 7 miles per second, or about 25,000
m.p.h., it would not fall back at all; the Earth's gravity would
be unable to retain it, and the object would escape into space.
Therefore, 7 miles per second is the Earth's escape velocity,
Actually, any body moving through the dense lower atmosphere
at 7 miles per second would be destroyed by frictional heating
against the air-particles, which is one reason why the space-
guns so beloved of past science-fiction writers cannot work, but
again the principle should be clear.
30
15-
5-
Ground density on Mars
MARS IN THE SOLAR SYSTEM
The Moon has an escape velocity of i\ miles per second,
and for Mars the value is 3-1 miles per second. (For Uranus,
it happens to be 14 miles per second.) And this has an effect
upon the density of atmosphere remaining.
Air is made up of vast numbers of tiny particles, all moving
around at high speeds. Obviously, a particle moving outward
from the Earth with a velocity of 7 miles per second will escape.
Fortunately, the Earth's air is made up of particles which can-
not attain this velocity, and there is no danger of our being
left gasping like a goldfish which has been removed from its
tank. But the Moon, with its weak gravitational pull, has been
unable to hold on to any atmosphere it may once have had,
which is why it is so unfriendly and sterile. Mars, predictably,
is an intermediate case. It
would be expected to have
a thin atmosphereand this
is true, though admittedly
the atmospheric density is
much less than we believed
before the first rocket vehicles
sent us back information from
close range.
According to modernideas,
there was a period in tile
Earth's early history when
there was no air at all. The
original atmosphere, made up
chiefly ofhydrogen, escaped;
hydrogen is the lightest of all
the elements, and its atoms
and molecules are the most
difficult to retain. Later, a
secondary atmosphere was
formed from gases set free
from the interior. No doubt
the same sequence of events
occurred on Mars, and the
Vikings have provided ad-
ditional evidence that this
really did happen.
Miles
Fig-
9- Tenuous atmosphere of
Mars. The pressure of the Earth's
atmosphere at a height of about
15 miles above sea level is approxi-
mately equal to the pressure at the
surface of Mars
31
GUIDE TO MARS
We now know that at the present moment, the Martian
atmosphere is so thin that the ground pressure is everywhere
below 10 millibars, as against almost iooo millibars at sea-level on
the Earth. This means that the Martian atmosphere is no denser
than the Earth's air at a height of at least 15 miles above the
ground (Fig. 9),
and we would be unable to breathe it even if it
were made up of pure oxygen (which it is not). From this, we
can show at once that there can be no liquid surface water, and
there are no seas, lakes or even pondsthough things were
certainly different in the past, and will probably be different
again in the future.
The early observers had other ideas. With their telescopes,
they drew the markings on Mars, and believed that they were
looking at oceans, continents, islands and straits. It was only
with the development of more modern-type instruments that
the truth began to emerge. But I am running ahead of my
story, so let us now turn back the pages to these far-off times
even before the telescopic exploration of Mars began.
1
32
Chapter Three
EYE AND TELESCOPE
Not even the most myopic observer can overlook Mars
when it is best placed. Quite apart from its red colour, it is so
brilliant that in bygone days it has even caused panicsas in
1 7
1
9, when it was widely mistaken for a crimson comet which
was hurtling toward us and might destroy the Earth. Obviously,
then, it must have been known since the dawn of human history,
and it was certainly one of the first bodies to be identified as a
'wanderer' rather than a true star.
In ancient times astrology, the superstition of the stars, was
taken very seriously indeed, and Mars was regarded as having
an evil influence. This is no place to discuss astrology, which
is, after all, strictly for the credulous; to modify a famous
remark said to have been made by the Duke of Wellington,
"anyone who believes in astrology will believe in anything".
But it is understandable that our remote ancestors should have
formed a deep distrust of Mars, because it is so red. Red
indicates blood, and blood means war. What could be more
natural than to name the planet after the War-God? The Greek
war-god was Ares, and the study of Mars is still known officially
as 'areography', though by now the term seems pedantic, and
I doubt whether it will survive. 'Martian geography' is so much
more explicit, though technically deplorable.
The Greeks were well aware of the unstarlike nature of Mars,
and they studied its movements closely. Yet they were not the
first to do so. Apparently the Egyptians knew the planet as
Harmakhis or Har decherthat is to say, the Red One, while
the Ghaldseans called it after Nergal, the Babylonian god of
war. The first precise observation of its position seems to date
from
272 B.c, just over half a century after the death of
Alexander the Great ; on 1 7
January of that year it is recorded
that Mars passed very close to the star Beta Scorpii, Later on,
the Arabs and Persians knew Mars as Mirikh, indicating a
torch, while in India it was Angaraka, from angara, a burning
coal.
B
33
GUIDE TO MARS
In pre-telescopic times nothing could be learned about Mars
itself. The only kind ofobservation possible was that of position-
measuring, and by the time that telescopes arrived on the
scene the way in which Mars behaved was very well known
-and there
is no association with the celebrated canals which became so
controversial in after years.
Up to this time it had been tacitly assumed that the dark
patches on Mars were seas, while the ochre tracts represented
continents. One man who did not agree was Emmanuel Liais,
who was trained in Paris but was then invited by the Emperor
ofBrazil to become Director of the Rio deJaneiro Observatory,
and who spent most of the rest of his life in South America.
Liais made some rather desultory observations of Mars, but
his important contribution was the suggestion that the dark
regions were likely to be vegetation-tracts rather than oceans,
Liais' theory was published in i860. Secchi did not agree, and
two years later wrote that "the existence of seas and continents
. . . has today been conclusively proved". Even at that stage,
Mars was providing plenty of scope for argument.
Better telescopes and better techniques led steadily to more
accurate maps of Mars. Sir Norman Lockyer, another pioneer
of astronomical spectroscopy, produced some good drawings
during the favourable opposition of 1862, and agreed with
Secchi that the 'green' areas were oceanic. Frederik Kaiser in
Holland and Gamille Flammarion in France were other skilful
observers; Kaiser gave the rotation period as 24 hours
37
03
o
o
o.
I
E
44
GUIDE TO MARS
minutes 22-62 seconds. Meanwhile, spectroscopy had been
coming to the fore, and at first it seemed to support the idea that
the atmosphere of Mars was decidedly damp. Flammarion, for
one, was convinced that the dark regions were due to water in
some form, though he did wonder whether it could be in a kind
of intermediate state, neither pure liquid nor pure vapour.
Next, there was the question of naming the Martian features.
This was something which had never been seriously tackled,
and the names used by different observers were unofficial. The
lead was taken by Richard A. Proctor, a British amateur who
was a noted 'popular' writer but also a clever astronomer in
his own right. In 1867 Proctor produced a map in which he
gave the Martian features names in honour of famous observers
Cassini Land, Fontana Land, Madler Continent, Arago Strait
and so on (Fig, 16). His system was followed by other British
observers, such as N. E. Green and the Rev. W. R. Dawes.
Promptly and predictably, the storm broke. Proctor's map
was criticized as being inaccurate, and there was some truth
in this; he was also attacked for having selected names which
favoured British astronomers. (Accusations of the same type
were levelled at the Russians nearly a century later, when they
obtained the first pictures of the far side of the Moon and pro-
duced names such as the Moscow Sea and the Soviet Moun-
tains.) Various modifications were introduced, but the whole
system was finally thrown overboard in favour of a new one by
Schiaparelh. I may be running ahead of my story, and if so I
apologize; but it is interesdng to compare the rival nomen-
clatures, and so let us look at two maps, one based on Proctor's
system and the other on Schiaparclli's. The identifications are
as follows:
Proctor (and Green)
Beer Continent
Herschel II. Strait
Arago Strait
Burton Bay
Madler Continent
Christie Bay
Terby Sea
Schiaparelli
Aeria and Arabia
Sinus Sabaeus
Margaritifer Sinus
mouth of the Indus
Chryse
Auroras Sinus
Solis Lacus
to
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Kepler Land and Copernicus Land Thaumasia
Jacob Land Noachis and Argyre I
46
GUIDE TO MARS
Schiaparelli
Deucalionis Regio
Protei Regio
Mare Sirenum, Lacus Phoenicis
Mare Cimmerium
Mare Tyrrhenum and Syrtis
Minor
Ausonia and Iapygia
Hellas
Proctor (and Green)
Phillips Island
Hail Island
Schiaparelli Sea
Maraldi Sea
Hooke Sea and Flammarion Sea
Cassini Land and Dreyer Island
Lockyer Land
Kaiser Sea (or the Hourglass Sea) Syrtis Major
Which system do you prefer? I admit to having a feeling of
nostalgia for Proctor's; after all, it is the kind of nomenclature
which has been accepted for the Moon. On the other hand one
is bound to admit that Schiaparelli's, based partly on geography
and partly on mythology, is the more scientific, particularly
now that we know so much more about the nature of Mars
;
Arago Strait is not a strait, Phillips Island is not an island, and
the Hourglass Sea is not a seait is a lofty plateau sloping off
to either side. Of course, Schiaparelli's system has had to be
revised too. Lacus Phcenicisthe Phoenix Lakehas proved
to be a towering volcano. Note that Chryse, the 'Golden Land'
where Viking i made its epic touchdown in July 1976, was the
old Madler Continent. One wonders what Johann Madler
would have thought.
Such was the situation at the end of what we may term the
middle period in Martian history. The movements, the shape
and the main surface features of Mars were well known; the
caps, varying seasonally, were assumed to be icy or snowy ; the
atmosphere was thought to be reasonably dense, though less
so than that of the Earth ; the dark regions were either oceans
(as most astronomers believed) or else vegetation tracts,
presumably filling old sea-beds. The temperature was expected
to be little, if at all, lower on average than that of Earth, and
the idea of inhabitants was certainly not ruled out.
The stage was set for one of the most memorable years in the
story of Mars: 1877.
] *
Chapter Four
THE STORY OF THE CANALS
To the early observers, Mars was an attractive world.
It was also a mysterious one, because so little could be seen
upon it apart from dark patches and white polar caps. Specula-
tion was rife, and it is worth looking back to some comments
by Bernard dc Fontenelle, secretary of the French Academy of
Sciences, in 1688. Fontenelle regretted that Mars had no
satellitesat least so far as he knew; the two dwarf attendants
were not discovered until almost two centuries laterand then
went on as follows
:
"We have seen phosphorescent materials, either liquid or
dry, which upon receiving light from the Sun absorb it, so that
they can shine brilliantly when in shadow. Perhaps Mars has
great, high rocks, naturally phosphorescent, which during the
day can store up light, emitting it again during the night.
Nobody can imagine a pleasanter scene than that of rocks
illuminating the whole landscape after sunset, and providing
a magnificent light without inconvenient heat. In America we
know that there are many birds which are so luminous that in
darkness we can read by their light. How do we know that
Mars does not have a great number of these birds which, when
night comes, scatter on all sides and make a new day?"
This is at least far more inviting than the bloodthirsty
Martians conjured up later by H. G. Wells and his imitators.
In fact, the idea of hostile inhabitants did not occur to anyone
until modern or near-modern times, and although men such
as William Herschel believed firmly in the habitability of Mars
they did not go so far as to speculate what the inhabitants
might be like. Obviously the first requirement was to communi-
cate with them, and various interesting suggestions were made.
Johann von Littrow, who became Director of the Vienna
Observatory in 181
9,
proposed lighting vast fires arranged in
geometrical patterns to attract the attention of the Martians,
who would presumably understand the message and make a
suitable reply. Another bright idea was to dig wide trenches in
49
GUIDE TO MARS
the Sahara Desert, and provide a sort of mathematical code.
The climax was reached in the mid- 1870s by Charles Cros, an
enthusiastic Frenchman, who put forward the scheme of
building a large burning-glass which could focus the Sun's
light and heat on to a Martian desert, scorching the sand there
;
by swinging the glass around it would be possible to write
words on the surface of Mars. I have often wondered what
words he intended to write, but the plan never progressed even
as far as the drawing-board stage. Monsieur Cros was apparently
most upset at the general refusal to take him seriously.
If we could not signal to the Martians, could we hope to
see any evidence of their handiwork? This brings us straight on
to the famous observations made in 1
877
by Schiaparelli, setting
off a violent argument which was not finally ended until the
flights of the Mariners. It was Schiaparelli who made the first
detailed studies of the features which he called canali, or
channels, but which have been immortalized as the Martian
canals.
Giovanni Virginio Schiaparelli was born in Piedmont in
1835,
and graduated from Turin University. In 1862 he was
appointed Director of the Brcra Observatory in Milan, which
was equipped with a fine 8|-inch refractor. His interests were
many (for instance, he carried out pioneer work in connection
with comets and meteor streams), but for the moment we must
confine ourselves to his work on Mars, which began with the
1877 opposition. The actual opposition date was
5
September,
and Mars was practically at perihelion, so that it was to all
intents and purposes as close to us as it can ever be. Schiaparelli
was a skilled observer, and the Milan skies were clear (much
clearer than they are today). He therefore decided to compile a
new map of Mars.
The chart which he produced was certainly much better
than any of its predecessors, and in the main it stands up quite
well to the modern results. He also revised the nomenclature;
out went Beer Continent, Lockyer Land and Dreyer Island,
while in came Aeria, Hellas and Iapygia. For a while the two
systems ran in parallel, but eventually Schiaparelli's prevailed,
and I propose to use it from now on, albeit with a slight feeling
of regret.
The most striking feature, however, was the detection of
50
THE STORY OF THE CANALS
very fine, regular lines running across the reddish-ochre
deserts. They were, Schiaparelli believed, unlike anything else
in the Solar System, and he was frankly taken aback. In a later
article he summarized his ideas about them, so let us keep to
his own words:
"All the vast extent of the continents is furrowed upon every
side by a network of numerous lines or line stripes of a more or
less pronounced dark colour, whose aspect is very variable.
They traverse the planet for long distances in regular fines,
that do not at all resemble the winding courses of our streams.
