Large Faults on Mercury

Back to: Mercury
This
Mariner 10 image shows Santa Maria Rupes, the sinuous dark feature
running through the crater at the center of this image. Many such
features were discovered in the Mariner images of Mercury and
are interpreted to be enormous thrust faults where part of the
mercurian crust was pushed slightly over an adjacent part by compressional
forces. The abundance and length of the thrust faults indicate
that the radius of Mercury decreased by 1-2 kilometers (.6 - 1.2
miles) after the solidification and impact cratering of the surface.
This volume change probably was due to the cooling of the planet,
following the formation of a metallic core three-fourths the size
of the planet. North is towards the top and is 200 kilometers
(120 miles) across. (Calvin J. Hamilton, LPI, and NASA)
Mercury was named by the Romans after the messenger of the gods
because it seemed to move more quickly than any other planet.
Mercury is the innermost planet in our solar system and is the
second smallest one. Pluto is the smallest. Both Saturn and Jupiter
have moons that are larger than Mercury, such as Titan and Ganymede.
Jupiter's moons Io, Europa, and Callisto are very close in size
to Mercury.
Mercury resembles our moon with lunar-like terrain but differs
with respect to its density. Mercury has a density of 5.43 gm/cm3
which is similar to the density of the Earth. This density indicates
that its core has an iron composition like the Earth. The core
probably takes up about 70% to 80% of the planet's radius with
the outer region largely composed of silicate rocks.
Mercury has almost no atmosphere. The atmosphere on Earth helps
keep a uniform temperature from day to night. On Mercury, due
to its closeness to the Sun, the temperature rises to over 400°
C (750° F) during the day. At night, because of the lack of
atmosphere to help retain heat, the temperature drops to -180°
C (-300°F).
Mercury Statistics:
Mass (kg) 3.303e+23
Mass (Earth = 1) 5.5271e-02
Equatorial radius (km) 2,439.7
Equatorial radius (Earth = 1) 3.8252e-01
Mean density (gm/cm^3) 5.42
Mean distance from the Sun (km) 57,910,000
Mean distance from the Sun (Earth = 1) 0.3871
Rotational period (days) 58.6462
Orbital period (days) 87.969
Mean orbital velocity (km/sec) 47.88
Orbital eccentricity 0.2056
Tilt of axis 0.00°
Orbital inclination 7.004°
Equatorial surface gravity (m/sec^2) 2.78
Equatorial escape velocity (km/sec) 4.25
Visual geometric albedo 0.10
Magnitude (Vo) -1.9
Mean surface temperature 179°C
Maximum surface temperature 427°C
Minimum surface temperature -173°C
Atmospheric composition
Helium 42%
Sodium 42%
Oxygen 15%
Other 1%