THEMIS of Mars
Not an ancient Greek goddess, THEMIS is
modern acronese for
THermal EMission Imaging System.
Above is this remarkable instrument's
premier infrared image of
Mars, from the newly orbiting
Mars Odyssey spacecraft.
Taken on October 30th, the sharp infrared picture covers the indicated
swath of the martian southern hemisphere and shows
surface temperatures in false-colors ranging from red, a warm 0 degrees
Celsius, to cool purple shades of -120 degrees C.
The striking, cold circular feature is
Mars'
south polar ice cap.
Composed of frozen
carbon dioxide, the ice cap is about 900 kilometers wide
and shrinking
during the onslaught of southern hemisphere
summer.
Temperatures are also seen to drop as the bottom portion
of the THEMIS image sweeps
beyond
the terminator or shadow line, into the martian
night.
A thin, light blue crescent along the upper edge of the planet is the
martian atmosphere.
The THEMIS image data was recorded as
a test of
the camera system
from an altitude of about 22,000 kilometers .