| Phobos as imaged by Mars Global Surveyor on June 1 2003. | |
| Discovery | |
|---|---|
| Discovered by | Asaph Hall |
| Discovered on | August 18, 1877 |
| Orbital characteristics (Epoch J2000) | |
| Mean radius | 9377.2 km 1 |
| Circumference | 58,915 km |
| Eccentricity | 0.0151 |
| Periapsis | 9235.6 km |
| Apoapsis | 9518.8 km |
| Revolution period | 0.318 910 23 d (7 h 39.2 min) |
| Avg. Orbital Speed | 2.138 km/s |
| Inclination | 1.093° (to Mars' equator) 0.046° (to local Laplace plane) 26.04° (to the ecliptic) |
| Satellite of | Mars |
| Physical characteristics | |
| Mean diameter | 22.2 km (26.8 × 21 × 18.4) (0.0021 Earths) |
| Oblateness | 0.31-0.12 |
| Surface area | ~6,100 km² (11.9 µEarths) |
| Volume | ~5,500 km3 (5.0 nEarths) |
| Mass | 1.07 kg (1.8 nEarths) |
| Mean density | 1.9 g/cm³ |
| Surface gravity | 0.0084 - 0.0019 m/s² (8.4-1.9 mm/s²) (860-190 µg) |
| Escape velocity | 0.011 km/s (11 m/s) |
| Rotation period | synchronous |
| Rotation velocity | 11.0 km/h (at the longest axis' tips) |
| Axial tilt | 0° |
| Albedo | 0.07 |
| Surface temp. | ≈233 K |
| Atmospheric pressure | no atmosphere |
The notebook of the discovery of Phobos by Asaph Hall is as follows:
The names were suggested by Henry Madan (1838–1901), Science Master of Eton, from Book XV of the Iliad, where Ares summons Fear and Fright.
Phobos was photographed close-up by Mariner 9 in 1971, Viking 1 in 1977, Phobos 2 in 1988, Mars Global Surveyor in 1998 and 2003, and by Mars Express in 2004 .
This low orbit means that Phobos will eventually be destroyed: tidal forces are lowering its orbit, currently at the rate of about 1.8 metres per century, and in about 50 million years it will either impact the surface of Mars or (more likely) break up into a planetary ring. Given Phobos' irregular shape (intermediate between a prolate and oblate spheroid) and modeling it as a pile of rubble (specifically a Mohr-Coulomb body), it has been calculated that Phobos is stable with respect to tidal forces, but it is estimated that Phobos will pass the Roche Limit for a rubble pile of its description when its orbital radius drops to about 8400 km, and will probably break up soon afterwards Holsapple K.A. (2001), Equilibrium Configurations of Solid Cohesionless Bodies, Icarus, v. 154, p. 432–448 *. Because of its ellipsoidal shape alone, the gravity on Phobos' surface varies by about 210%; the tidal forces raised by Mars more than double this variation (to about 450%) because they compensate for a little more than half of Phobos' gravity at its sub- and anti-Mars poles.
As seen from Phobos, Mars would be 6400 times larger and 2500 times brighter than the full Moon as seen from Earth, taking up a full 1/4 of the width of a celestial hemisphere.
As seen from Mars' equator, Phobos would be one-third the angular diameter of the full Moon as seen from Earth. Observers at higher Martian latitudes (less than the 70.4° latitude of invisibility) would see a smaller angular diameter because they would be farther away from Phobos. Phobos' apparent size would actually vary by up to 45% as it passed overhead, due to its proximity to Mars' surface. For an equatorial observer, for example, Phobos would be about 0.14° upon rising and swell to 0.20° by the time it reaches the zenith. By comparison, the Sun would have an apparent size of about 0.35° in the Martian sky.
Phobos' phases, in as much as they could be observed from Mars, take 0.3191 days to run their course (Phobos' synodic period), a mere 13 seconds longer than Phobos' sidereal period.
The Soviet spacecraft Phobos 2 detected a faint but steady outgassing from Phobos. Unfortunately Phobos 2 failed before it could determine the nature of the material, but it is most likely water. Recent images from Mars Global Surveyor indicates that Phobos is covered with a layer of fine dust about a metre thick, similar to the regolith on the Earth's Moon.
Phobos is highly nonspherical, with dimensions of 27 × 21.6 × 18.8 km. It is heavily cratered, and the most prominent surface feature is the large crater named Stickney, after the maiden name of Asaph Hall's wife Chloe Angeline Stickney Hall. Like Mimas's crater Herschel on a smaller scale, the impact that created Stickney must have almost shattered Phobos. The grooves and streaks on the surface were probably also caused by the Stickney impact. The grooves are typically less than 30 m deep, 100 – 200 m wide, and up to 20 km in length.
The unique Kaidun meteorite is claimed to be a piece of Phobos, but this has been difficult to verify since little is known about the composition of the moon.
Phobos and Deimos both have much in common with carbonaceous (C-type) asteroids, with very similar spectra, albedo and density to those seen in C-type asteroids. This has led to speculation that both moons could have been captured into Martian orbit from the main asteroid belt. However, both moons have very circular orbits which lie almost exactly in Mars' equatorial plane, while captured moons would be expected to have eccentric orbits in random inclinations. Some evidence suggests that Mars was once surrounded by many Phobos- and Deimos-sized bodies, perhaps ejected into orbit around it by a collision with a large planetesimal Craddock R.A. (1994), The Origin of Phobos and Deimos, Abstracts of the 25th Lunar and Planetary Science Conference, held in Houston, TX, 14-18 March 1994., p.293.
Competing explanations were based on the land tides Phobos could raise on Mars. The reality of the secular acceleration itself (corresponding to an altitude loss of about 5 per revolution, about 5 cm per year) was later subjected to doubt, and the problem vanished on its own by 1969. In a February 1960 letter to the journal Astronautics, however, Siegfried Frederick Singer, then science advisor to President Eisenhower, came out in support of Shklovsky's theory, going as far as stating that "* purpose would probably be to sweep up radiation in Mars' atmosphere, so that Martians could safely operate around their planet". A few years later, in 1963, Raymond H. Wilson Jr., Chief of Applied Mathematics at NASA, allegedly announced to the Institute of Aerospace Sciences that "Phobos might be a colossal base orbiting Mars", and that NASA itself was considering the possibility.
Similar "hollow Moon" claims occurred at around the same time.
Phobos (maan) | Фобос (спътник) | Fobos (satèl·lit) | Phobos (měsíc) | Phobos | Phobos (måne) | Phobos (Mond) | Fobos (luna) | Fobo | فوبوس | Phobos (lune) | Fobos (mjesec) | Fóbos | Phobos (luna) | פובוס (ירח) | Phobos (satelles) | Fobas (palydovas) | Phobos (maan) | フォボス (衛星) | Phobos | Marsmånen Phobos | Phobos (księżyc) | Fobos | Фобос (спутник Марса) | Fobos (mesiac) | Fobos (luna) | Фобос | Phobos | Phobos (måne) | โฟบอส | Phobos (buwan) | Фобос (супутник) | 火卫一
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"Phobos (moon)".
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