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Analysis of condensates formed at the viking 2 lander site: The first winter
Authors:Stephen D. Wall
Affiliation:Jet Propulsion Laboratory, 4800 Oak Grove Drive, Pasadena, California 91106, USA
Abstract:A thin light-colored ground covering appeared on the surface of Mars near the Viking 2 lander from Ls = 230° to Ls = 16°, a total of 249 Mars days, during the lander's first winter on the surface. This paper presents a reduction of applicable lander imagery during the period. Imaging sequences, relative surface albedo, spectral reflectance estimates, and limited photometric data are presented and compared with previous laboratory measurements. Photometric data are best fit by an average Minnaert k = 1.1 (blue), k = 1.0 (green), and k = 0.95 (red). Appearance and disappearance rates, spectral reflectance, and photometric data all tend to confirm an earlier proposal that the covering was a combination of H2O and CO2, which fell already condensed onto dust particles brought northward by the season's first major dust storm. Under this assumption, the covering thickness is estimated to be between 0.5 and a few millimeters.
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