Fri, Oct 4, 5:36 AM CDT

Phobos Shuttle Over Arcadia Planitia

Bryce Science Fiction posted on Mar 09, 2008
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Description


In this picture, the Phobos Shuttle to Arcadia City is on final approach. Beneath it is a series of "rocky islands"--the debris from an ancient meteorite impact. Compared to space shuttles of our present age, this shuttle is huge. Six decks and a present day shuttle would not completely fill the space in one of the larger engine nacelles. Phobos Port is the entryway to Mars for colonists. Thousands are arriving every Martian month and Phobos Port is their Ellis Island. From the Port, shuttles arrive from and depart to every major Martian city. Three hundred new settlers and their belongings are being ferried to Arcadia City. In a few minutes, their long journey from Earth to Mars will come to an end. Phobos (Panic/Fear) was picked for the Port because it is the closest of Mars's two moons. It is so close to the planet that Phobos skims around Mars, completing its orbit in 7.66 hours--that is more than three orbits each Martian day. Phobos is so close to the Martian surface that if the new colonists were headed for Marineris Center, near the equator, Phobos 22.22 km. diameter would look at full moon about one-third the size of Earth's full moon. However, since they will be settling on the Arcadia Planitia plain, which is next door to the northern Polar regions, a full-moon Phobos will look much smaller in the sky because it is literally farther away from the viewer than it would be at the equator. From either pole, Phobos remains permanently hidden just over the horizon. Because Phobos is rotating much faster than Mars itself, its orbit continues to shrink. Eventually, Phobos will reach the Roach Limit and break up into a thin ring of debris circling Mars. That event, however, is still tens of thousands of years in the future. Phobos's sister moon, Deimos (Terror/Dread) is much farther out from the Martian surface and it moves so slowly (30.35 hours for a single rotation) that its orbit is slowly growing larger as it moves away from the planet's surface. Between Deimos-rise and Demos-set, Mars will have completed one rotation and part of another. Another interesting difference between the Martian moons is that speedy Phobos rises in the west and, due to the slower rotation of Mars, 11 hours later sets in the east, while pokey Deimos rises in the east and takes 2.7 days to set in the west and the same amount of time to rise back in the east. The 30 hour rotation period of Deimos causes Deimos to constantly fall behind the faster rotation of Mars. In other words, the spot on Mars where the viewer is located is moving faster than Deimos and slower than Phobos. So in a very real sense, the viewer is moving faster than Deimos. Whew! Here are a couple of fun sites for you all to check out in regard to the motions of Phobos and Deimos: Actual movie taken by NASA's Spirit robot on Mars: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Phobos_%26_Deimos_full.gif Diagram of Martian Moons in their orbits around Mars by SKY & Telescope: http://www.skyandtelescope.com/observing/objects/javascript/mars_moons Have fun! Jeremy CREDITS: Bryce 6.0, NASA's MRO. Shuttlecraft: by Billy.

Comments (21)


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wawadave

12:13AM | Sun, 09 March 2008

nice one?? got a better hint where this can be found?Shuttlecraft: by Billy thx!!!

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Seaview123

12:20AM | Sun, 09 March 2008

Nice looking render. Thanks for the science lesson, too.

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Django

1:05AM | Sun, 09 March 2008

Thorough research is the basis of every good Sci-Fi artist, well done

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Kartika

1:05AM | Sun, 09 March 2008

Excellent work!

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DarkStormCrow

1:29AM | Sun, 09 March 2008

Nice sci fi work, great modeling, well done...

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FrenchKiss

3:51AM | Sun, 09 March 2008

Very nice image and interesting story!

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e-brink

6:10AM | Sun, 09 March 2008

You've got some real speed going there! Great picture.

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kenwas

7:42AM | Sun, 09 March 2008

Good sense of motion.

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shadownet

11:18AM | Sun, 09 March 2008

Once again I get to go on an incredible journey to far away places! Great scene! Now fasten your seatbelt and make sure your trays are in an upright position, looks like the landing might be a little bumpy due to some unexpected turbulence. :O)

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sackrat

1:17PM | Sun, 09 March 2008

Well done !

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ontar1

9:08PM | Sun, 09 March 2008

That is cool, wow, a lot of info there but it was excellently narrated, fantastic scene and excellent work!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

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Hefrian_Rotter

2:38PM | Mon, 10 March 2008

good shtuff! da Rotter

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jocko500

6:51PM | Mon, 10 March 2008

cool sci-fi

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tralfaz

9:02PM | Mon, 10 March 2008

Wow, I feel like I'm flying! Great image!!

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tcombs

9:35AM | Tue, 11 March 2008

You can see the speed.

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Burpee

1:01PM | Wed, 12 March 2008

Your motion blur is outstanding! This looks so real. Awesome work!

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Evanooh

12:27PM | Sun, 16 March 2008

Great work! excellent model and landscape... well done! Hugs

puredigital101

4:54PM | Sun, 16 March 2008

VERY NICE WORK love the design of the shuttle the engine effects are pretty cool too

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FCLittle

8:51PM | Sun, 16 March 2008

Nicely done....great sense of movement here, and I really like the stark terrain in the distance....

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cole4965

10:47AM | Wed, 19 March 2008

Really awesome scene!!! Well done!

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NefariousDrO

9:35PM | Tue, 24 February 2009

This is really good, you have a very strong sense of speed in this image, and I like that shuttle model, too.


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