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Phobos is the larger and innermost of Mars' two
moons, named after Phobos from Greek Mythology. Phobos is closer to its primary than any other moon in the solar system,
less than 6000 km above the surface of Mars. It is also one of the smaller moons in the solar system. Phobos and Deimos were both discovered by American astronomer Asaph Hall. Phobos was discovered on August 12, 1877, and was first photographed close-up by Mariner
9 in 1971, Viking 1 in 1977, Phobos 2 in 1988, and by Mars Global Surveyor in 1998 and 2003.
Phobos orbits Mars below the synchronous orbit radius, meaning that it moves around Mars faster than Mars itself rotates. Thus
it rises in the west, moves very rapidly across the sky and sets in the east, usually twice a day. It is so close to the surface
that it cannot be seen above the horizon from all points on the surface of Mars. This low orbit means that Phobos will eventually
be destroyed: tidal forces are lowering its orbit (currently at the rate of
about 1.8 meters per century), and in about 50 million years it will either impact the surface of Mars or (more likely) break up
into a planetary ring when it descends below its Roche limit.
Phobos is a dark body that appears to be composed of C-type
surface materials. It is similar to the C-type (blackish carbonaceous chondrite) asteroids
that exist in the outer asteroid belt. Phobos's density is too low to be pure rock, however. It is probably composed of a mixture
of rock and ice. The Soviet spacecraft Phobos 2 detected a faint but steady outgassing from Phobos. Unfortunately Phobos 2 died before it could determine
the nature of the material, but it is most likely water. Recent images from Mars Global Surveyor indicates that Phobos is covered with a layer of fine dust about a meter thick,
similar to the regolith on the Earth's
Moon.
Phobos is heavily cratered. The most prominent feature on Phobos is the large crater
named Stickney, the maiden name of Asaph Hall's wife. Like Mimas's crater Herschel on a smaller scale, the impact that created Stickney
must have almost shattered Phobos. The grooves and streaks on the surface were probably also caused by the Stickney impact.
Phobos is highly nonspherical, with dimensions of 27 × 21.6 × 18.8 km.
Phobos is widely believed to be a captured asteroid. There is some speculation that it originated in the outer solar system
rather than in the main asteroid belt. It is not known how the capture could have taken place.
As seen from Phobos, Mars would be 6400 times larger and 2500 times brighter than the full Moon as seen from Earth, taking up a full 1/4 of the width of a celestial hemisphere.
See also
Phobos, as imaged by Mars Global Surveyor on June 1, 2003 (NASA)
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