Information on Mars Sundial

From: V Laxmanan (vlaxmanan@hotmail.com)
Date: Tue Jan 06 2004 - 21:12:34 PST


For those who might be interested, the following information about the Mars 
Sundial was obtained from the following website.

http://www.artsciwashington.edu/newsletter/summer99/sundial.htm

The artiole was written a few years ago, in 1999, long before Rover landed 
on Mars.

*********************

If It's 2 p.m., This Must Be Mars

Ever wonder how long days are on other planets? In a few years, you'll be 
able to monitor the passage of Martian days and seasons via the Internet, 
with the help of a sundial being designed and assembled at the UW. The 
sundial, contained in a package of four instruments that make up the Athena 
Precursor Experiment on NASA's Mars Surveyor mission, will land on the red 
planet in January 2002.

The idea for the sundial originated with Bill Nye, host of public 
television's "Bill Nye the Science Guy." Looking at the instruments, Nye 
noticed a small square and post used as a kind of test pattern to calibrate 
the spacecraft's color panoramic camera. He suggested it could be a sundial

. "He sent me an email asking if I wanted to help design the first sundial 
on Mars," recalls Woodruff Sullivan, UW professor of astronomy and a sundial 
expert. "I sent one back asking, 'Does it rain in Seattle?'"

For eight months, Sullivan and Nye have been part of a sundial design team 
that includes artists Jon Lomberg and Tyler Nordgren, Cornell University 
planetary scientists Steven Squyres and Jim Bell, and Louis Friedman, 
executive director of the Planetary Society. With the team's design, Larry 
Stark, who makes scientific instruments in the UW physics department, 
devised detailed drawings for making the sundial. Much of the fabrication is 
being done at Arizona State University in Tempe. The parts will be returned 
to the UW for final assembly, and the sundial will be delivered to NASA's 
Jet Propulsion Laboratory late this summer.

Sullivan has designed numerous instruments for reckoning time using the 
sun's shadow, including a large one on an outside wall of the 
Physics-Astronomy Building on the UW's Seattle campus. Designs must account 
for the Earth's orbit and the site latitude if the shadow cast by the post 
is to give accurate time.

For the first sundial away from Earth, some factors differ. For one thing, a 
year is nearly twice as long on Mars. In addition, while Mars has seasons as 
Earth does, the seasonality is exaggerated because the planet's orbit is far 
more elliptical. But there are similarities, too. Earth tilts about 23.5 
degrees on its axis, while Mars tilts 25 degrees, and a Martian day is only 
37 minutes longer.

"It's not as different as you might think," Sullivan says. "It's the same 
basic principle; you just have to feed in different parameters. It's like 
the difference between making a map of Los Angeles and a map of London."

The Martian sundial will be located near the planet's equator, though a 
final landing site for the Surveyor mission hasn't been chosen. Uncertainty 
about the location, and the fact that the sundial could be tilted by 
surrounding terrain, limits the features that can be designed into it, says 
Sullivan. Once the spacecraft has landed, the panoramic camera will monitor 
the sundial's shadow, allowing Sullivan and other scientists to calculate 
its exact orientation. The appropriate sundial lines then will be 
superimposed over the sundial's image on the World Wide Web.

The sundial, made from anodized aluminum, is just three inches square and 
weights slightly more than two ounces. Black, grey, and white rings in the 
center, and color tiles in the corners, will be used to adjust the 
brightness and tint of pictures taken by the panoramic camera. The rings are 
arranged to represent the orbits of Mars and Earth, with red and blue dots 
showing the planet's positions at the time of landing. Two replicas are 
being made, one as an engineering model and the other to be placed in the 
Smithsonian Institution.

The sundial will include a greeting for any explorers who might one day 
encounter it. The instrument also will have the word "Mars" in 24 languages, 
including those of the ancient Mayan and Sumerian cultures in which Mars 
figured prominently, and stick figures and space-related drawings that 
depict earthlings.

_________________________________________________________________
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