Some of the shorter ones do not reach three hundred miles;
others extend for many thousands, occupying a quarter or even
a third of the circumference of the planet. Some of these are
very easy to see, especially the one designated by the name of
Nilosyrtis. Others in turn are extremely difficult, and resemble
the finest thread of a spider's web drawn across the disk. They
are subject to great variations in breadth, which may reach
120 to 180 miles for the Nilosyrtis, while others are scarcely
20 miles broad , . . Their length and arrangement are constant,
or vary only between very narrow limits , . . The canals may
intersect among themselves at all possible angles, but by
preference they converge toward the small spots to which we
have given the name of lakes. For example, seven are seen to
converge in Phcenicis Lacus, eight in Trivium Charontis, six
in LunE Lacus and six in fsmenius Lacus."
Perhaps the most remarkable thing about the canal network
as described by Schiaparelli was that it seemed to follow a
definite pattern. There was nothing haphazard about it. Either
the canals followed great-circle tracks across the planet, such
as the Phison, or eke they were gently curved, such as the
Nilosyrtis. Whether curved or not, they ran from dark area to
dark area; there was not a single case of a canal breaking off
abruptly in the middle of an ochre tract. Altogether, Schiapa-
relli recorded forty canals during the 1877 opposition.
It has often been said that Schiaparelli was not the first to
see the canals, and that earlier observers had drawn some of
them. This is basically correct. What seems to be a 'canal' is
shown on one of the drawings made by Beer and Madler, and
there are streaks on the sketches made by observers such as
Lassell, Lockyer, de la Rue, Secchi, Kaiser and others. The
5i
GUIDE TO MARS
Rev. W. R. Dawes, in 1864,
produced drawings on which
there are streaks which would certainly have been called canals
if the term had been invented then so far as Mars was con-
cerned. But the aspect as shown by Schiaparelli was entirely
different, and it opened up a new train of thought.
The next opposition was that of 1879. Mars was rather further
from perihelion, but conditions were still good, and Schiaparelli
made the most of them. He recovered the old canals, and added
new ones. There was something more: single canals could be
abruptly replaced by double ones, a phenomenon which became
known as 'gemination' or twinning. To quote Schiaparelli
again:
When a gemination occurs, "the two lines follow very nearly
the original canal, and end in the place where it ended. One
of these is often positioned as exactly upon the former line, but
it also happens that the two lines may occupy opposite sides
of the former canal, and be located upon entirely new ground.
The distance between the two lines differs in different gemina-
tions, and varies from 370 miles and more down to the smallest
limit at which the two lines may appear separated in large
visual telescopesless than an interval of 30 miles." According
to Schiaparelh's observations, a canal which appeared single
one night might well be double the next (Fig. 18).
When Schiaparelli first published his results there was a
good deal of scepticism, which was understandable. Nobody
else saw the canals in 1877, and although C. E. Burton in
Ireland, using a 6-inch refractor and an 8-inch reflector, made
a few sketches in 1879 which showed significant streaks, full
confirmation of the canal network was not forthcoming for
some time. Succeeding oppositions passed by with Schiapa-
relli still obtaining results which differed from those of other
observers. For that matter, no two observers seemed to show
Mars in the same guise, and a selection of maps of the time
underlines what I mean. Compare charts such as the Knobel,
using an 8-inch reflector in 1884; Lohse, also in 1884; and
Schiaparelli at the previous opposition. It is hard to credit
that they represent the same planet.
Schiaparelli was not in the least deterred. Also, it had to be
borne in mind that the oppositions of the early 1880s were less
favourable than those of 1877 and 1879, because Mars was
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GUIDE TO MARS
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95
GUIDE TO MARS
Fossa: a 'ditch' a long, narrow, straight or curved valley.
Example: Sirenum Fossa.
Labyrinthus : a valley complex. The only example so far named
is Noctis Labyrinthus (formerly known as Noctis Lacus)
.
Mensa : a flat-topped, table-like area with steep slopes to either
side. Example: Nilosyrtis Mensa.
Mons: a mountain. Example: Olympus Mons (which is, of
course, a volcano). Olympus Mons was formerly called Nix
Olympica, the Olympic Snow, and had long been suspected
of being lofty. Another famous mountain is Arsia Mons,
previously known as Nodus Gordii, the Gordian Knot.
Patera: a shallow, complex crater with scalloped edges.
Example : Alba Patera.
Planitia : Smooth, low plain. Examples : Hellas Planitia, Argyre
Planitia, Chryse Planida, Utopia Planitia. Hellas and
Argyre were once thought to be plateaux, but are in fact
basins ; Hellas is the deepest known depression on Mars.
Planum: a plateau, or high plain. Examples: Lunae Planum,
Solis Planum.
Tholus : a hill or an isolated, dome-shaped mountain. Example
:
Hecates Tholus.
Vallis : a valleya sinuous channel, often with tributaries. The
best example is Vallis Marineris, or Mariner Valley, about
which more anon.
Vastitas: Extensive lowland plain. The vast circumpolar
northern plain is named Vastitas Borealis; it used to be
called the Mare Boreum.
To avoid as much confusion as possible, I have used the new
names. A few of the old designations of the albedo features have
been retained, notably Margaritifer Sinus (the Gulf of Pearls),
Sinus Sabseus (named after the Red Sea) and Sinus Meridiani
(the Meridian Bay, which was always used as the zero longitude
for Marsin fact, the Martian 'Greenwich', chosen quite
arbitrarily). These three dark markings seem to have nothing to
distinguish them from their surroundings, apart from their
colour.
In other cases I have thought it best to keep to the older
names as given in the official map compiled by the International
Astronomical Union committee shortiy before the Mariners
96
ttHffl
I. Mars seen from liarlh
JB Aug, 1973, 02.35. 27m. refractor,X 500. Long, of c. meridian oig
'
5 Oct. 1073. W.JB. ioin. rcflectorx 380. Long. 323". Paul Dohcrty.'
7 Dec.
1975. 21.55. Iom- rcflectorx 300. Long. 244 . Paul Dohcrty,
7 Dec.
1975. 23.55. tool, rcflectorx 300. Long. 274". Paul Dohcrty.
8 Dec.
1975. 02. 05. ioin, rellcctorx 300. Long. 305'. Paul Dohcrty.
13 Dec.
1975. a 1. 30. ioin. rcflectorx 350. Long. i86
c
. Paul Doherty.
Patrick Moore.
rt
3 EC 1
This 'far encounter' picture wits taken on 4 August 1969.. when the Mariner was 28 t. 000
miles from Mars; the time was 11,14 G.M.T. North is at the top; the longitude of the
central meridian is 233 -3. The picture was the 74th in the Mariner 7 sequence. The most
prominent feature is the bright Olympus Moris (then still called Nix Olympica) - now
known to be a towering volcano. Complex bright streaks are visible nearby in the Tharsis
region, and at the right edge there is a dark feature which was in the approximate position
of the old 'canal' Agathodsemon. The dark diffuse area to the lower left is the Mare Sirenum,
Xote also the linear cleft in the south polar cap.
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Olympus Mats
The great Martian volcano - the highest and most massive volcano known anywhere in
the Solar System
-
was photographed from the Viking i orbiter on 31 July 1976, from a
distanee of 5000 miles. The volcano has an altitude of 15 miles. It is shown here in mid-
morning, wreathed in clouds which extend up the flanks to an altitude of about ia miles.
The multi-ringed summit caldcra. 50 miles across, pushes up into the Martian stratosphere,
and is cloud-free. The cloud cover is most intense on the far western side of the mountain,
and a well-defined wave cloud train extends several hundreds of miles beyond the volcano
.upper left 1. The planet's limb is seen to the upper left corner. Extensive stratified hazes are
also visible. The clouds arc thought to be composed principally of water be, condensed from
the atmosphere as it cools while moving up the slopes of the volcano. The base diameter of
Olympus Mens is about 375 miles - approximately the same as the distance between
London and Edinburgh.
VI. Almsfrom Viking 1
This picture was taken on
18,
June 1976, as Viking approached Mars and well before it
entered an orbit round the planet. Just below the centre of the picture, and close to the
morning terminator, is the basin of Argyrc. North of it is the Valles Marineris. The bright
area south of Argyrc is partly covered by the white south polar deposit. The region to the top
of the picture is the Tharsis volcanic area, appearing bright because of clouds. It is notable
that the dark regions do not have sharp boundaries - contrary to the overall impression gained
from using Earth-based telescopes to observe Mars.
In every way comparable wilh Olympus Mons is the volcano now known as Arsia Mom
(its old name was Xodus Gordii) , It has an exceptionally large summit caldera. 6a miles in
diameter, excellently shown on this Viking Obiter i picture. Like Olympus Moris and some
of the other Tharsis volcanoes, Arsia Mons is so lofty that its summit often protrudes above
the dust-storms - a fact noted by Schiaparelli long ago. though naturally be had no idea that
the features were massive volcanoes. On earlier Mariner
9
pictures Arsia Mons was referred
to as 'South Spot'.
IX. Fault J^ones on Mars
During surveys of possible landing sites for Viking 2, this picture ol an area two degrees
south of the Martian equator was taken from Viking 1 on 8 July 1976. Fault zones breaking
the crust are clearly shown; the fault valleys are widened by mass wasting and collapse.
Mass wasting is the down-slope movement of rocks under the influence of gravity.)
X. (lop) First view of Mars from the Viking i lander. It was taken a few minutes after the
touch-down on 20 July 1976. The large rock to the upper left is about 4 inches across. Many
other rocks are shown, together with line-grained material.
(above) Part of the polar cap, photographed from the Viking 1 orbiter. The dark streaks
represent surface which is not covered by the white deposit.
XI. (top right) The 1 i-mile crater Yuty, in Chrysc, photographed from Viking 1 during orbit.
Xote the terraced walls and the extremely massive central peak, which is crowned by pits
and which gives every indication of being a volcanic structure.
(right) Argyre Planilia, photographed on 1 1 July 1976 by Viking Orbiter 1 . This is an oblique
view across Argyre toward the horizon, some 13,000 miles away. The atmosphere was clear,
and the horizon brightness due to thin haze ; above the horizon are detached layers of haze
miles high.
XIII. Lava-flows and Watercourses
Itofi) Part of a mosaic of 15 photographs taken around midnight on
9 July 1976 by Viking 1
from a range of 1 040 miles. The area is WNWofthe original site selected for the landing. Lava-
flow.s are shown, broken by faults which form ridges. Sinuous river channels cross the area.
'.bottom') Utopia, from Viking 2. Winding between the rocks nray be seen features which could
well represent old stream-beds. The apparent tilt of the horizon is caused by the 8-degree tilt
of the spare-craft.
TUBE
;
XIV. Soil Sampling
[ top j Collecting samples : Viking i Lander,
8 October 1976. The irregularly-shaped rock
was pushed several inches by the Lander's
collector arm, moving the rock to the left of its
original position and leaving it slightly cocked
upward. The left-hand picture shows the
collector head pushing against the rock - which
was named 'Mr. Badger' by the flight control-
lers. The picture at the right shows the displaced
rock and the depression from whence it came.
A sample from the site was successfully collected
on 1 1 October.
[right) Trench dug by the Viking 1 Lander on
Sol 8. The trench is 3 inches wide, 2 inches deep
and 6 inches long.
((o/j'lPhobos from Viking Orbitcr 1 ; aa February
1977. Phobos is
75
per cent illuminated, and is
about 1 3 miles across and 1 1 .8 miles from top
to bottom; north is at the top. The south pole
is within the crater Hall (3.1 miles in diameter!
at the bottom centre, where the pictures of the
mosaic overlap. Features as small as 65ft. across
can be seen. There are striatioris, crater-chains, a
linear ridge, and hummocks - some of which are
over 160ft. in size. A long linear ridge extends
from the south pole toward the upper right, and
a scries of craters runs horizontally across the
picture, which is parallel to the orbital plane of
Phobos. The mosaic was taken during the
Orbiter's 24.2nd revolution round Mars.
(left) Another Viking 1 view of Phobos, taken
from a range of
545
miles ; the camera was
slewed to compensate for the rapidly-changing
motion at this range. The smallest visible
feature is 130ft. across; Phobos itself is visible
for 1 1 miles from top to bottom and 3.6 miles
from left to right. Xote the remarkable striations.
unknown before Viking 1 took detailed photo-
graphs of the satellite.
to/) Preliminary photograph of Deimos from Mariner q.
IhoUom) This photograph was taken from the orbitcr of Viking i. The largest craters recorded
are Voltaire (diameter 1,2 miles) and Swift (0.6 miles) ; of the two Swift has the sharper
outline. In shape Deimos is roughly ellipsoidal, with principal diameters of g|, 7-I and 7 miles.
The surface is dark, with an average albedo of 6 per cent, though in one patch the reflectivity
rises to 8 per cent. Like Phobos, Deimos has synchronous rotation - that is to say, it keeps
the same face turned toward Mars all the time.
MARS AS SEEN FROM EARTH
began to fly. For instance, there are as yet no new names for
the ochre tracts which have always been known as Aeria,
Phaethontis and so on.
Obviously, the observer has to depend upon the tilt of Mars
with respect to the Earth. When the southern hemisphere is
favoured, the Syrtis Major is pre-eminent; when the northern
hemisphere is presented, pride of place generally goes to
Acidalia Planitia (formerly the Mare Acidalium), though the
Syrtis Major is conspicuous even then. As we have noted, the
southern hemisphere is tipped toward us at perihelic opposi-
tions, which is why it was better-mapped than the northern
region until the space-ships took over.
Here, then, is a very brief 'tour' of Mars which may be
undertaken by anyone equipped with an adequate telescope
of, say, 8 inches aperture.
It is convenient to begin with the Syrtis Major (I still have
an unscientific wish to call it the Hourglass Sea!) which is V-
shaped, and extends from the equator into the northern hemi-
sphere. It is said to show changes, some of which are seasonal
while others are unpredictable; there are reports that it is
sometimes relatively narrow, sometimes broad. I cannot com-
ment, because I have never been sure of these variations. They
are admittedly well-authenticated, though not so easy to explain
as they used to be when astronomers still believed the Syrtis to
be a vegetation-tract.
To the west is the ochre region of Aeria, which merges into
Arabia. To the east is Isidis Planitia (formerly Isidis Regio).
Well to the north is Utopia Planitia, celebrated as being the
landing-site of Viking 2 in September 1976.
