homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Creamy white frozen dunes on Mars signal arrival of spring

Is that ice cream?

Tibi Puiu
September 17, 2019 @ 4:26 pm

share Share

Credit: ESA/Roscosmos/CaSSIS.

When Galileo Galilei made the first telescope observations of Mars in 1609, he was not able to detect any surface detail. Later observations by iconic astronomers such as Christiaan Huygens, Giovanni Cassini, William Herschel, and Giovanni Schiaparelli revealed white spots that looked like polar caps, seasonal variations on the Martian surface, and carved featured into the natural landscape which astronomers at the time called “canals.”

These fathers of modern astronomy could have never dreamed of the level of exquisite detail that we’ve come to know the Martian surface in. Just take a glimpse of this amazing satellite image (featured above) of a region of the red planet’s north pole, showing rich, creamy white textures.

The observation was captured by ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter, a spacecraft jointly operated by the European Space Agency (ESA) and Russia’s Roscosmos.

Although it might look like delicious ice cream or white chocolate mousse, what we’re actually seeing is a collection of icy dunes made of carbon dioxide and sand with dark patches in between.

The spacecraft’s CaSSIS camera took the image in late May, a period when the landscape was going through seasonal changes. During winter, the Martian north pole is covered in CO2 ice. Come spring, the ice turns into vapor from below the surface. And as the ice cracks, the sublimated ice transports sand during its ascent into the atmosphere.

There multiple types of dunes in the image, too. Those on the left are ‘regular’ dunes as most people will recognize. Those on the right, however, are called barchan dunes, also known as crescent dunes — these grow large and link up with each other to form barchanoid ridges. Such formations are highly useful to scientists studying Mars since their curved tips signal which way the prevailing wind blows.

Last year, the same spacecraft captured another springtime image — this time in the southern pole. This image also shows a dune filed, but it’s a bit more interesting because it features a crater.

Credit: ESA/Roscosmos/CaSSIS,

share Share

The Universe’s First “Little Red Dots” May Be a New Kind of Star With a Black Hole Inside

Mysterious red dots may be a peculiar cosmic hybrid between a star and a black hole.

Quakes on Mars Could Support Microbes Deep Beneath Its Surface

A new study finds that marsquakes may have doubled as grocery deliveries.

Scientists Say Junk Food Might Be as Addictive as Drugs

This is especially hurtful for kids.

Southern Ocean Salinity May Be Triggering Sea Ice Loss

New satellite technology has revealed that the Southern Ocean is getting saltier, an unexpected turn of events that could spell big trouble for Antarctica.

A New AI Can Spot You by How Your Body Bends a Wi-Fi Signal

You don’t need a phone or camera to be tracked anymore: just wi-fi.

Pregnancy in Space Sounds Cool Until You Learn What Could Go Wrong

Growing a baby in space sounds like science fiction. Here’s why it might stay that way.

Satellite Eyes Reveal Which Ocean Sanctuaries Are Really Working (And Which Are Just 'Paper Parks')

AI and radar satellites expose where illegal fishing ends — and where it persists.

Astronomers Spotted a Ghostly Star Orbiting Betelgeuse and Its Days Are Already Numbered

A faint partner explains the red giant's mysterious heartbeat.

Humans Built So Many Dams, We’ve Shifted the Planet’s Poles

Massive reservoirs have nudged Earth’s axis by over a meter since 1835.

Our Radar Systems Have Accidentally Turned Earth into a Giant Space Beacon for the Last 75 Years and Scientists Say Aliens Could Be Listening

If aliens have a radio telescope, they already know we exist.