This is how Mars
and its tiny satellite Phobos might appear from a distance of about 100 miles from
Phobos' surface. Phobos is over the low martian plains of Syrtis Major.
Below the plains extending down to Mars' terminator and beyond is the
heavily cratered Terra Sabaea. Clouds of water-ice crystals are forming at
the terminator between light and dark.
Looking more like a common potato than a celestial body,
Phobos is actually the larger of Mars' two satellites, with a length of about 16
miles and about 11 miles across its smallest dimension. Phobos does not have
enough mass for gravity to pull it into a uniform sphere like the larger satellites
and planets in the Solar System.
Phobos may be an asteroid
long ago captured by Mars' gravity, orbiting a mere 5,800 miles above Mars'
surface, making it the closest satellite to its host planet in the Solar System.
Phobos' orbit is so low that it completes one revolution in less than eight
hours, easily outpacing by threefold Mars' rotation period of 24 hours, 40 minutes. The
resulting tidal forces are causing Phobos' altitude to decay at the
relatively rapid rate of 6 feet per century; in about 50 million years
Phobos will either crash into the martian surface, or be torn apart by Mars'
gravity.