Syrtis Major is part of a dark mass which extends for more
than half-way round the planet. It adjoins a rather narrow but
often very prominent dark region, the Sinus Sabsus, which is
separated from a similar region, Pandora Fretum, by the fighter
region of Deucalionis.
To the south of the Syrtis Major is one of the most famous
markings on Mars: Hellas Planitia, which is circular and
practically featureless. (In the 'canal' days it was recorded as
being crossed by two streaks making up an X; they were named
the Peneus and the Alpheus, but, alas, they do not exist.)
Hellas is very variable in brightness. Sometimes, as in 1967,
d 97
GUIDE TO MARS
it can rival the polar cap; at other oppositions, as in
1975, it is
hardly identifiable. There is no mystery about these changes.
When Hellas is bright, its basin is cloud-filled. Adjoining it,
between it and the tract ofNoachis, is a dark region, fiellespontus;
it is heavily cratered, though of course nothing of the kind was
expected before the probe pictures. Hadriaca Patera, to the east,
is rather similar. (This was formerly Mare Hadriacumthe
Adriatic Sea.)
Extending from the Syrtis Major and the adjoining Libya, to
the east, are two more dark regions, Tyrrhena Patera (once the
Mare Tyrrhenum) and Cimmerium, separated by the lighter
Hesperia Planum, which is sometimesnot alwayseasy to
identify. To the north are Ekctris and Eridania, two more of the
ochre tracts. It was in this area that the capsule of the Russian
probe Mars
3
came down in 1971, though without sending back
any useful information after its arrival.
Well to the north of the Tyrrhena-Cimmerium streaks is the
Triuium Charontis, a darkish patch which can be quite prominent
at times, and was once thought to be the centre of a system of
radiating canals with fascinating names such as Cerberus,
Hades, Erebus and Styx. Only the Cerberus has any real
existence, and it is certainly not a canal.
In this general area are various lightish areas such as
Mthiopis, Mtheria, Elysium Planitia and Isidis Planitia. On older
maps the boundary between iEthiopis and Isidis was marked
by one of the most celebrated of the canals, the Nepenthes-
Thoth; I have seen a diffuse dusky streak there running in the
direction of the wedge-shaped, darkish area of Casius.
Now let us go back to the equator. Here we find the Meridian
BaySinus Meridiani, which has two dark 'forks' pointing
northward; it has been called 'Dawes* Forked Bay' and also the
Fastigium Aryn, and it marks the zero for Martian longitudes.
It extends from the Sinus Sabseus, and under good conditions
the forked appearance may be seen with a modest telescope,
though it is not always conspicuous and may well be variable
in intensity. To its west, and separated from it by a bright
region, is the Margaritifer Sinus, which is shaped rather like the
Syrtis Major, but is much less prominent. Almost due north of
it is the Aeidalia Planitia (Mare Acidalium), with its extension
still called the Mliaeus Locus, though no doubt the name will
98
MARS AS SEEN FROM EARTH
be changed before long. Aeidalia is the principal dark zone
north of the Martian equator, and at aphelic oppositions it
tends to dominate the scene whenever it lies on the Earth-
turned hemisphere.
Between Aeidalia and Margaritifer is Chryse Planitia, the first
site from which signals from Mars were sent back in July 1976.
It merges into the similar region of Xanthe, and to the west of
Xantlie is the dark Lums Planum (formerly Luns Lacus). To the
north-west there arc ochre tracts such as Tempe and Arcadia
Planitia. Between these two regions the old maps showed a
canal, the Ceraunius ; this has gone the way of all canals, but
at least it has given its name to a lofty hill, the Ceraunius
Tholus, which lies in the volcanic area of Tharsis.
It is here that we find the greatest of all the volcanoes, the
Olympus Mons. Also in Tharsis arc Ascraus Mons, Pavonis Mons
and Arsia Monsnee Ascraeus Lacus, Pavonis Lacus and Nodus
Gordii respectively. All were recorded from Earth long before
probes had become even remotely practicable, and at dmes
they have been seen even when the rest of Mars has been veiled
in dust, for the excellent reason that they are high enough to
poke out above the dusty layers.
The darkish patch between Margaritifer to the one side and
Tharsis on the other is Aurora Planum, which extends toward the
sometimes-prominent dark region still called the Titkonius
Lacus. Here Lowell showed a canal, the Coprates; Mariner
9
revealed the immense Vallis Marineris, which is on a giant
scale even by Martian standards. Another dark region, the
Mare Erytkraum, lies south of Auroras; south again is the basin
of Argyre Planitia, which is of the same type as Hellas, and can
be cloud-filled and bright, Thaumasia is ochre, and between it
and the dark Ph&nicis is the celebrated Solis Planum, which is
certainly worth watching. Sometimes it is an easy object,
though at other oppositions I have failed to identify it at all
even though by all logical standards I ought to have seen it.
There is another prominent dark area in the south-west,
Mare Sirenum, which has a beak-like extremity; from here
Lowell drew a canal, the Araxes, linking Sirenum with
Phcenicis, but it too was a mere illusion. Phalkontis, yet another
ochre region, lies south of Sirenum, with Memnonia and
Amazonis Planitia to its north. Finally, in the north-west adjoining
99
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GUIDE TO MARS
Arcadia Planitia, are two darkish patches, Castorius and
Propontis, which I have usually seen without much difficulty
when the northern hemisphere has been tilted toward us at a
favourable angle.
The popular zones are naturally hard to examine, and there
is no point in saying much about them here, but I ought to
mention two bright patches in the far south, Thyh I and
Thyle H, as well as the huge northern Vastitas Borealis (once
Mare Boreum), which extends all round the planet and is
covered by the polar cap material during winter.
Again I stress that this is a rough outline guide, in no way a
precision chart, but I hope it will be good enough to show the
main features which arc accessible to the average, well-equipped
amateur observer. For the sake of completeness I also give the
map which was drawn up under the official auspices of the
International
Astronomical Union, regarded as the best
possible chart in prc-Mariner days, though to my mind it
shows far too many streaks which could be classed as canals!
Amateur observers can still make themselves useful, because
they can record clouds and other atmospheric phenomena and
also note any possible modifications in the outlines of the dark
areas. Yet for our real knowledge of Mars we must turn to the
space-ships, and begin on i November
1962, when Man's
pioneer probe was sent on its way to the Red Planet.
'
102
Chapter Eight
SPACE-SHIPS TO MARS
The first Mars-ship took off when the Space Age was only
a little more than five years old. The opening of the new era
may be dated very precisely: to 4
October 1957,
when Russia's
Sputnik 1 sped round the world sending back 'bleep! bleep!'
signals which, to some Western ears, sounded faintly derisory.
(An American admiral named Rawson earned a place in
history by claiming that the Sputnik was "a hunk of old iron
that almost anybody could launch", though at that time the
United States space programme was floundering hopelessly.)
Probes to the Moon followed in
1959;
Yuri Gagarin made his
pioneer ascent in April 1961. It was inevitable that vehicles to
the planets should follow.
In fact, the Russians made an attempt even before Gagarin's
flight. There were only two planets within practicable range:
Venus and Mars, and of these Venus had claims to being
regarded as the better bet. The revelations about its immensely
hostile nature did not come until later, and in 1961 it was still
believed that the surface might be reasonably welcoming. On
12 February the Russians dispatched a Venus probe, but after
it had receded to less than five million miles all contact with it
was lost.
By this time America's programme was well under way, and
two Venus probes were launched from Cape Canaveral during
the summer of 1962. The first, Mariner 1, failed. The other,
Mariner 2, made a successful pass of Venus in mid-December,
and sent back the first positive information about that some-
what sinister world. Meanwhile the Russians had turned their
attention to Mars.
Nowadays, when flights to the Moon have become history
and the launching of a new probe does not even merit a note in
the daily papers, it is strange that so many people still have
completely wrong ideas about the way in which a space-ship is
launched. There is a persistent view that the vehicle has to
'get out of the Earth's gravity'. In fact there is no possibility
J 03
&*
*
i
GUIDE TO MARS
of anything of the sort, and no need for it. The Earth's gravi-
tational field weakens with increasing distance, but in theory
it has no limit. What has to be done is to work up to escape
velocity, so that the gravitational tug is inadequate to bring the
probe back.
Though the basic notion of space-flight is very old, credit
for putting it upon a properly scientific footing must go to a
shy, deaf Russian teacher named Konstantin Tsiolkovskii, who
published some technical papers at the beginning ofthe present
century which were decades ahead of their dme, and of which
nobody took the slightest notice {mainly, it is true, because they
were in Russian, and came out in an obscurejournal). Tsiolkov-
skii knew that the main problem would be that of fuel, and he
suggested using a compound launching vehicle made up of
several rockets mounted one on top of the other. At launch, the
large lowermost rocket would provide the power; when ithad
used up all its fuel it would break away and fall back to the
ground, leaving Rocket No. 2 to carry on with its own motors.
When it, too, had run out of fuel, the uppermost stage would
have been put into a path which would take it to its target
world.
This is how all lunar and planetary probes have been sent
on their way, but the whole procedure is remarkably compli-
cated, and there are grounds for suggesting that the safe
landings ofthe Vikings on Mars in 1976 rank at least equal with
the manned lunar landings of the Apollo missions, considered
from a purely technical point of view. The main difference
between a lunar voyage and a planetary journey is that the
planet does not stay obligingly close to us, and of course the
distances involved are much greater. Venus is always at least
a hundred times as remote as the Moon, and Mars is further
away still.
I do not propose to say much about rockets, because it would
be too much ofa digression. I must, however, stress that a rocket
works by what Isaac Newton called the 'principle ofreaction'
every action has an equal and opposite reaction. In a rocket,
gases are sent out through the exhaust, and these kick against
the rocket body and propel it onward. This is why a rocket can
function in vacuum; there is no need for any surrounding
atmosphere, and in fact air is a positive nuisance, because it
104
SPACE-SHIPS TO MARS
sets up friction and this in turn produces heat. A space-rocket
takes off slowly, and accelerates to full velocity only when it is
safely beyond the dense lower reaches of the Earth's atmo-
spheric mantle. The motors are complex by any standards, and
use liquid propellants; but the underlying principle is no
different from that of the Guy Fawkes firework rocket.
With unlimited fuel supply, there would be no actual need
to work up to escape velocity at all, but practical considerations
alter the whole situation. What we cannot do is to wait until a
planet (such as Mars) is at its closest to us and then simply fire
a rocket across the gap. Quite apart from the numerous other
objections, this would mean using power throughout the
journey, and no vehicle we can build at the moment could
possibly carry enough fuel. We must make use of the Sun's
gravitational force, and 'coast' for most of the way.
The Earth moves along at a mean velocity of 18
miles per
second, or around 66,000 m.p.h. If it moved faster, it would
follow a different orbit, and would initially swing outward ; if it
were slowed down by some miraculous means, it would at first
swing inward. For a Venus probe, then, the principle is to take
the vehicle up in a rocket launcher and then slow it relative to
the Earth, so that it enters a transfer orbit and comes within
range of Venus. But let us concentrate on Mars, where the
probe has to be speeded up.
The diagram (Fig. 28)
given here shows the path of Mariner
4,
because this was the first Mars probe to be successful. It was
launched from Cape Canaveral on 28 November 1964. The
180 days
240 days
Fig. 28. Flight path of Mariner
4
GUIDE TO MARS
massive, compound vehicle carrying the Mariner rose majesti-
cally into the air with what seemed to be agonizing slowness ; the
lowermost rocketan Atlasfired its motors, soon shedding
two of its 'boosters' and using the remaining one. When its
work was done, Atlas broke away and fell back into the sea.
Rocket No.
2, an Agena type, took over at a height of 100
nautical miles and a velocity of 13,000 m.p.h. The Agena
engine was shut down as soon as Mariner
4 had been put into
a closed orbit round the Earth, moving at a brisk
17,500 m.p.h.
After another forty-one minutes the Agena fired again, and
when it finally shut down for good the space-craft was moving at
25,598 m.p.h. in a path which would take it to within striking
distance of Mars. By now it was on its own; Agena, like Atlas,
had broken away and fallen back to Earth.
Basically, no more power was needed for the main journey.
Mariner was in a transfer orbit, and if the calculations were
right the probe would reach the orbit of Mars to rendezvous
with the planet. This duly happened. Within two days the
Mariner was half a million miles from Earth, and it coasted
along until the Mars rendezvous on
14 July 1965 at a mere
61
18 miles from the planet. The time elapsing between launch
and rendezvous was 228 days, or 222 sols, and the total distance
covered was approximately
330,000,000 miles. Recalling that
Mara can approach the Earth to within
35,000,000 miles, this
sounds a long wayrather like driving from London to
Bognor Regis by way of Edinburghbut in terms offuel it was
the most economical path.
Of course, I have over-simplified matters grossly. A mid-
course correction had to be carried out on
5 December
1964; a
command was sent to the probe, and was duly obeyed. There
was also the question of 'attitude', because if the Mariner
pointed in the wrong direction it would be unable to communi-
cate or to receive proper instructions. The method of achieving
this was most ingenious. The star Canopus was used as a 'lock'
as well as the Sun.
The best way to explain this, I think, is to picture a weight
which is hung from a long cord. It will tend to spin, but a second
cord, at approximately right angles, will steady it. A line ofsight
on Canopus was used as Mariner's second *cord'. Canopus, the
second brightest star in die sky, was eminently suitable; it was
106
SPACE-SHIPS TO MARS
in the right position relative to the Sun, and its brilliancy
enabled the Mariner sensors to locate it, though admittedly
only after a day of searching around. The method worked
splendidly, and even when die Canopus lock was temporarily
lost, at the time of the December mid-course correction, the
sensor was able to find it again. Power, obtained by utilizing
the solar paddles which gave Mariner its characteristic
appearance, was no real problem.
Mariner 4 made a single fly-by of Mars. Though its main
task was then over, it did not leave the Solar System ; it was
moving in a stable path round the Sun, so becoming a tiny
artificial planet, and there is no reason to suppose that it will
not continue in its path indefinitely, though all contact widi
it was lost when its power eventually gave out.
I have gone into some detail about the Mariner
4
path
because it is absolutely typical, but, as we have noted, Mariner
was not the first Mars probeand this brings us back to
1 November 1962, when the Russians made their pioneer
effort.
