Mars Past, Present & Future
A talk given during Astronomy Week 2003 by Brian Sheen
Introduction
The word Planet comes from the Greek meaning "Wandering
Star". Of all the planets in the sky Mars is the one to which
this term applies the most. Because it has such a strange motion
it has been studied for thousands of years, although until the
arrival of the telescope with little effect. At its best only
Venus can be brighter, as a red object Mars stands alone, the
Romans naming it after the god of war, the rate at which it
travels east, it brightness variations even at opposition
attracted much attention from the astronomers of old.
Early Work
The Greeks including Ptolemy studied the stars, Sun and Moon
with a view to measuring the passage of time. They found Mars to
be a serious hindrance in this respect. They were forced to
propose Earth centred orbits for the planets with sub circles,
deferents, to account for retrograde motion Eudoxus was a leading
figure in this work which culminated in the Ptolemaic Solar System
which stood unchallenged, to any great extent until Copernicus in
16th Century.
In the 17th Century Kepler also found Mars trouble some as its
very elliptical orbit was hard to define with certainty. By the
late 18th Century William Herschel had turned his telescopes on
the planet and decided that it was the most Earth like of all the
planets, smaller than Earth to be sure, but it has polar caps that
changed with the seasons and fixed surface markings.
The early 19th Century books had little to say about the red
planet, Ferguson merely mentioning that the variations in size
indicated a variation in distance from Earth and therefore an
elliptical orbit.
The Telescope era.
By the second half of the 19th century a number of interesting
facts had been determined due to the improvement in the telescope
and the micrometers attached to them. The fact is that August the
26th represents the closest approach of Mars to the Earth and when
this corresponds to opposition then the planet appears at its
brightest. 11th Aug. 1877 was the occasion of a very favourable
apparition followed by those of 1892, 1909 and 1924 amongst
others. Very poor oppositions occur in February when the orbital
separation is at its greatest.
Parallax is a favourite tool of astronomers when seeking to
determine the distance of fairly close objects. Ascension Island,
on the equator, was chosen by David Gill as a suitable site in
1877. By measuring the angular distance between Mars and nearby
stars throughout the night arrived at a fairly accurate figure and
from Kepler's Law the distance to the Sun and hence the scale of
the Solar System.
The mass of the Earth was also determined by making use of an
occultation of a star in 1672. Then recording the transit of Mars
relative to the same star some 200 years (1877) later, the time
delay due to the presence of the Earth allowed its mass to be
established to less than 1%.
Also in this period, the first maps of the planet were drawn
and measurements made of the polar caps and their changes through
the season. The fact that Mars rotates in some 40 minutes longer
than Earth means that it does not present the same face to the
Earth throughout the night and features can be seen coming into
view on one side and vanishing from the other. Its inclination to
the plane of the ecliptic at 24 degrees is similar to Earth's.
Today computer programmes allow amateur astronomers to be sure
which part of Mars is visible at the time they are observing.
The opposition of 1877 allowed the American astronomer Asaph
Hall to discover the two moons, which were called Phobos and
Deimos, Fear and Terror, the attendants of Mars in Greek
mythology, in Homer's Iliad. A translation reads, "Mars spake,
and called Dismay and Rout to yoke his steeds, and he did on his
harness sheen." The news was flashed by telegraph to Plymouth
just in time to be announced to a meeting of the British
Association. The tiny moons are now believed to be captured
asteroids. Typically Newcombe claimed the discovery for himself as
Director of the Washington Observatory where Hall worked.
Incidentally Phobos has a large crater called Stickney after
Hall's wife's maiden name.
The infamous canals were first seen by Schiaparelli in 1877 he
actually called them channels but were translated canals and were
studied assiduously by Percival Lowell at Flagstaff Observatory
from 1894 onwards. Of course today we realise that they were only
tricks of the light.
The space age
Our knowledge of Mars increased only slowly until the first
Space Probes and Landers arrived in 1970. Then of course it
increased again exponentially until the present day. The Mariner
Probes were the first sending back good quality pictures, Mariner
9 being the most successful. The instrumentation allowed the
atmosphere, surface features, including polar caps, craters,
channels and volcanoes to be studied in detail. Two Viking Landers
arrived in the mid 70's and set about trying to discover if life
was or had been present on the planet. The instrumentation
produced some odd results but in the end they were put down to a
chemical reaction.
Mars Global Surveyor was launched in 1996 and arrived in
September 1997 and carried out the most detailed survey of the red
planet in history. The images are of such quality that the theory
has been advanced that the whole surface of Mars must have been
covered in water to a significant depth.
Pathfinder was launched a little later but arrived ahead of
Surveyor, after bouncing around on the surface for a while it
opened up to release its Rover named Sojourner, many excellent
pictures were obtained and chemical analysis carried out.
The opposition of 1877 sparked a flurry of interest in Mars and
the same has happened this time around. The first to arrive will
be ESA's Mars Express carrying Beagle 2, the first British Lander.
It will land in Isidis Planitia and carries and range of
analytical equipment, the most significant of which is a miniature
mass spectrometer. Colin Pillenger hopes that it will give firm
evidence of the existence for the first time, of life outside
planet Earth.
Strange to say one of the best bits of Mars science has come
from meteorite ALH84001 that landed in Antarctica, when examined
under a SEM produced images that resembled fossilised bacteria.
However most scientists remain sceptical.
The Orbiter will image the surface of the planet and produce a
map of the mineral composition of the surface.
The Americans arrive a little later, Jan 2004, with twin Rovers
Spirit and Opportunity they will be producing stereo images and
using spectrometers to determine the composition of the Martian
Surface.
See it for your self
Although we here on Earth cannot hope to equal the quality of
the images produced by the various Probes it does not stop
amateurs the world over from trying to take their own pictures.
Sky and Telescope has produced a number of features on its web
site which are well worth studying. It will tell you exactly which
part of Mars is visible at the moment, how to use an occulting bar
to image the two satellites. Access www.skyandtelescope.com and
browse the site, not forgetting to check under the heading planets
in addition to the specific Mars pages.
Basic data.
Position, the fourth rock from the Sun, Diameter 6800 kms,
length of day 24 hrs, 37 mins., length of year 687 days,
inclination to orbit, 25 degrees.
Sources
Books Refs.Dicks, D.R. Early Greek astronomy to Aristotle, pub
Cornell 1985 Hoskin.M, Cambridge Illustrated History of Astronomy,
pub CUP, 1997 Ferguson. J - Astronomy, pub A.Strahan, London, 1803
Ball,R.,The story of the heavens, pub Cassell, 1893 Rudaux.L.
& de Vaucouleurs G., Encyclopedia of Astronomy, Batchworth
Press, 1959 Moore P. Atlas of the Solar System, pub. Chancellor
Press, 1997 Moore P. Mars, pub. Cassell, 1998 Lee.W. To rise from
Earth, pub Blandford, 2000. Ridpath.J & Woodruff. J,
Astronomical Dictionary. Pub. Phillips 1995 Moore P. Astronomy
Encyclopedia. Pub. Phillips 2002
Journals Astronomy & Geophysics Aug. 2003 Vol. 44 Issue 4,
Blackwell Publishing. Astronomy Now Aug. 2003, Pole Star
Publications
Web Sites. www.skyandtelescope.com for a range of information
about viewing Mars. www.beagle2.com for all the information about
the British Lander, it links to the Mars Express site.