Flying over the North Pole of Mars
AI Summary2 min read
TL;DR
A video compiled from ESA's Mars Express mission shows a flight over Mars' North Pole, revealing orange landscapes, the white polar ice cap, and the North Polar Basin during spring when carbon-dioxide ice evaporates.
Flying over the North Pole of Mars
Video Credit: ESA, Mars Express, VMC; Processing & License: Simeon Schmauß
Explanation: If you could fly over the North Pole of Mars, what would you see? Images from ESA’s Mars Express mission in 2019 were compiled into the featured video which shows just such a trip. First you see below you a landscape tinted orange by rusted iron in the fine soil, with some land appearing darker due to exposed rock. Soon the northern polar cap comes into view, mostly white because of its reflective frozen water. Surrounding the polar cap is the North Polar Basin, a layered depression covered with dust and sand. The frames in the featured video were captured during northern Martian Spring when the carbon-dioxide ice is evaporating, leaving the underlying water-ice in the cap. Mars Express continues to study the Martian surface and look for clues about the Red Planet's ancient climate and potential for life.