In those early days of space research the Soviet teams had
consistent trouble with their long-range communications, and
even at the present time
(1977)
they have had very little luck
with Mars. Their first probe, Mars 1, was quite a massive
vehicle, weighing almost 2000 pounds, and apparently it was
put into the correct orbit, so that all seemed to be well. The
path which would take it to Mars was of the same general type
as those of the later Mariners, and it carried a variety of
instruments, including several cameras.
Like all other probes, too, Mars 1 was designed to carry out
studies of the conditions in interplanetary space. Astronomers
wereand still areinterested in the so-called solar wind,
which is made up of low-energy atomic particles ejected from
the Sun in all directions. Also, the magnetic fields in space are
of tremendous theoretical importance; cosmic radiation is
another field in which probes are invaluable, and, of course,
there is the question of meteoritic particles. Not so many
decades ago it was still thought possible that any space-ship
daring to leave the protective screen of atmosphere round the
Earth would be promptly and fatally battered by a concen-
trated bombardment of meteoroids. Luckily the danger has
107
i
GUIDE TO MARS
been found to be negligible, but there are plenty of micro-
meteorites, too small to cause any damage to a space-probe but
large enough to be recorded. AH the vehicles to the planets have
sent back details of the number of hits.
By mid-March
1963 Mars 1 was almost 70,000,000 miles
from the Earth, and still going well. Then, abruptly, contact
with it was lost, and was never regained. What presumably
happened is that the 'star lock' failed, so that the probe swung
round and was unable to continue sending or receiving mes-
sages. In all probability it passed Mars at around
193,000 miles
on
19 June 1963, and there is little doubt that it is still orbiting
the Sun, but its fate will never be known. By the time it 'went
silent', it was so remote that signals from it, moving at the
velocity of light, took twelve minutes to reach the Earth.
Chronologically, Mars 1 was the fourth planetary probe.
Earlier vehicles had been Russia's Vencra 1, which also went
out of contact before getting anywhere near its target, and the
two American Venus probes, Mariner 1 (which was a complete
failure; it went out of control as soon as it had been launched,
and had to be destroyed) and Mariner 2, which made a trium-
phal pass of Venus in December 1962. Following Mars 1, the
Russians attempted another Venus shot with Zond 1, and again
they failed. In November
1964 the centre of activity, so far as
Mars was concerned, had swung back to the United States.
Two Mariners had been prepared: Numbers
3 and
4. They
were identical, and each was designed to by-pass Mars and send
back data, including pictures. The reason for building two
probes instead of only one was mainly as a safeguard in the
event of failure. As events proved, this was a wise precaution.
As with all space-craft, the time of launching was important.
It is essential to use as little fuel as possible, and the velocity
needed to reach Mars is least when the Earth launch and Mars
rendezvous occur on opposite sides of the Sun. The 'window',
or period of time when a launch is practicable, is limited to a
few weeks every two yean. Absolutely ideal launch conditions
would be when the take-off point, the Sun, and the arrival
point are lined up, but this hardly ever happens, because the
orbit of Mars is appreciably tilted with respect to that of the
Earth. The inclination is only 1-9 degrees, but this is quite
enough to make a considerable difference.
108
SPACE-SHIPS TO MARS
The 'window' for 1964 fell in November. At noon on Novem-
ber the Fifth, Mariner
3
was sent up from Cape Canaveral.*
Americans do not celebrate Guy Fawkes' Day, but it was
certainly an unlucky time for Mariner 3,
because although the
launch seemed at first to be successful the planners soon realized
that the flight was doomed. During the first rush through the
Earth's dense lower air, the delicate space-craft itself is pro-
tected by a shield, which is jettisoned as soon as the main
atmosphere has been left beliind. With Mariner
3,
the shield
stuck obstinately in position, and the dead-weight meant that
the velocity was reduced, so diat there could be no hope of the
probe reaching Mars. Five and a half minutes after the space-
craft had been separated from the Agena stage of the launcher,
it was ordered to extend its solar panels, which would enable it
to use the Sun's energy to provide power for its various items of
equipment. Alas, the solar panels failed too, and without them
there was no power. Frantically the planners suspended all
scientific operations in the Mariner, kept on trying to persuade
the panels to extend, and then decided to fire the motor of the
space-craft itself in an attempt to jerk the awkward shield free.
Before they could do so, the battery ran down. To all intents
and purposes Mariner 3
was dead; it had remained in contact
for only 8 hours
34
minutes. Silent and untrackable, it entered
a path round the Sun, and no doubt it is orbiting even now.
The space-planners were disappointed, but not dismayed.
They managed to identify the cause of the problem, and the
back-up probe was modified accordingly. By 28 November,
Mariner 4 stood on its launching pad; the usual procedure was
followed, and this time there was no mishap. The shield
dropped away, the solar panels worked perfectly, and the first
American messenger to Mars was well and truly on its way.
On the following 14 July the rendezvous manoeuvre was begun,
and shortly after midnight G.M.T. on 15 July
Mariner made
its closest approach to Mars. For the record, the exact time was
01 hours o minutes 57
seconds; the distance from the Martian
surface was 61 18 miles. By then the picture sequence had been
completed, and the first views were received later in the day.
*
There was a period, following 1963, when Cape Canaveral was re-
named Cape Kennedy, but the local inhabitants were not in favour, and
eventually the name was changed back again.
109
I
GUIDE TO MARS
Altogether Mariner
4 sent back twenty-one pictures of Mars,
some of which were almost blank while others showed con-
siderable detail. Although only one per cent, of the total
surface of Mars came under scrutiny, the results provided
astronomers with plenty of food for thought, and one of the
picturesthe eleventhwas very clear (Plate II) ; it showed
an area in Atlantis, the ochre region between Cimmerium
and Sirenum, and revealed a 75-mile crater. By then, of
course, the presence of craters had been established, and more
than seventy were finally recorded. This is no place to go into
details of how the television techniques were applied, or of
the 'computer enhancement' in which the raw pictures were
electronically dismembered, cleaned up, and reassembled to
bring out the details. Suffice to say that the techniques evolved
were more or less new, and the power actually received from
the space-craft was a tiny fraction of one watt: to be precise,
o-oooooooooooooooooo1 watt (if you care to count the number
of zeros, you will find that there are eighteen of them). Any-
thing of the kind would have seemed hopelessly futuristic even
at the start of the Space Age, less than a decade earlier.
There was an obvious temptation to compare the Martian
surface with that of the Moon, but even at that early stage it
was clear that to take the analogy too far would be unwise.
I well remember a comment made by one of the NASA
scientists when asked whether Mars was like the Earth or like
the Moon. He paused, and then said "Wellto me, it's like
Mars," which was a very fair summing-up. But there were some
really vital conclusions to be drawn immediately. First, the
dark areas and the ochre tracts did not seem to be very different
except in colour; there were craters in both. Some were seen
in the famous dark region of the Mare Sirenum, and there were
others m Phlegra, Phasthontis, Atlantis and elsewhere. Neither
were the boundaries of the dark regions as well-marked as had
been expected, and it is probably true to say that these first
Mariner
4
pictures finally killed off the vegetation theory which
had been regarded as so nearly proved. Also, Mars was not a
world with a flattish landscape, and one elevation on the
famous eleventh frame was estimated to rise to 13,000 feet
(though the existence of giant volcanoes was not then sus-
pected). Yet one inference drawn at the time has been found to
no
SPACE-SHIPS TO MARS
be wrong. It was supposed that the formations were very
ancient and considerably eroded, which now seems to be the
very reverse of the truth.
Despite the excellence of the television pictures
by 1965
standards, that is to saythe most important results concerned
the atmosphere, which turned out to be very thin indeed. The
method adopted was most ingenious, and has always been called
the Occultation Experiment. Shortly after 02-19 hours on 15
July, more than two hours after closest approach, Mariner
4
went directly behind Mars. Needless to say, it could not be
seen; to glimpse a space-craft from Earth at such a range
would mean using a telescope much more powerful than
anything we can build. But radio signals were clear, and just
before the actual occultation these signals were naturally
coming to us after having passed through the Martian atmo-
sphere. The way in which these signals were affected gave
reliable clues as to the atmospheric composition and density
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125
GUIDE TO MARS
northern hemisphere, making up ochre tracts such as Aeria,
Arabia and Eden. The crater Schiaparelli has actually been
seen from Earth as a tiny speck, though naturally nobody in
pre-Mariner days had any idea of its true nature (unless we
include the extraordinary observations made by Barnard and
Mellish). Sinus Meridiani or the Meridian Bay, to (he lower
left, seems to be an albedo feature and nothing more. The zero
for longitude is now taken to be the craterlet called Airy-0 in
honour of Sir George Airy, the rather formidable last-century
Astronomer Royal who was largely responsible for the accep-
tance of Greenwich as the zero for terrestrial longitudes.
Isidis Planitia (formerly Isidis Regio), bordering Syrtis
Major, slopes down to the volcanic region of Elysium Planitia,
where there are several well-marked volcanoes : Elysium Mons,
Hecates Tholus and Albor Mons, all of which are decidedly
lofty even though they cannot compare with the giants of
Tharsis. The relative sparseness of crater distribution around
here is very evident. The quadrant also includes Utopia
Planitia ; it was here that the second Viking lander came down,
not very far from the prominent crater now called Mie. Utopia
had been expected to be relatively smooth. Instead it has proved
to be what has been termed 'a forest of rocks'.
I have already commented upon the fact that some of the
most famous Martian canals were in this quadrantPhison,
Euphrates, Protonilus, Hiddekel and others. All, alas, were
quite illusory.
North-West Quadrant. (Fig. 32) This is the quadrant which con-
tains most of the Tharsis volcanoes. Pride of place must go to
Olympus Mons, which has a base
375
miles across and a
maximum altitude estimated at 78,000 feetabout 15 miles,
which is over twice the height of our Everest above sea level.
Olympus is a shield volcano, and is crowned by a 40-mile
caldera. It is the largest volcano known to us, and dwarfs
anything we find on Earth. During Martian mornings it is
wreathed in clouds formed of water ice, condensed from the
atmosphere as it cools while moving up the slopes of the volcano.
Shield volcanoes were originally so called because of a
supposed resemblance in shape to the shields of early Viking
warriors. On Earth they are confined mainly (not entirely) to
126
MARINER 9AND OTHERS
three areas: Hawaii, the Galapagos Islands and Iceland, plus
a few in California and New Zealand. Summit calderas are the
rule, and this also applies to the Tharsis volcanoes. Ascneus
Mons has a 31-mile caldera; Pavonis, 28 miles; and Arsia Mons,
which actually lies just in the southern hemisphere, beats them
all with a caldera over 85 miles in diameter.
The Tharsis volcanoes are associated with what seem to be
drainage systems. The most conspicuous features of the sur-
rounding area are the canyons, mainly the tremendous Vallis
Marineris and the labyrinth at Noctis, which lie in the south-
west quadrant. Another interesting feature is the Tractus Albus,
which is ridge-like and which runs from Arsia Mons as far as
Acidalia Planitia. It is certainly associated with the diagonal
line of the main volcanoes, of which the four giants are not the
only members.
The Tractus Albus runs between the Tharsis volcanoes to
the east and the darkish Lunse Patera to the west; it drops in
height with increasing distance northward. Acidalia is a low-
lying region, and is quite unlike the Syrtis Major even though
these are the two most conspicuous dark areas on the whole of
Mars.
Tharsis slopes off sharply to the west (Amazonis Planitia),
but less sharply toward the east. Here we come to an ochre
tract, Chryse Planitia, which merges into the very similar
Xanthe. It was in Chryse that the lander of Viking 1 made its
epic descent.
South- West Quadrant. (Fig.
33)
Two major features dominate
this part of Mars: the Vallis Marineris, and the basin of Argyre
I.
The Vallis Marineris, or Mariner Valley, is huge even by
Martian standards. It is 2500 miles long, over
45
miles wide
at its broadest point, and probably 20,000 feet deep, which is
practically three times the depth of the Grand Canyon of the
Colorado. It seems to be in the nature of a rift, and comparisons
have been made between it and our Red Sea, though the
Vallis is considerably the longer of the two. The tributaries
running from it are particularly significant, and it is hard to
resist the conclusion that they were formed by the action of
running water. The whole system extends from Tharsis right
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129
GUIDE TO MARS
through to Aurorae Planum, and one has to admit that it does
correspond more or less to the site of the Coprates canal
shown on the old Lowell-type maps, though on the whole I
fear that this may be pure coincidence. To the north-west is
another familiar feature, long known as Juventas Fons or the
Fountain of Youth, which may be an irregular depression and
which is visible from Earth as a dark patch. Lowell, needless to
say, classed it as an oasis.
Adjoining the Tharsis region and the high area of Phcenicis
is the Needs Labyrinthus. This is a huge system of canyons,
unlike anything else so far discovered, and making up the
pattern which has been nicknamed the Chandelier. The
canyons are not like die rills of the Moon, and may well be due
to fracturing of the surface, together with the withdrawal of
magma from below. Each of the main canyons has an average
width of about a dozen miles. No doubt this region will be
one of the main Martian tourist attractions in the centuries
to come . . .
To the east are two famous dark areas, Mare Cimmerium
and Mare Sirenum; Cimmerium is rather high, while Sirenum
seems to have no special characteristic apart from its colour.
There are many craters, and according to Russian reports the
lander of their probe Mars
3 came down in a position which
corresponds to one of these craters, Ptolemaeus.* It is a great
pity that no useful transmissions were received, because this
thickly-cratered area is quite different from the ochre tracts
of Chryse or Utopia.
Argyre Planitia (formerly Argyre I, to distinguish it from
a rather smaller feature, Argyre II} is a basin of the Hellas
type, though it is neither so large nor so deep. Littie can be
seen in it, but to its north there are some remarkable sinuous
features which we must, I feel, class as dry riverbeds. To the
north-west lie the dark, cratered regions of Mare Erythraeum
and Margaritifer Sinus.
* One of the most famous walled plains on the Moon is also called
Ptolemseus. There is considerable overlap in the naming of lunar and
Martian craters, which will inevitably lead to confusion in the future. The
Martian nomenclature has not yet been fully completed, which is why I have
had to retain some of the older names such as Mare Eryth return ; these
will certainly be revised shortly, and the term 'Mare* is bound to be
dropped.
