「火星の衛星」日本が探査へ 世界初を競うライバル国は?

宇宙航空研究開発機構(JAXA)は6月9日、火星の衛星に着陸して、砂や氷などを採取して地球に持ち帰る無人探査機を2021年度をめどに打ち上げる計画を明らかにした。
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JAXA

宇宙航空研究開発機構(JAXA)は6月9日、火星の衛星に着陸して、砂や氷などを採取して地球に持ち帰る無人探査機を2021年度をめどに打ち上げる計画を明らかにした。政府の宇宙政策委員会の小委員会で説明し、大筋で了承を得たという。産経ニュースなどが報じた。

朝日新聞デジタルによると、小惑星探査機「はやぶさ」や、2019年度に打ち上げ予定の月面着陸探査機の経験を活かすことで、技術的に可能だとが判断したという。火星の歴史や太陽系の成り立ちの解明につなげるほか、将来の月や火星の有人探査に向けて技術を向上させる狙いがある。

宇宙政策委で正式に認められれば、文部科学省は2016年度の概算要求に関連予算を盛り込み、JAXAが開発に着手する。総開発費は約300億円になる見込みだ。

JAXAの前身となる宇宙科学研究所 (ISAS) は、日本初の火星探査機「のぞみ」を1998年に打ち上げたが、火星周回軌道への投入には失敗した。衛星探査が実現すれば、約20年ぶりのリベンジとなりそうだ。

■ロシアの探査機は、打ち上げ失敗

火星の衛星はフォボスとダイモスの2つあるが、どちらに着陸するかは未定だ。フォボスとダイモスは、球形ではなくジャガイモのような凸凹した形をしている。長径はフォボスが約27km、ダイモスが約16km。JR東京〜横浜間(32km)よりも短い。

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火星の衛星「フォボス」(左)とダイモス(右)

フォボスとダイモスの起源は不明。もともと小惑星だったが火星の引力で捕獲されて衛星になったという説と、小惑星が火星に衝突してできたという説がある。探査機が岩石や砂を持ち帰って調べれば、どちらが正しいか決着をつけられる。火星の誕生時の様子や、火星にかつて大量にあった水がなくなった理由の解明にもつながると期待される。

火星の衛星から岩石や砂を持ち帰る計画は、実現すれば世界で初めてとなるが、これまではロシアが先行していた。ロシアは2011年11月、フォボスから表土を採取し地球に持ち帰る探査機「フォボス・グルント」を打ち上げた。しかし、打ち上げ後間もなくソフトウェアが原因と見られる問題で地球の軌道から脱出できなくなり、2012年1月に地球の大気圏に再突入している。

ロシアは、後継機を2020年に打ち上げることを目標にしており、日本のライバルとなりそうだ。

■スライドショー「美しい火星の地形」

HiRISE Mars Photos
Shallow Irregular Pits with Raised Rims(01 of09)
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Researchers are still trying to figure out what caused these \"mystery\" features. One intriguing theory suggests they were sculpted by ancient glaciation. (credit:NASA/JPL/University of Arizona)
Dune Fields and Wall Rock in Coprates Chasma(02 of09)
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Researchers think that the dune sand, wall spurs and boulders shown here are all partially composed of olivine, a mineral that is highly susceptible to weathering by aqueous (water) processes. (credit:NASA/JPL/University of Arizona)
Sedimentary Bedrock Diversity in Terby Crater(03 of09)
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From the HiRISE website: \"Terby Crater, sitting on the northern rim of Hellas Basin, has been filled by sedimentary deposits, perhaps deposited by or in water.\" (credit:NASA/JPL/University of Arizona)
Raindrops of Sand in Copernicus Crater(04 of09)
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The dark features here look like raindrops, but are actually sand dunes. This spot was targeted an infrared spectrometer on the Mars Orbiter because the dunes are rich in the mineral olivine.\r\n\r\nOlivine-rich dunes are very rare on Earth, as olivine rapidly weathers to clays in a wet environment. There is also olivine-rich bedrock in the central peaks of Copernicus Crater on the Moon.\r\n\r\n(Caption: Alfred McEwen) (credit:NASA/JPL/University of Arizona)
Bright Tracks from Bouncing and Rolling Boulders(05 of09)
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This image shows a well-preserved impact crater. A closeup view highlights distinctive bright lines and spots on the steep slope on the north side.\r\n\r\nNo such pattern was visible when HiRISE imaged this crater 5 years ago (2.6 Martian years ago), in March 2008. The discontinuous bright spots indicate bouncing, thus these features are interpreted to be a result of boulders bouncing and rolling down the slope. \r\n\r\nWhere did the boulders come from? Maybe they fell from the crater\'s steep upper cliffs, although we don\'t see any new bright features there that point to the source. Maybe the rocks were ejected from a new impact event somewhere nearby.\r\n\r\nWhy are the trails bright? Perhaps the shallow subsurface soil here is generally brighter than the surface soil, as revealed by the Spirit rover in a part of Gusev Crater. It can\'t be bright from ice because this is a warm equator-facing slope seen in the summer.\r\n\r\n(Caption: Alfred McEwen) (credit:NASA/JPL/University of Arizona)
Ridges and Grooves That Wave and Buckle on a Valley Floor(06 of09)
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Long linear ridges and grooves curve, wave, and buckle across most of this image. Here, as elsewhere on Mars, these linear ridges and grooves fill a valley floor, hence their name, \"lineated valley fill.\"\n\nBecause these features are only found in valleys in the middle latitudes (30 to 60 degrees) of the Northern and Southern hemispheres, scientists had long suspected that they were associated with some ancient climate that had prevailed in that latitudinal band. Based on peering beneath the surface using radar, scientists now think that lineated valley fill is probably merely a rocky veneer atop a glacier of nearly pure ice! The rocks that make up the linear ridges and grooves were oriented by the ancient flow of the glacier underneath.\n\n(Caption: Ethan Schaefer) (credit:NASA/JPL/University of Arizona)
Megabreccia on the Floor of an Impact Crater(07 of09)
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\"\'Megabreccia\' is a term we use to describe jumbled, fragmented blocks of rock larger than 1 meter across, in a matrix of finer-grained materials,\" per the HiRISE website. \"It\'s the result of energetic processes, typically from an impact event.\" (credit:NASA/JPL/University of Arizona)
Defrosting of Dunes with Large Gullies(08 of09)
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The purpose of this observation is to image dunes where substantial \"gullies\" formed in the previous Martian winter. These features likely formed due to carbon dioxide defrosting or weight that caused the surface to slump. \r\n\r\nThe gullies at this site are particularly large, which is intriguing, suggesting that this site be monitored to see if stages of gully formation or details of activity can be observed. \r\n\r\n(Caption: HiRISE Science Team) (credit:NASA/JPL/University of Arizona)
Martian Honeycomb Hideout(09 of09)
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The most striking aspect of this image is the honeycomb-like pattern of the dunes.\n\nThis is a seasonal monitoring site, meaning HiRISE takes pictures across the seasons to view what changes occur and what causes them. The surface here is covered with seasonal carbon dioxide frost. In this case, we can compare locations of cracks in the frost to previous images. \n\n(Caption: HiRISE Science Team) (credit:NASA/JPL/University of Arizona)
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