History of Mars Exploration History of Mars Exploration Analyze historical and modern Mars data to develop an evolving understanding of Mars. Models how scientists have historically viewed Mars. Early Exploration 1609 - 1965 Early Exploration Nicolaus Copernicus Published De revolutionibus orbium coelestium (On the Revolutions of the Celestial Spheres) in 1543 Early Exploration Tycho Brahe Observations of Mars in 1583 showed Mars could move closer to Earth than it did to the Sun. Possible in a heliocentric universe, but not geocentric. Early Exploration Ptolemaic System Early Exploration Tychonian System Early Exploration Johannes Kepler Assistant to Brahe; derives first two laws of planetary motion in 1609. 1st law derived from Brahe’s observations of Mars. Early Exploration Though these early observations helped scientists accurately describe the motion of Mars in the sky, nothing about the planet itself was known. Mars retrograde motion. Image Credit: Tunç Tezel Early Exploration Beginning with Galileo, scientists were able to observe Mars with a new tool, the telescope. William Herschel’s 40ft telescope, 1789. Percival Lowell at Lowell Observatory. Early Exploration Galileo Galilei observed Mars in 1610 and wrote: “…unless I am deceiving myself, I believe that I have already seen that it is not perfectly round.” Early Exploration Christiaan Huygens made the first (known) sketch of Mars in 1659; determined a rotational period for Mars: “The Rotation of Mars, like that of the Earth, seems to have a period of 24 hours.” Early Exploration Giovanni Cassini calculated a rotational period of 24 hrs, 40 min; may have been first to report the southern polar cap in 1666. Early Exploration French author Bernard le Bovier de Fontenelle wrote about Mars in 1686: “Mars has nothing curious that I know of; its days are not quite an hour longer than ours and its year’s the value of two of ours. It’s smaller than the Earth, it sees the Sun a little less large and bright than we see it; in sum, Mars isn’t worth the trouble stopping there.” From Conversations on the Plurality of Worlds Early Exploration In 1783, William Herschel determined Mars to have a diameter 0.55x Earth’s and an obliquity of ~28°; noted the south polar cap. Early Exploration Herschel also noted: “I have often noticed occasional changes of partial bright belts…and also a darkish one, in a pretty high latitude… And these alterations we can hardly ascribe to any other cause than the variable disposition of clouds and vapors…” Early Exploration Herschel concluded the inhabitants of Mars “probably enjoy a situation in many respects similar to ours.” Early Exploration • Giovanni Schiaparelli popularized the straight lines he called canali (can mean “channels” or “canals”). He also used fiume or “river.” • Started a new nomenclature for Martian features. Early Exploration Map of Mars by Schiaparelli, 1877 Early Exploration Asaph Hall of the US Naval Observatory discovered the two moons of Mars in 1877. Moons Deimos – 15 km (9.3 miles) Phobos – 26.8 km (16.7 miles) Early Exploration • Percival Lowell misinterpreted “canali” to mean canals (artificial); mapped 437 “canals” in 917 sketches; took the idea of artificial canals to the grave. • Calculated an atmospheric pressure of 85 millibars (8.5% of Earth’s) Lowell’s Martian canals, ca. 1900 Early Exploration Let’s look at some data… Early Exploration What are limitations to this type of mission and its instruments? What observations can you make from this data? (Please select the relevant images and prepare to post them on your poster.) How would you interpret these observations? How would you generalize the Mars environment from these images / data? What new questions do you have about Mars? What type of data do you need to answer these questions? Early Exploration Early Mars Exploration Data Presentation Early Exploration Setting aside the argument of whether or not the canals were real, astronomers knew with certainty that the surface of Mars changed - dark and light patterns did not remain the same over time. Mars Map by Eugène Michel Antoniadi, 1930 Early Exploration Pettit, E. & Nicholson, S.B. (1924). Measurements of the radiation from the planet Mars, Popular Astronomy, Vol. 32, p. 601. Early Exploration • What did they find? ~ 7° C at the equator ~ -68° C at the southern polar cap • As telescopes improved, astronomers became confident that Mars had a polar cap. The question remained, what was it made of? - Water? Freezing temperature of 0° C - CO2? Freezing temperature of about -78.5° C Early Exploration In 1947, Gerard Kuiper made the 1st positive ID of CO2 in the atmosphere of Mars. Early Exploration • In 1950, the best guess* for the composition of the Martian atmosphere was: - 98.5% N - 1.2% Ar - 0.25% CO2 - <0.1% O *Estimates from Gérard de Vaucouleurs; also calculated an atmospheric pressure of 87 millibars (8.7% Earth’s). Early Exploration • In 1963*, the “probable composition of the Martian atmosphere” was believed to be: • 72% N2 • 25% CO2 • 2% Ar • < 0.5% O2 • Trace amounts of H2O *Estimates from NASA Technical Document NASA-TM-X-56223, 1963; presented at the Symposium on Extraterrestrial Biology and Organic Chemistry, Warsaw, June 3-12, 1963. Early Exploration • Spinrad, Munch, & Kaplan in 1963 calculated: • An average precipitable water amount of 14 micrometers (Earth 2.5cm); MARS IS DRY Early Exploration • Spinrad, Munch, & Kaplan in 1963 calculated: • An average precipitable water amount of 14 micrometers (Earth 2.5cm); MARS IS DRY • An atmospheric pressure of 25 millibars (2.5% Earth’s) From Spinrad, Munch & Kaplan, 1963 Early Exploration “A third presence on Mars indicates a living world: vegetation. The evidence is in the blue-green areas and the changes in their appearance. Vegetation would present exactly the appearance shown…. The seasonal change that sweeps over them is metabolic; that is, it shows both growth and decay….” - Earl C. Slipher, 1962 Image Credit: Lowell Observatory Early Exploration • Early exploration of Mars revealed it to be: • Cold; temperatures at freezing or well below freezing • Dynamic, at least regarding patterns on the surface; dust, vegetation, or both? • Low atmospheric pressure; clouds • Unsure about the atmospheric composition • Arid • Polar cap – What is it made of? • No canals/intelligent life