A European
spacecraft is making its closest ever pass by the Martian moon Phobos today to
scan never-before-seen regions of the small, rocky satellite.
The
European Space Agency's (ESA) Mars Express spacecraft will skim just 60 miles
(97 km) above the surface
of Phobos, one of Mars' two diminutive moons, during today's pass. The flyby
is the third and closest in a series of five swings past Phobos this summer
to study the moon in unprecedented detail.
With a
diameter of just 13.5 miles (22 km), Phobos is larger than Mars' second moon
Deimos (7.4 miles, or 12 km, along its long axis). Both satellites were first
spotted by astronomer Asaph Hall in 1877, but researchers are still unsure
whether the moons are actually captured asteroids, ancient planetismals from
the birth of the solar system, or the remains of a massive
Martian impact.
Mars
Express made its first summer swing by Phobos on July 12 at a distance of about
350 miles (563 km), with subsequent passes bringing the spacecraft within 60 miles
(97 km) of the moon at the closest and out as far as 412 miles (664 km) on the final flyby
set for Aug. 3. The probe has flown by Phobos before, such as its August 2004 pass
at a range of about 124 miles (200 km), but never as close as today's visit,
ESA officials said.
Mars Express
has turned its full complement of science instruments on Phobos for its flyby series, including a high-resolution camera for
mapping and three-dimensional images, a subsurface-probing radar to study the moon's
interior and other tools to take detailed measurements of Phobos' mass,
composition and other features.
Mission
managers said Mars Express may also catch a glimpse of the planned destination for Russia's
Phobos-Grunt lander, a spacecraft slated to launch in 2009 to collect samples
of the small Martian moon.
Mars
Express is not the only spacecraft to take a look at Phobos this
year.
In April,
NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter turned its camera eyes on the pitted moon
from a distance of about 3,600 miles (5,800 miles) and returned some of the most
detailed views of Phobos to date with its High-Resolution Imaging Science
Experiment (HiRISE) camera.