ISO
MARINER 9AND OTHERS
Soutk-East Quadrant. (Fig.
34)
Overall, this is one of the most
heavily cratered parts of Mars, and there are few true volcanoes,
though a couple have been located in Tyrrhena Patera, north-
east of Hellas at around latitude 22 degrees, longitude
253
degrees. Magnificent systems of river beds are seen in the
Rasena region (latitude 25 degrees, longitude 190 degrees).
Among the craters, one of the most extraordinary is Proctor,
east of Hellas, which appears to be filled with sand-dunes. It
lies on the Hellespontus, a cratered region sloping down
toward the Hellas basin itself.
I have already said a good deal about Hellas. It is over 1300
miles across, and apart from one small patch, seen by Antoniadi
and named by him Zea Lacus, it is virtually featureless.
Across it Schiaparelli, in 1877 and 1879, drew two canals which
were later called the Alpheus and the Peneus, making up a
cross. No trace of them was shown by Mariner
9, so yet again
we seem to be dealing with alleged canals which do not exist
in any form whatsoever.
South Polar Region. Here we are back to layered terrain, but the
region round the pole itself is more thickly cratered than its
northern counterpart. Around latitude 60 degrees there is a
belt of darkish terrain, and this may explain the 'Lowell Band',
though it is less well-marked than the northern Vastitas
Borealis. There are also some lighter areas which may be
basins: Argyre II, Thyle I and Thyle II, all of which are
covered with cap material during the depths of winter.
This account of the scene from Mariner
9 is not meant to be
at all complete. All I have tried to do is to give a brief survey of
the various types of features discovered. Comparing these
results with those of the earlier probes leaves one in no doubt
as to the magnitude of Mariner 9*5 achievement, which was
all the more remarkable because of the need to shoulder the
programme originally assigned to Mariner 8. From being
regarded as an inert, lunar-type planet, Mars was transformed
into an active world, with features which defied explanation but
which were of surpassing interest. It was also thought possible
that instead of being in the last stages of senility, Mars was
gradually heating up and preparing to enter a new and much
less hostile phase in its evolution. There were also various
131
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133
GUIDE TO MARS
enigmas. The river beds did not look ancient, and they were not
seriously eroded; yet there can be no water on Mars today in
liquid form. It was all very puzzling.
There were many regrets when Mariner 9 finally came to
the end of its career, but already the plans for Viking were
being drawn up, and in the meantime there was plenty of
analysis to be done. Also, the Russians had certainly not lost
interest, and in the summer of
1973, less than a year after the
last signals from Mariner
9,
they dispatched a positive fleet of
space-ships. Four vehicles were sent up in rapid succession.
At least two were of the orbiter-plus-lander type, and much
was expected of them, particularly as the Soviet rocket planners
had already had such marked successes with Venuswhich
is a far more difficult subject for exploration than Mars.
Sad to say, the Soviet fleet was a failure, and added very
littie to the information drawn from Mariner 9. To avoid
tedious repetition, it may be best to treat the four probes
briefly and in order of launch
:
Mars
4. Launched 21 July 1973. On 10 February
#974
it
approached its target, but its braking engine failed to operate,
and the probe missed Mars by over 1300 miles, so that it
continued on its way in a solar orbit. A few television pictures
were obtained during the involuntary fly-by, but their quality
was poor.
Mars 5. Launched
25 July; approached Mars on the following
1 2 February. This time the braking engine worked, and some
television pictures were obtained. They showed craters and
river beds, but with nothing like the clarity of Mariner
9.
Mars 6. Launched
5
August; reached the neighbourhood of
Mars on 12 March
1974. The lander was successfully broken
free from the orbiter at a distance of almost 30,000 miles from
Mars, and the initial descent seemed promising. Rocket
braking was used for five minutes, and then the main parachute
was deployed. The parachute phase lasted for 148 seconds, but
then contact was permanently lost. So far as is known, the
lander came down at latitude 24 degrees, longitude
25
degrees west, between Mare Erythraeum and Margaritifer
134
MARINER 9AND OTHERS
Sinus, but nothing more was heard from it. Some television
pictures were received before the separation, and the Soviet
news agency said that from Mars 6 the planet looked like a red,
waning Moon.
Mars 7. Launched 9 August
1973;
approached Mars on
9
March
1974,
three days before Mars 6. This time die lander
separated from the orbiter prematurely, and the vehicle missed
Mars by 800 miles, moving uselessly into an orbit which will
continue to take it round the Sun.
The story of the Mars Fleet is rather depressing, and since
then the Russians have left the Red Planet alone. But in Cape
Canaveral, the Vikings were being made ready.
J
35
Chapter Ten
THE VIKINGS
It has been said that the Viking missions were the most
ambitious ever undertaken by the American space-planners up
to 1977. True, a little of the novelty had been stolen by the
Russian success in landing two capsules on the surface of the
much more hostile planet Venus, and managing to receive one
direct picture from each; but the Martian Vikings were
expected to go on transmitting for many weeks rather than for
an hour or so. Moreover, there was the all-absorbing problem
of the search for life.
What Mariner
9
had not done, and could not possibly do,
was to tell us whether or not Mars is completely sterile. This
was one of the main tasks for Viking, but let me stress at the
outset that it was not the sole reason for attempting a controlled
landing. Indeed, many scientists maintained that some of the
other investigations, such as analysis of the soil materials and
atmospheric composition, were even more important. Opinions
differed, but everyone agreed that whatever happened the
Vikings wouldif successfulusher in a new phase in our
exploration of the Solar System.
Two missions were planned. Vikings 1 and 2 were identical,
and were intended to carry out identical tasks from two
different regions of the planet. No. 1 was aimed at the 'Golden
Plain', Chryse, more or less between the Margaritifer Sinus to
the south and the dark mass of Acidalia to the north. No. 2 had
as its target Gydonia, an area considerably closer to the north
pole, and just about at the limit of the northern polar cap at
its maximum spread. The sites had been chosen very carefully.
They were relatively low-lying, and were expected to be reason-
ably smooth; also, they were well placed to receive any residual
moisture, because they lay at the end of the great drainage-
system associated with the Tharsis volcanoes. If there were any
moisture on Mars, it would be expected to be there.
Each vehicle consisted of two main parts, an Orbiter and a
Lander (Figs.
35
& 36). Naturally, the two would travel together
136
THE VIKINGS
across interplanetary space, and would be put into a closed
path around Mars in much the same way as for Mariner 9.
At
the planned moment the Lander would be separated, and would
descend through the Martian atmosphere to make a gentle
descent on to the surface, leaving the Orbiter to its own devices.
Not that the Orbiter was at the end of its career: far from it.
Not only would it carry on with its own investigations, but it
would also act as a relay to send back messages from the
Lander. Indeed, without the Orbiter, the Lander would have
been very restricted in its ability to communicate with Earth.
Low gain
antenna
Viking-
lander capsule
Attitude control
gas jets
Fig. 35. The Viking vehicle. {Vikings 1 and 3 were identical.)
The launching vehiclea Titan 3/Centaur rocket combi-
nationhad been well tested, and was expected to give no
trouble. Neither was there any reason to doubt that there would
be any real difficulty in putting the Viking into its path round
Mars. The main risk was in the landing itself, which had to be
completely automatic. Once the order to separate had been
sent from Earth, the landing manoeuvre could be neither
stopped nor modified. Moreover, a time-lag would be inevi-
table, because radio waves would take over nineteen minutes
to reach the Earth. When Viking 1 touched down, the distance
between Mars and ourselves was 212,000,000 miles, while at the
b* 137
GUIDE TO MARS
time when Viking % made its descent Mars was even further
away.
In view of what they accomplished, these first two Vikings
were amazingly small. The Orbiter was octagonal, 8 feet
across, io-8 feet high and a mere 32 feet across die full spread
of its solar panels. The Lander was 10 feet across and
7 feet
high, with a total unfuelled weight of 1270 pounds. It was a
strange-looking, three-legged device (Fig.
36), and everything
S-band
high gain
antenna
Seismometer
Meteorology sensors
eteorology
boom assembly
Temperature
sensor
Biology processor
MagnetsV
Collector head
Fig. 36. Viking Lander. {The biology box, gas chromatographmass
spectrometer, X-ray fluorescence spectrometer and pressure sensor are
internally mounted.)
depended upon its coming down gently and at an acceptable
angle. A tilt ofmore than 19 degrees would put it out of action
insofar as transmissions were concerned, and if the vehicle
landed upon a large boulder it would be fatally damaged; the
clearance of its base from the ground was a mere 8-7 inches.
Unfortunately, boulders of 'dangerous' size were below the
resolving limit of either Orbiter photography or Earth-based
radar measurements, so that a good deal of luck was needed.
Before the actual landings, it is fair to say that the scientists at
138
THE VIKINGS
theJet Propulsion Laboratoryat Pasadena (California) estimated
the chances of success at no more than 50-50,*
It has been claimed that the Lander is the cleverest machine
ever built by Man. This may be true, but it was also extremely
delicate, and it had to be protected as well as possible. It also
had to be sterilized, because to carry any Earth contamination
to Mars would be scientifically disastrous. One way to kill any
organism is by intense heat, and before being sent up the Lander
was accordingly 'cooked' for forty hours in an oven heated to
well above the boiling-point of water. There is every reason to
hope that the treatment was effective. Ofcourse, one can never
be absolutely sure, but the risks have been eliminated as far as
humanly possible, and no doubt this also applies to the Russian
descent capsules.
Politics can never be kept out of science, unfortunately, and
it is a fact that several of the most memorable space-shots have
been timed for reasons that are not, strictly speaking, scientific.
Thus the Space Age began on 4
October 1957,
with a Russian
satellite: the fortieth anniversary of the Bolshevik revolution.
Luna 3,
the first probe to go right round the Moon and send
back pictures of the far side, was dispatched on
4
October 1959.
With Viking, it was hoped to make the initial landing on
4
July 1976,
American Independence Day, but at an early stage
it became clear that this could not be done. There was trouble
before the launching, and Viking 1 was delayed. Eventually
the two vehicles were reversed, so that the probe which should
have been Viking 2 became Viking 1 (and will so be called
hereafter). To the great credit of all concerned, no attempt was
made to speed things up. This might havejeopardized the whole
mission, and the delay was accepted, though doubtless with a
certain amount of regret. Actually, a further delay was en-
countered later on, because the original landing site had to be
rejected, but by then the Independence Day target had been
missed in any case.
*
Aday or so before Viking I landed, I presented a television programme
about it, together with Dr. Garry Hunt and Professor Geoffrey Eglinton.
We had models of the Lander, and we demonstrated what would happen
with touch-downs on various types of Martian surface. As a member of the
studio team commented, we did at least prove one thing. "If you drop
them from a great height," he said dryly, "they break!"
139
GUIDE TO MARS
Viking i finally took off on 30 August
1975, and Viking 2
followed on
9
September. I do not propose to say much about
the launching itself, or about the journey through space; it is
enough to note that there were no major hitches. On
19 June
1976 Viking 1 entered a closed orbit round Mars, and work
began immediately. (By then both the Martian satellites had
been photographed, but I propose to leave all discussion of
these odd little worldlcts until Chapter Thirteen.)
Unlike Mariner
9,
the Viking did not immediately set out to
study the whole surface of Mars. Its first task was to check on
the Chryse landing site in order to make sureso far as
possible!that it really was a suitable place. But even before
entering orbit, it had sent back some truly magnificent far-
encounter pictures which surpassed anything that Mariner
9
had been able to do. The ochre tracts, the dark areas, the basins
and the volcanoes stood out splendidly, and the improvements
in photographic technique were obvious at once.
The pictures which came back soon after Viking had begun
its main programme were absolutely staggering. One view, of
the towering Olympus Mons, was obtained on 31 July from a
distance of 5000 miles; it was rnid-morning on Mars, and the
volcano was wreathed in clouds which extended up the flanks
to an altitude of at least twelve miles. There could be little
doubt that these clouds were of water ice, condensed out of
the atmosphere as it cooled while moving up the slopes of the
volcano. The giant caldera, formed by the collapse of the
volcano top, was splendidly shown above the uppermost clouds.
Another picture, taken later, showed the even larger caldera of
Arsia Mons, one of the other chief members of the Tharsis
group. Then there were smaller features such as the well-
formed, 1
1
-mile crater now called Yuty, in the Chryse area
not too far from the intended landing-site. Yuty is remarkably
lunar in aspect, with regular, terraced walls and a massive
central peak crowned by a pit (Plates VII and XI),
On
3
July Viking sent back a picture of part of the tremen-
dous Vallis Marineris. From a range of 1240 miles, the Valley
was seen to have destroyed part of the wall of a well-formed
crater, and the effect was unlike anything seen before. Remem-
ber, the Valley is well over a mile deep, and dwarfs all
terrestrial canyons. (On this picture there is a strange-looking
140
THE VIKINGS
black ring {Plate V) . This ring is shown on many ofthe Viking 1
pictures, but I hasten to add that it is due to a slight defect in
the optical system, and is in no way Martian.) Then there were
the fault zones, causing valleys which are widened pardy by
collapse and partly by mass wasting, i.e. the downslope move-
ments of rocks due to gravity. Also of special interest were the
subsidence features which could well have been produced by
the melting of ice below the surface; there were sand-dunes,
such as the dune field near the north wall of the Ganges
Chasma; there was a canyon leading into the Valhs Marineris
complex; there were extensive lava-flows, and there were one
or two amazing pictures, one of which showed a mountain
clump which, by chance lighting and shape, gave an uncanny
resemblance to a human face I On 1 1 July Viking obtained a
good oblique view of Argyre Planitia, the large Hellas-type
basin surrounded by thickly cratered terrain. One feature of
this photograph was the presence of detached layers of haze,
15 to 25 miles high (Plate XI).
River beds were much in evidence, and by now there were
very few scientists who believed that they could be anything
other than dry watercourses. All in all, the Viking pictures
added even more interest to what Mariner
9
had already told
us, but the main objective was always to study Chryse, where
the Lander was due to touch down.
