No, that"s not a new frozen coffee drink from Starbucks; it"s the southern polar ice cap on Mars. Mars is the only other planet in the solar system with visible ice caps, though they differ from Earth’s because the ice caps on Mars consist of both water ice and frozen carbon dioxide. The ice cap looks smooth here, but its surface is pockmarked with swiss-cheese-like depressions caused by the seasonal freezing and melting of the Martian winters and summers. While Mars has been observed by humanity for thousands of years, it was only on August 13, 1672, that Dutch astronomer Christiaan Huygens observed the ice cap using the most powerful telescope of the day. The giant of science designed the 50x magnification telescope himself, and with his brother, produced the lenses as well.
An ice cap-puccino
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
Combating extinction with citizen science
-
Day of the Dead
-
Let’s go mothing
-
Diving into the underwater nirvana
-
Hawaii Volcanoes National Park turns 103
-
Arrone in Umbria, Italy
-
Dallas Latino Cultural Center for Hispanic Heritage
-
A path lain with petals
-
Cenote near Puerto Aventuras, Mexico
-
A little blue
-
A theatrical dream
-
A bridge of Madison County
-
Composite of photographs from the Apollo 15 mission
-
Camel thorn trees, Namib-Naukluft Park, Namibia
-
Evidence of human habitation
-
Venice Skatepark, Los Angeles, California
-
National Hummingbird Day
-
Glen Brittle, Isle of Skye, Scotland
-
Happy Thanksgiving!
-
Talk like a pirate—or walk the plank
-
Humpback whales in Maui, Hawaii
-
Have fun storming the castle
-
Corfe gets creepy
-
Great Backyard Bird Count
-
Rosa Parks Day
-
Happy Thanksgiving
-
Sweetheart Abbey, Scotland
-
Crescent Lake near Dunhuang, China
-
Kiteboarding and windsurfing in Croatia
-
Blue hour in Trondheim, Norway
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

