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CUTTING EDGE

BBC Sky at Night Magazine

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June 2025

Mars's largest moon may have risen from the ashes of a previous satellite

CUTTING EDGE

The origin of Mars's two moons, Phobos and Deimos, has long been a matter of debate. The idea that they are captured asteroids has been popular in the past, but the fact that they both orbit close to Mars's equatorial plane means that most planetary scientists today accept it is much more likely they formed from a disc of rock and dust circling the planet. Such a circum-Martian disc was probably formed of ejecta from a giant impact into the Red Planet.

Phobos, the larger and inner of the two moons, is spiralling ever closer to Mars due to tidal effects and will probably be broken apart by these forces within a few tens of millions of years. But Phobos's past could have been even more dramatic.

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JUNO: The mission that rewrote the story of Jupiter

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Charlotte Daniels rounds up the latest astronomical accessories

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1 mins

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One sky - then, now and forever

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Use tone mapping to tame brightness and reclaim lost detail

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BBC Sky at Night Magazine

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JWST image of galaxy Messier 82 reveals a flurry of star formation

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BBC Sky at Night Magazine

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August's episode of The Sky at Night celebrates the work of Jocelyn Bell Burnell. George Dransfield explains why this pulsar pioneer is such a hero to her

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3 mins

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