Alarm signals had been sounded from Arecibo in Puerto
Rico, where the immense radio telescope, built in a natural
hollow in the ground, had been engaged in radar mapping of
the Chryse area. There seemed to be a greater degree of rough-
ness than had been expected, and the Orbiter pictures added
to the general unease, because quite apart from the desirability
of corning down at an angle of less than 19 degrees it was also
essential to avoid landing upon a rock which would puncture
the space-craft and put it out of action. Eventually the original
site was abandoned, and a second target area selected, still in
Chryse but rather to die north-west. This seemed to be better,
but the final choice was still further west, and the die was cast.
On 20 July, the great attempt began.
Absolute precision was impossible, and all that could be
done was to aim the probe as accurately as possible and hope
for the best. There was every prospect that it would land
141
GUIDE TO MARS
somewhere inside a restricted "ellipse of uncertainty', and there
were no detectable boulders within range, though the planners
were unpleasantly conscious of the fact that neither the radar
nor the Orbiter mapping could show features which would
still be large enough to cause disaster.
The capsule that separated from the Orbiter was made up
of three main sections: the Lander itself, a cone-shaped aero-
shell made up of aluminium alloy, and a base cover. The
Spacecraft
Separation
-^
Deorbit Ig
Orbiter
Enter atmosphere
250 km
Deploy parachute'
6,400 m *7
Entry to landing
6 to 13 minutes
Fig.
37. Descent sequence of the Viking Lander
Lander was enclosed, while the braking engines were part of
the aeroshell and the parachute was in the cover. The whole
procedure was different from that of a Moon landing, because
the atmosphere of Mars, thin though it may be, is dense enough
to cause definite friction, which involves heat. It also means
that parachutes can be used, though they cannot cope with the
full slowing-down process on their own (Fig.
37).
When the descent capsule left the Orbiter, it began its
gradual 'coast down' to Mars. It continued to do so, unham-
pered by any atmospheric drag, for more than three hours, but
14a
THE VIKINGS
at an altitude of 800,000 feet above the surfacethat is to say,
around
1 50 milesthe atmosphere started to make its presence
felt. In preparation for this, the capsule had been turned so
that the aeroshell and its heat shield faced the direction of
travel. By now the capsule was moving at 1 0,000 m.p.h., which
is not far short of three miles per second, and as it dropped
lower and lower the frictional heating built up. The heat shield
proved adequate : the deceleration reached its maximum value
at 15 to 18 miles above ground level, and for a brief period the
path of the capsule levelled off into horizontal flight because of
the aerodynamic lift provided by the capsule. With continued
slowing-down, the heating became less violent, and the
descent could be resumed. At 19,000 feet from the Martian
surface the velocity was a mere 1000 m.p.h., and by now, of
course, the capsule was well below the level of the tops of the
Tharsis volcanoes. This was the moment for the parachute to be
deployed, and seven seconds later the aeroshell, its work done,
separated from the Lander and drifted away, to fall to the
ground well away from the main site.
The last part of the descent was, obviously, the most critical
of all, and the scientists back on Earth could know nothing
about it, because of the iof-minute delay in the reception of
signals. In fact the parachute worked perfectly, and within a
minute the Lander's velocity had dropped so much that the
effects of the winds on its horizontal travel were measurable.
The legs were extended to the landing position, and when the
radar altimeter gave the height at a mere 3900 feet the para-
chute was jettisoned. At the same moment the three terminal
descent engines of the Lander itself came into play, and
seconds later the 440,000,000-mile journey was over. The final
touchdown speed was less than 6 miles per hour. Only an hour
and a halflater, scientists in the control centre at Pasadena were
examining the first pictures ever to be successfully transmitted
from the surface of Mars.
The touch-down position was a mere twenty miles from the
planned impact point, well within the 'ellipse of uncertainty'.
And yet luck had played its part. The Lander came down only
25 feet from a boulder which was ten feet across and three feet
highmore than big enough to have caused fatal damage if
the landing had been made on top of it. As soon as I saw the
H3
GUIDE TO MARS
picture of it, I was reminded of the comment made in the tele-
vision studio when we were demonstrating with models: "If you
drop them from a great height, they break!"
The very first picture, taken immediately after touchdown,
showed that the entire landscape was strewn with rocks. One,
near the centre of the picture, was four feet across, and six feet
away from the Lander. One pad of the third leg was shown,
and had penetrated only i -4 inches into the soil, so that clearly
the Martian surface was reassuringly solid, even though it was
later found that another of the Lander's legs was covered with
sand. The overall impression was of a barren, rocky desert, with
extensive sand-dunes as well as pebbles and boulders. {Plate
XII, top).
What, then, about the colour? On the sol after the landing,
Viking sent back a colour picture showing that the fine,
granular material so much in evidence was rusty red, while
most of the rocks were of similar hue, so that presumably the
red material
when they can not only study photographs taken from close
range, but even analyse samples of the surface materialit is
hardly likely that they will be more in accord when it comes to
Mars. At the moment die two schools of thought are firmly
entrenched, and only dme will show which is more nearly
right.
It is interesting to look back once more, and note how our
ideas about Mars have seesawed. To Hcrschel, and to Lowell,
it was a world capable of supporting life; Lowell believed in a
civilization compared with which homo sapiens would seem
primitive. In the years after Lowell's death, Mars became a
dying planet, devoid of inhabitants and even of advanced
vegetation. Then, following Mariners 6 and
7,
it was dismissed
as a cratered waste, dead and sterile. It has taken Mariner
9
andj above all, the Vikings to prove that we are dealing with a
world which may be going through nothing more than a
temporary ice age. There are many problems to be solved, but
with each new puzzle the fascination of Mars increases.
166
Chapter Thirteen
PHOBOS AND DEIMOS
Most people, I suppose, have read Jonathan Swift's classic
Gulliver's Voyages, To be more precise, most people have read
the voyages to Lilliput (the country of the midgets) and
Brobdignag (the country of the giants). The remaining
Voyages are less famous, but one of them is particularly
relevant in a discussion of Mars. Dr. Lemuel Gulliver is said to
have visited Laputa, an airborne island which probably
qualifies as die first fictional flying saucer. The Laputan
astronomers were so skilful that they had discovered "two lesser
stars, or satellites, which revolve about Mars, whereof the
innermost is distant from the centre of the primary planet
exactiy three of his diameters, the outermost five; the former
revolves in the space of ten hours, the latter in twenty-one and
a half". In other words, the inner satellite moves round Mars so
quickly that it completes its circuit in less than a sol.
The Voyage to Laputa was written in 1727. At that time
there was no telescope in existence powerful enough to show
the two satellites of Mars that we now know to be genuine, and
this was also true when Swift died in 1 745. Five years later, the
French novelist Voltaire wrote a rather strange story, Micro-
mSgas
s
in which the Solar System is visited by a being from the
star Sirius, Voltaire also credited Mars with two moons.
In fact, the Mardan satellites were not discovered until 1877,
and the Swift and Voltaire stories have led to some peculiar
speculations. It has even been suggested that our remote
ancestors had optical instruments which enabled them to track
the satellites down. Unfortunately for this intriguing idea, the
true explanation is very simple, and Voltaire himself wrote it
down. He pointed out that because Mars is further away from
the Sun than we are, how can it possibly manage with less than
two moons?
There was also something of a progression in the numbers
of planetary satellites known in the mid-eighteenth century.
Mercury and Venus appeared to be unattended. (They still
167
GUIDE TO MARS
are. A satellite of Venus has been reported now and then, but
is nothing more than a telescopic 'ghost'.) The Earth, of course,
had one moon. Jupiter had four known satellites, all discovered
by the earliest telescopic observers; Galileo saw them in 1610,
and others detected them at about the same time. Saturn had a
retinue of five: Titan, discovered by Christiaan Huygens in
1655, and Iapetus, Rhea, Dione and Tethys, all found by
Giovanni Cassini between 167 1 and 1684. So there was the
progression: Venus 0, Earth 1, Jupiter 4,
Saturn 5. It was
logical to give two attendants to Mars, and this is what both
Swift and Voltaire proceeded to do.
As larger telescopes were built, more planetary satellites
came to light. By 1 850 the grand total was eighteenEarth 1
,
Jupiter 4,
Saturn 8, Uranus 4 and Neptune 1. Yet only the
Earth among the inner group of planets seemed to be accom-
panied. In
1 783 William Herschel made an unsuccessful search
for a Martian satellite, and in 1862 and 1864 Heinrich d'Arrest,
at the Copenhagen Observatory, was equally luckless, The
general feeling among astronomers was that the poet Tennyson
was right in describing 'the snowy poles of moonless Mars*.
Then came the close opposition of 1877, when Schiaparelli
drew his map of Mars and described the canal network for the
first time. Over in the United States, a well-known observer
named Asaph Hall decided to renew the attempt to find a
satellite. He was well equipped for the search, since he was
able to use the 26-inch refractor at Washingtonone of the
largest telescopes in the world at that time, and also one of the
best (the object-glass was made by Clark, whose skill was second
to none). Hall began work in early August. At first he was as
unsuccessful as Herschel and d'Arrest had been, and apparently
he was on the verge ofgiving up when his wife persuaded him to
continue for at least another few nights.
On 10 August he began observing as usual. For some time
he saw nothing unusual about the background of stars, but at
2.30 in the morning of 1 1 August he caught sight of a very faint
object close to Mars which seemed to be much more promising.
Unfortunately, fog rising from the nearby Potomac River
came up before he had had time to do more than make a quick
observation of the suspected object, and the next four nights
were useless, as cloud and mist prevailed. Finally, on 1 6 August,
168
PHOBOS AND DEIMOS
the weather cleared. Hall was able to recover his suspected
satellite, and he saw that it was moving along together with
Mars, so that it was a true attendant. On the following night
there were startling developments. The original satellite was
seen again, and another was found, even closer-in to Mars.
Hall's announcement, made on 18 August, caused a great
deal of interest, which increased when it became clear that the
inner satellite at least was a most remarkable object. In Hall's
own words, written a few days later: "At first I thought that
there were two or three moons, since it seemed to me at that
time very improbable that a satellite should revolve around its
primary in less time than that in which the primary rotates.
To decide this point, I watched the moon throughout the nights
of 20 and 2 1 August, and saw that there was in fact but one
inner moon, which made its revolution around the primary in
less than one-third the time of the primary's rotation, a case
unique in the Solar System."
Certainly this was very strange. The inner moonactually
the second in order of discovery
provided that he
has adequate telescopic equipment.
The Syrtis Major is a case in point. Sometimes it is said to
look narrow, sometimes broader; and though many of these
alleged changes can be put down to errors in observation or
interpretation, it is at least possible that they have a basis of
reality. Then there is Hellas, which can sometimes appear so
brilliant that it is easily mistaken for an extra ice-cap, but at
other oppositions is so obscure that it is hard to identify at all.
Argyre I shows variations in brightness of the same kind, though
they are less striking.
Clouds are seen frequently, and observations are genuinely
useful. Small clouds, occasionally well enough defined to have
their positions determined, can shift from night to night, and
can provide information about Martian wind velocities. The
major dust-storms come into a different category, and here the
best procedure is to do one's best to define their limits. They
can spread with amazing rapidity, as happened in 1973. I
observed the planet on 1 2 October, and the surface details were
perfectly clear. The next three nights were cloudy. When I
next observed, on 16 October, the dust had covered the planet,
and I could see practically nothing at all.
188
OBSERVING MARS
Much depends upon the altitude of Mars. When the planet is
low down a high magnification will be useless, and there is no
alternative but to wait until the alternative has climbed to a
respectable value. Also, it often happens that a very clear,
transparent night will be unfavourable, with the disk of Mars
wobbling like a jelly. Oddly enough, slight mist is sometimes
advantageous, even though it cuts down the total light received,
because the image can be pleasingly steady.
Without wanting to sound depressing, I must again stress
that small telescopes are unable to show much on Mars even
near opposition. There have been many published drawings
made with such instruments, often showing fine details
together with canalsall of which are completely spurious.
This is no slur upon the integrity of the observers concerned,
but the human eye is notoriously easy to deceive, and there is
always the tendency to draw what one half-expects to see.
Neither is this tendency confined to amateurs: far from it.
One has only to look at the maps produced by Schiaparclli,
Lowell and others, who were using powerful telescopes, but
who still recorded the network of canals which we now know
to be absolutely non-existent.
The phase should never be neglected when making a sketch.
The fraction of the illuminated disk presented to us can go down
to as little as 85%,
and if the observer merely draws a circle and
fills in the detail he can see there are bound to be major errors.
Drawing the disk to the correct phase can, however, be a tedious
process. Personally, I admit that I 'cheat' by using prepared
disks of the type shown here (Fig.
45).
They have the advantage
of looking much neater than freehand phase drawings, and they
are also shown against a black background, though I admit
that this is not strictly necessary. To achieve absolute accuracy
one ought to have a full set of disks, from 100% (i.e. a perfect
circle, as at opposition) down to
85%
{the minimum phase),
but in practice I doubt whether one needs more than half a
dozensay 100%, 98, 95, 92, 89, and 86. An error of one or
two per cent, is, frankly, unimportant.
In general it is wise to adopt a set scale for drawings; the
Mars Section of die British Astronomical Association workers
use 2 inches to the planet's full diameter, and this seems very
suitable. Some observers vary the scale, drawing Mars largest
189
90k
GUIDE TO MARS
when at opposition, but
this seems an unnecessary
refinement.
When sketching Mars,
the first step is to survey
the planet and see just
what is on view. Then
draw in the obvious de-
tails such as the polar caps
and the main dark areas.
When this has been done,
check carefully and note
the time (using the 24-
hour clock, and ignoring
Summer Time ; always
giveG.M.T.) . These main
features should then be
left unaltered. There is
good reason for not
changing them: Mars is
rotating all the time, and
the drift of the markings
across the disk is percep-
tible even over periods of
a few minutes.
Now change to the
highest possible magnifi-
cation andfill intheminor
details, paying particular
attention to the relative
intensities of the various
features, and concentrat-
ing upon anything which
seems unusual (clouds in
particular) .Written notes,
dealing with features of
special interest, can be
added, after which the whole drawing should be re-checked
for accuracy. Finally, add the following data: date, time, name
of observer, type and aperture of telescope, magnification,
190
93>i
97 V.
Fig. 45. Disks to help in making drawings
of Mars ; phase go per cent.,
93
per cent.
and
97
per ccnl
OBSERVING MARS
seeing conditions, and the longitude of the central meridian
of Mars. Should any of these facts be omitted, the drawing
promptly loses most of its value.
