×

3D Visualization

Navigate through the cosmos in real-time.

Local Group Map 3D 3D VIEW

Phobos

The Doomed Moon of Mars

High-resolution image of Phobos, the larger moon of Mars, showing its irregular potato-like shape, surface grooves, and large impact craters including Stickney crater.

Quick Reader

Quick Reader – Phobos Overview (Expanded & Informative)

Attribute Details
Object Name Phobos
Object Type Natural satellite of Mars
Discovery 1877
Discoverer Asaph Hall
Diameter ~22.5 km (irregular)
Shape Highly irregular (“potato-shaped”)
Mean Distance from Mars ~6,000 km
Orbital Period ~7 hours 39 minutes
Rotation Synchronous (same face always toward Mars)
Gravity Extremely weak
Escape Velocity ~11 m/s
Composition Carbon-rich, rubble-like
Notable Feature Stickney crater
Fate Gradually spiraling inward

Key Points

  • Phobos is the larger and inner moon of Mars
  • It orbits Mars faster than Mars rotates
  • It is slowly falling toward Mars
  • Phobos will eventually be destroyed
  • It may be a rubble pile, not a solid body

Introduction – A Moon That Is Running Out of Time

Phobos is not a stable moon.

Unlike Earth’s Moon, which slowly drifts away from its planet, Phobos is doing the opposite. It is spiraling inward, pulled closer to Mars with every orbit. This makes Phobos one of the most dramatic examples of orbital decay in the Solar System.

In roughly 30–50 million years, Phobos will either break apart into a ring or crash onto Mars.

Phobos is not just a moon—it is a countdown in motion.

Discovery – A Prediction Fulfilled

Phobos was discovered in 1877 by American astronomer Asaph Hall at the U.S. Naval Observatory.

The discovery was notable because:

  • Its existence had been predicted earlier

  • Jonathan Swift hinted at two Martian moons in Gulliver’s Travels

  • Voltaire later referenced them in fiction

Though coincidental, these predictions added to Phobos’s mystique.

Phobos was named after a figure from Greek mythology—Phobos, the personification of fear and companion of Ares (Mars).

Size and Shape – Not a Typical Moon

Phobos is extremely small compared to major moons.

Key physical traits:

  • Roughly 22 × 18 × 14 km in size

  • Irregular, non-spherical shape

  • Deep grooves and fractures

  • Extremely low gravity

A human standing on Phobos could jump into space with little effort.

Its shape and structure suggest that Phobos is not internally strong, unlike large spherical moons.

Orbit – A Moon That Moves Too Fast

Phobos orbits Mars at an altitude of only ~6,000 km, closer than any other known moon orbits its planet.

Its orbital behavior is unusual:

  • Completes one orbit in ~7.6 hours

  • Rises in the west and sets in the east

  • Passes over the Martian sky multiple times per day

Because Phobos orbits faster than Mars rotates, tidal forces act in reverse—pulling it inward instead of pushing it away.

This is the key reason Phobos is doomed.

Stickney Crater – A Scar That Almost Shattered Phobos

The most striking feature on Phobos is Stickney crater, nearly half the moon’s diameter.

This crater:

  • Formed from a massive impact

  • Nearly disrupted Phobos completely

  • Created fractures visible across the surface

That Phobos survived this impact suggests:

  • It absorbed the shock rather than shattering

  • Its interior may be a loosely bound rubble pile

Stickney crater is evidence that Phobos is fragile—but resilient.

Composition – Captured Asteroid or Martian Debris?

For decades, scientists debated Phobos’s origin.

Two main hypotheses exist:

Captured Asteroid Hypothesis

  • Composition similar to carbonaceous asteroids

  • Irregular shape

  • Low density

Reaccumulated Debris Hypothesis

  • Formed from debris around Mars

  • Result of ancient impacts

  • Explains orbital alignment

Recent evidence increasingly favors the reaccumulation scenario, though the debate is not fully settled.

Phobos may not be a visitor—it may be a product of Mars itself.

Why Phobos Is Scientifically Important

Phobos matters because it:

  • Reveals how small moons form and evolve

  • Demonstrates active orbital decay

  • Preserves early Mars system history

  • Is a potential resource hub for future missions

Studying Phobos helps scientists understand moon–planet interactions in extreme conditions.

Phobos vs Deimos – First Contrast

Feature Phobos Deimos
Size Larger Smaller
Orbit Very close Farther
Shape Highly irregular More rounded
Fate Falling inward Slowly drifting outward
Stability Unstable Stable

Phobos is the dramatic one.
Deimos is the survivor.

Tidal Forces – Why Phobos Is Falling Inward

Phobos’s fate is controlled by tidal interactions with Mars.

On most planet–moon systems, the moon orbits outside the planet’s synchronous orbit, so tidal forces transfer energy outward. Phobos is different. It orbits inside Mars’s synchronous distance, which means the tidal interaction works in reverse.

As Phobos moves around Mars:

  • Mars’s gravity raises tidal bulges on the planet

  • Because Phobos orbits faster than Mars rotates, these bulges lag behind

  • Gravitational drag removes orbital energy from Phobos

  • The moon spirals inward by about 1.8–2 cm per year

This slow inward drift is relentless. There is no mechanism to stop it.

Phobos is not being pulled in suddenly—it is being drained of orbital energy.

