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Space telescope focuses on Martian storm

Hubble snaps picture during prime time for Red Planet observations

NASA / ESA / STScI / SSI / Cornell
Hubble pictures show Mars in relative sizes as it was seen from Earth over a series of years, from upper left to lower left: 1995, 1997, 1999, 2001, 2003 and 2005. The 2003 apparition was clearly the biggest.
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Red Planet view
Oct. 29: The next few days are prime time for watching Mars — "Today" host Lester Holt talks with Space.com's Dave Brody about what to look for.

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By Bjorn Carey
updated 2:47 p.m. ET Nov. 3, 2005

When Mars orbited close to Earth this past weekend, many skywatchers noticed a large dust storm raging across its surface. NASA's Hubble Space Telescope took detailed images that were released Thursday.

The large regional dust storm appears as the brighter, redder cloud in the middle of the planet's disk in the Hubble photo. This storm has been kicking up dust along the planet's equatorial regions for several weeks, and is about 930 miles (1,500 kilometers) long, measured diagonally. A dust storm that large on Earth would cover Texas, Oklahoma and New Mexico.

Astronomers say this storm is likely responsible for the reddish, dusty haze and other dust clouds that have been seen across the planet in views from Hubble, ground-based telescopes, and the NASA and ESA spacecraft orbiting the planet recently.

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The storm is in close proximity to the NASA Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity's landing site in on Meridiani Planum. Dust in the atmosphere could block sunlight the rover needs to continue operating at full power.

Image: Mars with dust storm
NASA / ESA / STScI / SSI / Corne
This Oct. 28 Hubble photo of Mars shows a huge dust storm just above the center of the Red Planet's disk.

The image was taken with Hubble's Advanced Camera for Surveys. The smallest resolvable features — small craters and wind streaks — are about 12 miles (20 kilometers) across.

Mars is now in its warmest months, resulting in a smaller than normal south polar ice cap toward the bottom of the image. Bluish water-ice clouds can also be seen along the limbs — the edges of the planet in this image — and in the north polar region at the top.

Mars goes through a 26-month cycle in which its distance from Earth varies. When Mars is closest to Earth, it appears brighter in the sky and is an easy target for telescopes. On Oct. 29-30, Mars and Earth reached the closest point in their orbits since August 2003. The Red Planet won't be this close again until 2018. 

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