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New study: How can Mars have set out earlier

Mars is in itself breathtaking, with the red glow and its complex composition, and a number of new fund adds just to the planet's fascinating history. Accord

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New study: How can Mars have set out earlier

Mars is in itself breathtaking, with the red glow and its complex composition, and a number of new fund adds just to the planet's fascinating history.

According to Science Alert, there is something that suggests that Mars, as several theories have pointed out, had a ring around it.

It concludes, in each case, a new study has looked at Deimos, the smaller of Mars’ two moons, orbiting the planet, writes Science.dk. the

The small moon tilts namely weak compared to Mars’ equator, which, according to Science Alert may be the result of gravity, which is due to a planetring.

In 2017, the looked researchers a closer look at Phobos, the largest of Mars' moons, but no one has thrown a glance at Deimos in the same degree.

'The fact that Deimos’ orbit is not completely level compared to the Mars’ equator was considered unimportant, and no one was interested in that explain it,' says Matija Ćuk, who is a researcher at the SETI Institute in the UNITED states and has been in the studio, to the Science Alert. the

Read more on Science.dk: Wild images: Astronomers spotting the first signs that a new planet is formed

Deimos’ inclination is not very big with only 1.8 degrees from Mars’ equator, and besides it is its trajectory are not abnormal. It swings around Mars roughly every 30. time, writes Science Alert.

By means of model simulations, the scientists have come forward to, that we need the 3.9-3.5 billion years back to find the change in Deimos' inclination and the ring around Mars.

Science.dk has previously written about how Mars for 4-4,5 billion years ago collided with a protoplanet, which is a third of Mars’ size.

Here there was formed boulders around Mars in a ring that looked like one of Saturn's rings.

And inside the ring was a gigantic moon a thousand times bigger than Phobos is gradually formed, but later disappeared again.

the Study accepted in The Astrophysical Journal Letters , but is not yet released. It can however be found in the database here.

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