Title: Surface Ice, Mars
Source: Viking Lander 2
Information: This high-resolution color
photo of the surface of Mars was taken by Viking Lander 2 at its Utopia
Planitia landing site on May 18, 1979 and relayed to Earth by Orbiter
1 on June 7. It shows a thin coating of water ice on the rocks and
soil. The time the frost appeared corresponds almost exactly with
the buildup of frost one Martian year (23 Earth months) ago. then
it remained on the surface for about 100 days. Scientists believe
dust particles in the atmosphere pick up bits of solid water. That
combination is not heavy enough to settle to the ground. But carbon
dioxide, which makes up 95 percent of the Martian atmosphere, freezes
and adheres to the particles and they become heavy enough to sink.
Warmed by the Sun, the surface evaporates the carbon dioxide and returns
it to the atmosphere, leaving behind the water and dust. The ice seen
in this picture is extremely thin, perhaps no more than one-thousandth
of an inch thick.
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