A newly released image from ESA’s Mars Express shows the north pole of  Mars during the red planet’s summer solstice.  All the carbon dioxide  ice has gone, leaving just a bright cap of water ice.
This image was captured by the orbiter’s High-Resolution Stereo Camera on 17 May 2010 and shows part of the northern polar region of Mars during the summer solstice. The solstice is the longest day and the beginning of the summer for the planet’s northern hemisphere. The ice shield is covered by frozen water and carbon dioxide ice in winter and spring but by this point in the martian year all of the carbon dioxide ice has warmed and evaporated into the planet’s atmosphere.
This image was captured by the orbiter’s High-Resolution Stereo Camera on 17 May 2010 and shows part of the northern polar region of Mars during the summer solstice. The solstice is the longest day and the beginning of the summer for the planet’s northern hemisphere. The ice shield is covered by frozen water and carbon dioxide ice in winter and spring but by this point in the martian year all of the carbon dioxide ice has warmed and evaporated into the planet’s atmosphere.
Only water ice is left behind, which shows up as bright white areas  in this picture.  From these layers, large bursts of water vapour are  occasionally released into the atmosphere. 
 The polar ice follows the seasons.  In winter, part of the atmosphere recondenses as frost and snow on the northern cap.  These seasonal deposits can extend as far south as 45°N latitude and be up to a metre thick. 
 Another phenomenon occurs on the curved scarps of the northern polar  cap, such as the Rupes Tenuis slope (on the left of this image). During  spring, the seasonal carbon dioxide layer is covered by water frost. At  certain times, winds remove the the millimetre-thick top layer of frozen  water, revealing the carbon dioxide ice below.
These processes bear witness to a dynamic water cycle on Mars and may  lead to the varying accumulation of water ice over the polar cap. 
 Other noticeable features in this image include the Chasma Boreale canyon, coloured deposits and a large dune field. 
 Chasma Boreale is about 2 km deep, 580 km long and about 100 km wide.   Its walls allow a perfect view into the strata within the deposits.  There are impact craters on the canyon floor, some heavily covered by  sand and some partly exhumed. 
 Dark and light-toned deposits can be seen as a fine and regular  covering. The darker sediments have been dropped by the winds during  spring dust storms. The patterns are created when the deposits change in  quantity according to the seasons.
The polar cap is surrounded by a large dune field, parts of which extend 600 km to the south.  
 Mars Express will soon be using its radar to probe the northern polar  cap in three dimensions. Since the radar antenna was deployed in  mid-2005, the team have been waiting for the right conditions to observe  the region. 
 The radar works best at night when the electrical interference from the  planet’s atmosphere is at a minimum.  An excellent opportunity to  observe the cap’s shape, depth and composition occurs in August and  September 2011.  
COURTESY: ESA.


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