Results from MGS Aerobraking Hiatus Orbits

Profiles Presented at the Fall Meeting of the American Geophysical Union

San Francisco, December 9, 1997


Background

During a hiatus in the Mars Global Surveyor spacecraft aerobraking sequence, the science instruments were able to collect data. The MOLA instrument obtained over 200,000 observations at altitudes less than 470 miles (786 km), which resulted in profiles of topography in the north-south direction as the instrument ranged for approximately 22 minutes during each orbit. Eighteen profiles were collected before aerobraking resumed. The locations of the profiles and the profiles themselves are shown below. Note that these data are still being corrected. Final versions will be submitted to the NASA Planetary Data System (PDS) for archiving in early February, 1998.

Summary of data collected in Calibration Pass and in the Aerobraking Hiatus Orbit: Periapse Number, Date, Time, Equator-crossing Longitude (areocentric, positive E):


Locations of MOLA tracks during the capture orbit (Pass 03) and aerobraking hiatus period (Passes 20-36). Track numbers correspond to the number of spacecraft periapse, the point of spacecraft closest approach to Mars in a given orbit. Note that the MOLA command upload did not occur in Pass 28 and almost no data was obtained along that track. Also note the east positive longitude convention denoting profile locations. (Credit: MOLA Science Team)


Topographic profiles of the western hemisphere of Mars obtained by the Mars Orbiter Laser Altimeter (MOLA) while the Mars Global Surveyor spacecraft was in a 35-hour orbit around Mars. The vertical exaggeration in the plot is 100:1. (Credit: MOLA Science Team)

Topographic profiles of the eastern hemisphere of Mars obtained by the Mars Orbiter Laser Altimeter (MOLA) while the Mars Global Surveyor spacecraft was in a 35-hour orbit around Mars. The vertical exaggeration in the plot is 100:1. (Credit: MOLA Science Team)

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Direct inquiries to: dsmith@tharsis.gsfc.nasa.gov