Seeing is usually given on the scale proposed by Antoniadi,
ranging from I (perfect) through II (good), III (fair), IV (rather
poor) down to V (so bad that one would not make a drawing
at all unless there was some special reason for attempting it).
The longitude of the central meridian can be calculated
easily, and involves nothing more frightening than simple
addition or subtraction. Various publications, such as the
Handbook of the British Astronomical Association, give the
longitude of the central meridian for o hours G.M.T. each day,
so that all one has to do is to allow for the interval between o
hours and the time of observation. The longitude changes by
the following amounts:
Hours
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Change, degrees
14-6
29-2
43'9
58-5
73*i
877
102-3
1 17-0
131-6
146-2
Minutes Change, degrees
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
20
3
40
50
0-2
O-5
0-7
I'O
1-2
1-7
2-0
2-2
2-4
4-9
7-3
9-7
12-2
Let me give a couple of examples from my own notebook.
(1). I observed Mars on 2 September
1975,
at 01-20 G.M.T.,
15 in. reflector X 360; seeing III, phase 85%. Looking up the
Handbook, I found that at hours on 2 September the central
longitude was 192-
5.
Longitude at hours:
-J-
1 hour
+ 20 minutes
Longitude at 01-20
092-5
14-6
4*9
II2-0
191
GUIDE TO MARS
This meant that the Syrtis Major was on the far side of the
disk; but features such as the Mare Sirenum were on view
5
5" 5"
(ji u to
n <%
a- a" a-
I
-
3.
I.
Q
f
a
i?
1 8
'*r?
Cf
>
JO
en
?d
O
SO
CI
to
1
to
"J
e
o
I
1
D
1 s s
2 S B
* -a ths-o &
8 1
j 8
1
8
J
^ .- t "C .- ,fi "O ."
i!? T3
*J E 3 *- In
I
3
8
a
i ! O K CO O
g
1
+
J3
k.
o
+
Li
o
c
-e
> o
z S
w
3
.o a
Ol o
>> bo
CO CO
s
I
s
+
i
C
ns
J
C
to IS
o),S
60
in
o
+
u
i
Si
II
8-
tn
00
E
u
5
Appendix V
NAMED FEATURES ON MARS
These names have been adopted by the International Astrono-
mical Union. The list is complete to 1977,
but will no doubt
be extended in the very near future. Extra names which are
already in common use {e.g. Yuty, the prominent 11 -mile
crater in Chryse) will certainly receive official approval before
long.
Longitude Latitude
Catena (chain of craters) degrees degrees
Coprates 66 to 56 -15
Ganges 71 to 67
02 to 03
Tithonia 98 to 80 -06
Ckasma (canyon)
Austral in
270
80 to -88
Borealis 65 to 30 +85
Candor 78 to
73
04 to 06
Capri 52 to 32
1410 03
Coprates 68 to
54
11 to 14
Eos 51 to 32
16 to 17
Ganges 52 to 48
08
Hebes 81 to
73
+01 to 01
Ius 98 to 80 -07
Juventae 61 -04
Melas 78 to 70
08 tO 12
Ophir
77
to 64 03 to 09
Tithonia 90 to 80 04
Dorsum (ridge)
Argyre 70
61 to 65
Fossa (long, narrow valley)
Alba 117 to 109 +38 to
+49
Ceraunue 107 +25
Claritas 108 to 105 -19 to 32
Elysium 225 to 219 +28 to +26
Hephaestus 240 to
233 +22 tO +l8
200
NAMED FEATURES ON MARS
Longitude Latitude
degrees degrees
Mareotis 8510 69 +41 to +48
Medusa 162 -08
Memnonia
1 58 to 140 22 to 15
Nili
284 to 279 +20 to +26
Sirenum 163 to 138 36 to 27
Tantalus 105 to
99 +34
to
+47
Tempe 80 to 62
+35
to +46
Thaumasia 100 to 80 36 to 40
Labyrintkus (valley complex)
Noctis no to
92 05 to 08
Mansa (flat-topped elevation)
Deuteroniius
346 to
340 +42 to
+45
Nilosyrtis 290 +32
Protonilus
315 +38
Mons (mountain)
Arsia 121 -09
Ascrseus 104 +12
Elysium 213 +25
Olympus
133 +18
Pavonis 113 +01
Monies (mountains)
Charitum 50 to 32 -57
Hellespont!
315 45 to 48
Nereidum
57
to
43
48 to 38
Phlegra
195 +31 to +46
Tharsis 125 to 101 12 tO +l6
Planilia (plain)
Acidalia
30 +48
Arcadia
155 +48
Amazonis 160
+13
Argyre
43
~49
Chryse
45 +17
Elysium 210 +15
Hellas 290 -45
Isidis 270 +15
Syrtis 290 +*5
Utopia
235 +35
201
GUIDE TO MARS
Longitude Latitude
Planum (plateau or high plain) degrees degrees
Aurora 52 to 48
10 to II
Hesperia 25810 242
10 to 35
Lunae 70 to 60 +05 to +20
Ophir 61 to
55
09 to 1
2
Solis 98 to 88 20 to 30
Syria 105 to 100 10 to 18
Sinai 90 to 70
10 to 20
Patera (shallow, scalloped crater)
Alba no +40
Amphitrites
299 -59
Apollinaris 186 -08
Biblis 124 +02
Hadriaca 267 -3i
Orcus 181 +14
Pavonis 121 +03
Tyrrhena
253
22
Uranius
93
+26
Tholus (hill)
Albor 210
+19
Australis
3=3 -57
Ceraunius
97 +24
Hecates 210
+32
Hippalus 89 +76
Iaxartes *5 +72
Jovis 117 +18
Kison
358 +73
Ortygia 8 +70
Tharsis
9' + 14
Uranius
98 +26
VaUis (valley)
Al Qahira 202 to 194 -23 to -15
Ares 23 to 14 +02 to + 1
Auqakuh 298 +28
Huo Hsing
295
to 292 4-32 to +28
Maadim 183 27 to 20
Mangala 151
1 to 4
Marineris
95
to
45
05 to 15
Nirgal
44
to 36 32 to 27
202
NAMED FEATURES ON MARS
Longitude Latitude
degrees degrees
Kasei 70 to 56 +21
Shalbatana
45
+01 to +15
Simud 40 to
37
00 to +14
Tin
32
4- 10 to +18
Vastitas (widespread lowland)
Borealis continuous
+55
to +67
203
CRATERS
Long. Lat. Long. Lat.
Adams, W. S.
197 +3
1 Darwin, G. H. & C. 20 -57
Agassiz,J. L, R, 89 -70 Dawes, W. R. 322 -9
Airy, G. B. -0.5 Denning, W. F. 326 -18
Antoniadi, E. M,
299 -f22 Douglass, A. E. 70 -52
Arago, F. 33o H-IO Du Martheray, M. 266 -6
Arrhenius, S.
237
40 Du Toit, A. L.
46 -72
Bakhuysen, Eddie, L. A. 218 +12
H. G. van de S.
344
-23 Eiriksson, L.
'74 -'9
Baldet, F.
295 +23 Escalante, F.
245
Barabashov, N.
% +47
Eudoxus
147 -44
Barnard, E. E. 298
-61 Fesenkov, V. G. 87 +22
Becqucrel, H. 8 +22 I'],i 1 1 1 n liirion. C. 312 +26
Beer,W. 8
s
Flaugergues, H. 34i -17
Bianchini, F.
97
-6
4
Focas,J. H.
347 +34
Bjerknes, W. 189 -43 Fontana, F.
73
-64
Boeddicker, O.
197 13 Fournier, G. & V. 287 -4
Bond, G. P.
36 -33 Gale.W.F. 222 -6
Bouguer, P.
333
-19 Galilei, G. 27 +6
Brashear,
J.
A. 120 -54 Galle,
J.
G.
3
1 -51
Briault, P. 270
10 Gilbert, G.
274
-68
Burroughs, E. R.
243 -72 Gill,D.
354
+16
Burton, C. E. 156 -14 GledhillJ.
273 -53
Campbell, Graff, K. 206 21
W.W. &J.W. i95 -54 Green, N. E. 8
-S
2
Cassini,
J.
D. 328 +24 Hadley, G. 203 -'9
Ceruffl,V.
338 +32
Haldane,
J,
B. 231 -53
Chamberlain, T. C 124 -66 Hale, G. E,
36 -36
Charlier, C. V. L. 169 -69 Halley, E.
59
-49
Clark, A.
134 -56 Hartwig, E. 16 -39
Coblentz,W.W. 9i
-55 Heaviside, O.
95
-7r
Columbus, C. 166 -29 Helmholtz, H. von 21 46
Comas Sold,
J.
158 20 Henry, P. & P.
336 +11
Copernicus, N. 169 -50 Herschel,W.
&J.
230 -14
Crommelin, Hipparchus IS' -44
A. C. D. 10
+5
Holden, E. S,
34
26
Crubj L.
197 -43 Holmes, A. 292 -75
Curie, P.
5 +29 Hooke, R.
44 -45
Daly, R. A. 22 -66 Huggins, W. 204 -49
Dana,
J.
D.
32 -73 Hussey, T,J. 127 -54
204
CRATERS
Long. Lat.
HuttonJ.
255
-72
Huxley, T. H.
259
63
Huygens, C.
304
14
Janssen,P.J. C. 322 +3
Jerry-Desloges, R. 276 9
Jeans,
J.
206 70
Jolyj- 42 -75
Jones, H. Spencer 20 19
Kaiser, F.
340
46
von Karman, T.
59
64
Keeler,
J.
E. 152
61
Kepler,
J.
219 47
Knobel, E. 226 6
Korolev.S. P. 196 +73
Kuiper.G.P. 157 -57
Kunowsky, G. K. F. 9 +57
Lambert,
J.
H.
335
20
Lamont,
J.
1
14
59
Lampland, C. O.
79
36
LasselLW. 63
21
Lau, H. E. 107 74
LeVerrier,
U.J.J. 343
-38
Liais, E. 253 -75
Li Fan 153
47
LiuHsin 172 53
Lockyer, N. 199 +28
Lomonosov, M. V. 8 +65
Lowell, P. 81 -52
Lyell.C. 15
-70
Lyot,B. 331 +50
Madler,
J,
H. von
357
n
Magelhsens 1 74
32
Maggini, M. 350
+28
Main.R, 310 77
Maraldi, G. 32
62
Mariner 164 35
Marth,A.
3
+13
Martz.E. P. 217 34
Maunder, E. W.
358
50
McLaughlin, D. B, 22 +22
Mendel, G. 199 59
Mie, G. 220 +48
Long. Lat.
Milankovitch, M. 147 +55
Millochau, G. 275
21
Mitchel, O. M. 284
-68
Molcsworth, P. B. 2 1
1
28
Moreux, T. 315 +42
Muller, G. & H.J. 232
26
Nansen, F
.
1 4
1
50
Newcomb, S. 358
24
Newton, I. 158 40
Nicholson, S. B. 166 o
Niesten, L. 302
28
Oudemans,
J.A.C. 92
10
Pasteur, L.
335
+19
Pcrepelkin, E.J. 65 +52
Pcridier,J. 276 +26
Pettit, E. E. 174
+12
Phillips, T.&
J. 45
~
6
7
Pickering, W. & E.
133 34
Playfair,R. 125 78
Porter, R. W. 114 50
Priestley,J. 228 54
Proctor, R. A. 330
48
Ptolemaeus 158 46
Quenisset, F. 319 +34
Rabe, W. 325 -44
Radau,R.
5
+17
Rayleigh,
J.
W. 240 -76
Redi,F. 267
61
Renaudot, G. 297 +42
Reuyl, D. 193
-10
Reynolds,. 160 74
Richardson, L, F. 181 73
Ritchey, G. W. F. 51 29
Ross, F. E. 108 58
Rossby, G. G. 192 48
Rudaux, L. 309 +38
Russell, H. N. 348 55
Rutherford, E. 11 +19
Schaeberle,
J.
M. 310 24
Schiaparelli, G. V.
343
3
Schmidt,
J.
& O.
79
72
205
GUIDE
'
ro MARS
Long Lat.
Schroter,
J.
H.
34
2 Trouvelot, E. L.
Secchi, A. 258 -58 Trumpler,
R.J.
Sharonov, V. V.
59 +27 Tycho Brahe
Sklodowska, M.
3 +34 TyndaUjJ.
Slipher,
Very, F. W.
E. C. & V. M, 84 -48 da Vinci, L.
Smith, W. 103 -66 Vinogradsky, S. N
South,
J. 339
-77 Vishniac, W.
Spallanzani, L.
273 -58 Vogel, H.
Steno, N.
115 -68 Wallace, A. R.
Stokes, G. G. 189 +56 Wegener, A.
Stoney,G.
J. '34 -69 Weinbaum, S.
Suess, E.
179 -67 Wells, H. G,
Teisserenc de Bort, Williams, A. S.
J 315 +1 Wirtz, K.
Terby, F, 286 -28 Wislencius, W,
Tikhov, G. A.
254 -5i Wright, W. H.
Craters on Phobos
D'Arrest, H. Stickney, A.
Hall, A. Todd, D. (There is also one
Roche, E. Wendell, W. on Phobos: Keple
Sharpless, B, P.
Craters on Deimos
Swift,
J. Voltaire, F. M. A
Long. Lat.
