Mars
Mars
Mars, know
as the red planet, id the fourth planet from the sun and the outermost rocky
planet. In the 19th century, astronomers first observed what were
thought to be sings of life on the mars. These singes included apparent
canal-like lines on the surface, and dark patches that were thought to be
vegetation. It is now known that the “canals” are an optical illusion, and the
dark patches are areas where the red dust that covers most of the planet has
been blown away. The fine dust particles are often whipped up by winds into
dust storms that occasionally obscure almost all the surface. Residual fine
dust in the atmosphere gives the Martian sky a pinkish hue. The northern
hemisphere of Mars has many large plains formed of solidified volcanic lava,
whereas the southern hemisphere has many craters and large impact basins. There
are also several hung, extinct volcanoes, including Olympus Mons, Which, at 600
kilometres across and 25 kilometres high, is the largest known volcano in the
solar system. The surface also has many canyons and branching channels. The
canyons were formed by movements of the surface crust, but the channels are
thought to have been formed by flowing water that has now dried up. The Martian
atmosphere is much thinner than Earth’s, with only a few clouds and mornings
mists. Mars has two tiny, irregularly shaped moons called Phobos and Deimos.
Their small size indicates that they may be asteroids that have been captured
by the gravity of Mars.
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