The demise of Phobos II

by Pete Porro



The Jan/Feb 1993 issue of the Planetary Society's _The Planetary Report_
contains a brief note written by A.S. Selivanov and U.M. Gektin of the
Institute of Space Device Engineering, Moscow, on the mysterious end of
Phobos 2. In the Question/Answer section on page 20, it says (all typos 
are my own, copied without permission):

[Accompanying the article are two figures.

Figure 1 caption reads, "This chart illustrates how the positions of the
spacecraft, the moon Phobos and the planet Mars lined up to create the
'Phobos Mystery Shadow.'"

Figure 2a caption reads, "Figure 2a is a thermal, or far-infrared, image of
the moon's shadow."

Figure 2b caption reads, "The Termoscan also produced a visible, or near-
infrared, version of the same image, as seen here in Figure 2b."]

"Last year I noticed more than one mention in the media of a 'mystery
object' that appeared in the last images returned by the Russian spacecraft 
Phobos 2.

It was suggested that aliens were responsible for the object and perhaps
even for the demise of the mission. What actually happened?" -Len Seymour, 
Elko, Nevada

The "mystery object" was actually the shadow of one of Mars' moons. The
spacecraft Phobos 2 reached Mars orbit and began to approach the martian
satellite Phobos in February 1989. In the middle of March, Phobos and the
spacecraft were several hundred meters apart, and they moved synchronously
in the same orbit. At that time there were several surveys of the martian
surface by the Termoscan equipment on board the spacecraft.

Termoscan is a two-channel scanning radiometer that can receive images in
the visible and near-infrared region of the spectrum and at the same time in 
the thermal, or far-infrared, region. A Termoscan image is produced by a 
scanning mirror moving perpendicular to the spacecraft trajectory with a 
frequency of one scan line per second. Thus a picture is generated by the 
motion of the spacecraft in its orbit.

The survey of the martian surface was made with a constant Sun-to-spacecraft
orientation. The centerline of the image is in the anti-Sun direction to an
accuracy of one to two scan lines. Since the spacecraft was near Phobos and
the Sun-Phobos directions was approximately the same as the Sun-spacecraft
direction, the Phobos shadow on the Mars surface can be seen in the
Termoscan field of view (Figure 1).

The length of this shadow was about 21 kilometers (13 miles). Termoscan's
field of view on the martian surface was 650 kilometers (400 miles) wide, and 
the resolution was 1.8 kilometers (about 1 mile). The moonlet's shadow came 
into Termoscan's field of view when the spacecraft was 200 kilometers (about 
120 miles) away from Phobos. At this point the termoscan instrument was pointed
at Mars' surface in the same direction as the Sun's rays. On March 26, 1989,
the shadow appeared as shown in Figure 2.

The factors that influenced the form and dimensions of the shadow included
Phobos' orientation (Phobos has an irregular shape); distortion from Mars'
surface curvature, especially near the planet's limb (the edge of its disk
as seen from the Phobos spacecraft); and the dispersion of radiation and other
atmospheric processes.

Another factor -- and probably a more important one -- was deviation of the
axis caused by the spacecraft's instability. The spacecraft's axis moved
about 40 minutes of arc during the experiments.

If the spacecraft's orientation and the distance from it to Phobos had been
perfectly constant, Phobos' shadow would have been an even line. But
because of the deviation of the spacecraft's axis, Termoscan's lines moved ahead 
of the shadow or dropped behind it as the shadow moved on the planet's surface. 
The scanning line overtook the shadow, going through its center, then passed it
(see Figure 2).

This process caused 250-to-300-kilometer (155-185-mile) motion on the Mars
surface in the direction of motion, and the shadow was elliptically
stretched in the resulting picture.

Figure 2 shows images from two different spectral regions. Figure 2a, taken
in the infrared part of the spectrum, shows Phobos' shadow. In Figure 2b, a
visible image, the shadow image drops behind. This image indicates that the
shadow lowered the local surface temperature 4 to 6 degrees Celsius.

The temperature variation depends on how fast Mars' thin surface layer
(several millimeters) cools. After analyzing the results from the two spectral
channels, we were able to calculate the thermal inertia (the measure of the 
object's resistance to changes in temperature) of the surface layer and draw
conclusions about its physical characteristics.

The calculations showed that almost all of the observed surface is covered
with a layer of dust. The thermal inertia is two to three times lower than it
would be without the dust. Further analysis will tell us more about Mars' surface
properties.

The death of Phobos 2 resulted from a failure in the control system of its
onboard computer. this caused reorientation of the solar cells such that
they did not receive sunlight power. The storage battery was drained of its
charge, and all the spacecraft's subsystems lost power. Phobos 1 went out of 
control earlier when its control lock with Earth was lost after an operator's 
error.


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