13 +16
5*
-62
214 50
190 +40
177 -50
39
+2
217 -56
276 -77
13 -37
249 -53
4
-65
245
-66
238 60
164 -18
26 -49
349
-18
151 -59
206
INDEXES
INDEX TO FORMATIONS REFERRED TO IN
THE TEXT
Acidalia, 88, 97, 98, in, 137, 136, 187 Fastigium Aryn,
98
Aeria, 67, 97
jEtheria, 98
Mxkdopk, 98
Airy-O, ia6
Alba Patera, 96, 152
Albor Mons, 126
Alpheus,
97, 131
Amazonis,
99, 127, 152
Arabia, 67, 97
Araxes,
99
Arcadia,
gg, 102
Argyre I,
96, gg, 120, 131, 137, 141,
165, t88
Argyre II, 130, 131
Arsia Mons ('South Spot"), g6, 99, 120, Isidb, 97, 126
127, 140 Ismenius, 5
1
Ascraeus Mons ('North Spot'),
99, ng,
127 Juvcnta:, 93, 130
Atlantis, 1 10
Aurora;, 99, 130 Korolev, 131, 152
Ganges,
93, 141
'Giant's Footprint', 114
Hades, 98
Iladriaca, 98
Hecates Tholus, 126
Hellas,
76, 93, 96, 97, 113, 114, 117,
]2o, 181, 131, 152, 165, 188
Hcllespontica Depressio, 113-14
Hcllcspontus, 98, i;;i
Hesperia, g8
Hiddckel, 68, 126
Homim, Mare, see Vastilas Borealb Libya, 98
Luna:, 51, 93, 96, 99, 127
Castus, 68
Castorius, 102
Geraunjus,
99
Cerberus, 98
'Chandelier', the, 130
Cliroitium. Mare, 1 1
1
Chryse, 48, 93, 96, 99, 127, 136, 141, NUiacus Lacus, 98
Margaritifcr, 96, 98, 130, 134
Mcmnonia,
99
Meridian!, 96, 98, 113, 126
Mie, 126, 148
'45. '49
Cimmerium, 98, 130
Copratcs, 99, 130
Cydonia, 136, 147, 148
Deucalionis, 97, 113
Dioscuria, 67
Electris, 98, i 1
1
Elysium, 126
Erebus, 98
Eridania, 98
Erythrasum, 99, 130, 134
Euphrates, 68, 136
Nilosyrtis, 51
Nilosyrtis Mensa, 96
Noachis, 98
Nocris, 96, 127, 129
Nodus Gordii, see Arsia Mons
Novissima Thylc, 83, 84
Olympia, 84
Olympus Mons ('Nix Olympica'), 96,
gg, 113, 119, 120, 126, 140, 165
Pandora:,
97
Pavonis Mons ('Pavonis Lacus', 'Middle
Spot"),
93, 99, 119, 120, 127
209
INDEX
Peneus, 97, 131
PtuEthontis, 99, 1 10
Phison, 51, 68, 126
Phlegra, 110
Phoenicia, 48, 51, 99
Proctor, 131
Propontis, 102
Protonilus, 126
Ptolenweus, 130
Rasena 1 3
1
Rima Angusta, 83
Rima Australis, 83
Sabxus, 97, 113, tso
Sirenum Fossa, 96
Sirenum Mare, 99, 113, 130, 169
Sobs, 87, 96, 99
Siii klii:y, 174
Styx, 98
Swift, 169, 174
Syrtis Major,
37, 44, 76, 87, 88, 93,
121, 126, 187, 188, 19a
97,
Tempe,
99
Tharsis, 81, 99, 11 9, 130, 126-7, '43
Thaumasia,
99
Thyle I, 102, 131
Thylc II, 102, 131
Tithonius, 80, 99
Tractus AI bus, 127
Trivium Charontis, 51, 54, 77, 98
Tyrrheaa,
93, 120, 131
Utopia,
93, 96, 97, 126, 147-9, 152
Vallis Marineris, 80, 96, 99, 127, 140-1
Vaslilas Borealis, 96, 102, 121, 131
Voltaire, 169, 174
Xanthe, 99, 127
Yury, 140
Zea Lacus, 131
210
GENERAL INDEX
Adams, W. S. 72
Antoniadi, E. M,, 60, 64, 78, 83-5, 87,
i3>
Apennines (lunar), 163
Apollo missions, 112, 181
Arago, F.,
44
Arecibo, radio telescope at, 141, 148
Argon on Mars, 146-7, 160
Arizona Crater, 15, 164
Armstrong, N., 112, 178
Arrhenius, S-, 65, go
Asteroids, the, 16, 41, 165, 176
Astrology,
33
Atmosphere, Martian
:
artificial production of?, 181^3
composition of, 72-3, Hi, 146
density and pressure of, 31, 32, 70-1,
81, III, 113, 118, 147, 160, 181
evolution of, 160
water vapour in, 15a
Barabaschev, N,, 70
Barnard, E. E., 92
Barnard's Star, 12
Bases, Martian, 182
Beer, W., 40, 43, 51
Brenner, L.,
59
Catdcras, volcanic, 164-5
Calendar, Martian, 27
Campani,
39
Canals on Mars, 49-68, 189
discovery of, 51-a
geminations, 52
non-existence of, 66-8
Canopus, 106-7, 1 12-13
Capcn, C. F 88
Caps, set Polar Caps
Cassini, G, D., 38-9, 82
Castelli, P.,
35
Ccrulli, V.,
59
Chlorophyll on Mars?, 89
Clark, object-glass by, 168
Clouds, Martian, 76-8, 188
Contamination problems, 179-80
Copernican Theory, 19-^20
Craters on Mars, 58, 92-3
origin of, 120-1
Cyr, D. L., 58
D'Arrest, H., 168
Dark areas on Mars, 86-91
colour of, 87-8
covering of, 116, 144
nature of,
44, 87, 88-9, 90, 1 10
Darwin, G. II., 16
Dauvillier, A., 90
Dawes, W. R,, 46, 52
Deimos, 16, 119, 167-77
colour of, 170
craters on, 173-5
data, 195
dimensions of, 1 70
discovery of, 169
eclipses of, 171-2
escape velocity of, 170
map of, 176
naming of, 169
rotation period of, 173
transmitter on?, 183
visibility from Mars, 170-1
De la Rue, W.,
44, 51
Dencb, 28
De Vaucouleurs, G, 70, 73, 74, 79, 85,
86
Dollfus, A., 65, 70, 85
Doppler Effect, 72
Dunham, T., 72, 119
Dust-storms, Martian, 77-80, 119, 188
Earth, atmospheric evolution of, 31
seasons of, 25
status of, 12
Eglinton, G, 139
Escape velocity, 30-1
Features on Mars, types of,
93, 96
Fescnkov, V., 87
Firet Point of Aries, 161
Ftammarion, C, 44, 60
Flaugergucs, H., 42, 77
Fontana, F., 36-7
211
INDEX
Fontenelle, B.,
49
Fraunhofer Lines,
57
Gagarin, Y., 103
Galapagos Islands, 127
Galileo, 91, 35
Gas Exchange experiment, 1 56
Green, N. E., 46, 59
Gulliver's Voyages, 167
Guzman Prize, 18
Hale, G. E., 60
Hall: A., 60, 168-9
Harding, K., 41
Harriott, T,,
34
Hawaiian volcanoes, ISO, [97
Herschcl, W., 40-1, 49, 69, 82, 166
Hess, S. L., 70, 74, 75, 76
Housden, C, E., 58
Huggins, W., 79
Hunt, G., 139, 145
Huygens, C, 37-8, 168
Iceland, 127, 144
Imbrium, Mare, 163
Jarussen,
J.,
71-9
Juno, 41
Jupiter, 12, 13, 16-17, 18
Kaiser, F.,
44, 51
Kami, L., 69
Karrer, S.,
73
Kepler,
J.,
21
Kiess, G. C,
73
Kiess, H. K.,
73
Knobel, E., 5a
Krakatoa, 80, 90
Kuiper, G. P., 73, 74, 85, 86, 170
Labelled Release experiment, 155-6
Lampland, C. O,,
74
Lasscll, YV., 51
Liais, E.. 44, 87
Lichens, 89
Life on Mars;
future, 184
search for, 1 36, 154-7
Link, F.,
75
Lippershey, H.,
34
Littzow,
J,
von,
49
Lockyer, N.,
44, 51
Lohse, P., 52
Lowell, P. 11, 55-9, 64, 84-5, 86, 130"
158, 166
Luna 2, 117, 1 78
Lunokhod vehicles, 178-9
Lyot, B,, 86
Madler.J, H., 40, 43, 51
Maraldi, G-, 39, 89
Mariner-1, 108
-2, 108
-3= i9
-4, 66, 91, 105-7, 109-12
-5. na
-6, 66, 1 12-15, '66
-7, 66, 1 12-15, '66
-8, 116, 131
-9. 66, 77. 79. 93.
1 16-30, 136, 173
-10, 14, 165
Mars, 11, 12, 17
ancient observations of,
33
atmosphere of, see Atmosphere
brightness of, 22
calendar of, 27
colour of,
33
core of, 29
craters of, see Graters
dark areas, see Dark areas
data, 195
escape velocity of, 3
1
flattening of, 28
interior of, 28-g
ionosphere of, 183
list of surface features, 200-6
magnetic field, lack of, 29, 1 18
magnetic materials on, 154
manned expeditions to, 180-1
observing hints, 187-93
oppositions of, 224, 193
orbit of, 31, 161
phases of, 24, i8g
polar caps of, see Polar Caps
pole star of, 28
precession of, 28
retrograding of,
34
rotation of, 26, 191
seasons of, 25
seen from Earth, 97-102
sky, colour of, 144
snowfall on?, 152
surface, description of, 121-33
surface gravity of, 29-30
telescopic observation of, early,
36-9,82
212
INDEX
temperatures on, 59, 113-14, n8,
Ho. *49
volcanoes on, 11-20, 86, 131, 140
Mars-t, 107
-2,77, 1 16-17
-3.77. 1 16-17
-4. '34
-5. 134
-6. 134
-7. '35
'Martians', communicating with, 18, 49
Maunder, E. W.,
59
McCall, G.J., 164
McLaughlin, D. B., go
Mcllish,
J.
E., 92
Mercury, 12, 14, 18, 30, 64, 165, 168
Meteorites, danger from, 107-8, 181
Meteors, seen on Mars,
75
Mktomigas, 167
Mills, A., 165
Mitchel, O. M., 83
Moon, the, 15
craters, origin of, 15, 163-5
nomenclature, 130
origin of, 16
rays on, 164
surface gravity on, 30
Mountains of Mitchel, 83
Neptune, 12, 16
Newton, Sir Isaac, 104
Nomenclature, Martian, 46-7, 50, 93,
130
Oases, Martian, 54, 86
Occultations by Mais, 40-1
Occultation Experiment, 1 1
1
Opik, E,
J., 58, 70, 74, 88, 89, 91
Oxygen on Mars, 72, 147
Perrotin, H,
54, 59
Phobos, 16, 1 1 g, 167-77
colour of, 170
craters on, 173-5
data, 195
dimensions of, 1 70
discovery of, 169
eclipses, 17
1-2
escape velocity of, 170
map of, 174
origin of, 176-7
rotation period of, 173
transmitters on?, 183
visibility from Mars, 170-1
Pickering, W. H., 54-5, 86, 87
Pioneer- 1 o, 13, 17-18
n, 18
Planets, origin of, 16
Pluto, 12, 17, 55
Polar caps
:
band round, 84-5, 131
composition of, 40, 42, 82,85, 151 -2,
"59.
> 6a
depth of, 83
discovery of, 39, 82
extent of, 82
temperatures of, 151-2
Polaris, 27, 161
Precession, 28, 160-1
of Mars, l6i-2
Probes, Martian, list of, 198-9
Proctor, R, A., 46, 159
Martian nomenclature of, 46-7
Ptolemaic Theory, 19, 35
Pyrolitic Release experiment, 154
Railways on Mars, possibility of, 183
Ranyard, A. C., 85, 1 1
1
Richardson, R. S., 65
River beds on Mars, 141, 151, 159, 163
-age of, 159
Roberts, G.,
79
Rockets, future of, 179
paths of, 105-6
principle of, 104-5
Rover, Martian, 179
Sagan, G., 160, 162
Saheki, T., 80
Salyut, 182
Satellites, in Solar System, 168
of Mars, see. Phobos ami Deirnos
unknown, of Mars, 170
Saturn, 12, 16, 17, 18, 35
Schiaparclli, G. V., 50-4, 83, 113, 120,
168
Schroter,
J.
H., 41-9
Secchi, A., 44, 51
Seismometer, on Viking, 147, 149
Sharonov, V. V., 70
Sharpless, B. P., 172
Shield volcanoes, 190, 126-7, l6
3
Sbklovsky, L, 172-3
Sigma Octantis, 28, 161
Simon, W. M., 89
Skylab, 181, 189
Slipher, V. M., 76
213
INDEX
SofTen, G., 158
Sol, the, 36
Solar System, plan of, 13-13
Space-stations, 182
Spectroscopic observations of Mais, 46,
71,89
Sputnik I, 103
Stars, distances of, 13
Stickncy, A., 169
Stoney,
J., 85, 1 1
1
Swift, Jonathan, 167
Sytinskaya, N., 70
Telescopes, invention of,
34
Tennyson, 168
Terby, F.,
54
Theophilus (lunar crater), 163
Thollon,
54, 59
Thuban, 161
Tibesti Desert, 144
Tikhoff, G, A., 89
Titan, 17, 18, 37
Tombaugh, C, 64
Transfer orbits, 105-6
Tsiolkovskii, K. E,, 104
Tycho lira In-. 20-1,
34
Tycho (lunar crater), 164
Uranus, 12, 16, 18, 29-30, 40
Vega, t6t
Venus, it, 14, ai, 35, 64, 103, 134
craters on, 165
satellite of?, 167-8
Vikings, 11, 31, 73, 80, 85, 104, m,
136-58
'grabs' from, 153-3
Landers, 137-9, '43-3, 144
landing sites, 136, 141, 148
landing technique, 142-3
launch, 137, 139
Orbiters, 137-8, 142
Orbiters, 'walking' of, 149-50
pictures from, 144, 148
rocks, moving by, 157
surface analysis from, 153
Violet Layer, 73-6, 81, 114
Vogel, H., 7a
Voltaire, 167
Voyager probes, 18
Wallace, A. R., 58
'Wave of darkening
1
, 57, 75, 87
Weather forecasts, Martian, 145-6
Wiidt, R., 86
Williams, A. S.,
54
Winds, Martian, 79-80, 89, 145
Xenoliths, 148
Yellow clouds, set Dust-storms
Zellner, B., 175
Zond-2, 1 1 a
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