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Published March 25, 2000 | Published
Journal Article Open

Surface properties of Mars' polar layered deposits and polar landing sites

Abstract

On December 3, 1999, the Mars Polar Lander and Mars Microprobes will land on the planet's south polar layered deposits near (76°S, 195°W) and conduct the first in situ studies of the planet's polar regions. The scientific goals of these missions address several poorly understood and globally significant issues, such as polar meteorology, the composition and volatile content of the layered deposits, the erosional state and mass balance of their surface, their possible relationship to climate cycles, and the nature of bright and dark aeolian material. Derived thermal inertias of the southern layered deposits are very low (50–100 J m^(−2) s^(−1/2) K^(−1)), suggesting that the surface down to a depth of a few centimeters is generally fine grained or porous and free of an appreciable amount of rock or ice. The landing site region is smoother than typical cratered terrain on ∼1 km pixel^(−1) Viking Orbiter images but contains low-relief texture on ∼5 to 100 m pixel^(−1) Mariner 9 and Mars Global Surveyor images. The surface of the southern deposits is older than that of the northern deposits and appears to be modified by aeolian erosion or ablation of ground ice.

Additional Information

© 2000 American Geophysical Union. Received June 8, 1999; revised October 11, 1999; accepted October 12, 1999. Paper number 1999JE001108. This work was part of the Mars Polar Lander site selection effort. A.V. was supported by NASA grant NAGW 5-4367. We gratefully acknowledge the Mars Orbiter Laser Altimeter and the Mars Orbiter Camera teams, especially David Smith, Maria Zuber, and Michael Malin for sharing their results and acquiring excellent data in support of the landing site selection. Gary Hansen and Alan Howard provided valuable reviews of the manuscript

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August 19, 2023
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