Approaching the Roche Limit – The Point of No Return

As Phobos continues to descend, it will eventually cross the Roche limit—the distance at which tidal forces exceed the moon’s structural strength.

For Phobos, this critical region lies roughly:

  • 2,000–3,000 km above Mars’s surface (approximate range)

Once inside this zone:

  • Mars’s tidal forces will overwhelm Phobos’s gravity

  • Cracks and fractures will widen

  • Material will begin to separate

Because Phobos is likely a rubble pile rather than a solid rock, it will not resist deformation well.

The approach to the Roche limit marks the beginning of structural failure, not instant destruction.

Will Phobos Crash or Break Apart?

There are two leading scenarios for Phobos’s end:

1. Ring Formation (Most Likely)

  • Phobos gradually breaks apart

  • Debris spreads into orbit

  • Mars gains a temporary ring system

This ring could persist for millions of years before falling onto Mars or dispersing.

2. Direct Impact (Less Likely)

  • Phobos remains mostly intact

  • It spirals all the way down

  • Collides with Mars’s surface

Current models favor ring formation, especially given Phobos’s weak internal cohesion.

Mars may one day resemble a miniature version of Saturn—briefly.

Evidence Phobos Is Already Breaking

Several surface features suggest that Phobos is under active tidal stress.

These include:

  • Long, parallel grooves

  • Surface fractures aligned with tidal forces

  • Regions of regolith migration

For a long time, these grooves were thought to be impact ejecta. Newer studies suggest many of them are stress fractures, caused by Mars’s gravity slowly pulling Phobos apart.

Phobos is not waiting for destruction—it has already begun to fail structurally.

Internal Structure – Solid Rock or Rubble Pile?

Measurements of Phobos’s density and response to impacts indicate:

  • Very low bulk density

  • High porosity

  • Weak internal strength

This supports the idea that Phobos is:

  • A loosely bound aggregate of rocks and dust

  • Held together mainly by self-gravity

  • Filled with voids

Such a structure explains:

  • Survival after the Stickney impact

  • Ease of tidal deformation

  • Likely breakup into debris rather than a single impact event

Phobos behaves less like a moon and more like a gravitational pile of fragments.

Why Deimos Survives While Phobos Does Not

Deimos, Mars’s outer moon, has a very different future.

Key differences:

  • Orbits farther from Mars

  • Lies outside the synchronous orbit

  • Experiences outward tidal migration

As a result:

  • Deimos is slowly drifting away

  • Its orbit is stable

  • It faces no immediate threat

Phobos and Deimos demonstrate how orbital distance alone can determine survival or destruction.

A Ringed Mars – A Temporary Future

If Phobos becomes a ring, Mars will briefly host:

  • A thin debris ring

  • Likely composed of rocky material

  • Visible from the Martian surface

This ring would be:

  • Much smaller than Saturn’s

  • Short-lived by cosmic standards

  • Continuously raining material onto Mars

Mars’s geological record may already contain remnants of previous moon-ring cycles.

Phobos might not be the first—and may not be the last.

What Phobos Teaches About Orbital Evolution

Phobos is one of the clearest real-world examples of:

  • Tidal orbital decay

  • Moon destruction in action

  • Roche-limit physics

  • Non-eternal satellite systems

It shows that moons are not permanent fixtures.
They are temporary solutions to gravitational dynamics.

The Timeline – How Much Time Does Phobos Have Left?

Phobos’s inward spiral is slow but measurable.

Based on current models, Phobos is expected to reach a critical breakup phase in approximately 30 to 50 million years. This estimate depends on:

  • The moon’s internal strength

  • Its porosity and structure

  • How tidal stresses propagate through its body

Although this sounds distant on human timescales, it is relatively short in planetary terms.

Phobos is living on borrowed time.

Why Scientists Want to Visit Phobos

Phobos is a high-priority target for future exploration.

It offers unique scientific advantages:

  • Access to Mars system material without landing on Mars

  • Records of Mars’s early impact history

  • Insights into rubble-pile structure

  • A natural laboratory for tidal physics

Because of its weak gravity, landing on Phobos is easier than landing on Mars.

Phobos could become a stepping stone for future human missions.

Sample Return – A Window into Mars’s Past

One of the most valuable goals is returning samples from Phobos.

Why this matters:

  • Phobos may contain material ejected from Mars

  • Ancient Martian crust could be preserved

  • Samples could reveal early Mars chemistry

The Japanese MMX (Martian Moons eXploration) mission is designed to:

  • Visit Phobos and Deimos

  • Collect surface samples

  • Return them to Earth

This mission could resolve the long-standing debate about Phobos’s origin.

Phobos as a Human Gateway

Because of its low gravity and proximity, Phobos is often discussed as:

  • A staging point for Mars exploration

  • A fuel depot location

  • A scientific outpost

From Phobos, astronauts could:

  • Control robots on Mars in near real-time

  • Study Mars without atmospheric entry

  • Operate with lower energy costs

Phobos may never host cities—but it could host human presence.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

Is Phobos really falling toward Mars?

Yes. Measurements confirm it is spiraling inward by about 2 cm per year.


Will Phobos crash into Mars?

Possibly, but current models suggest it will break apart into a ring first.


How big would a Phobos impact be?

If intact, the impact would be catastrophic locally but not planet-destroying.


Why doesn’t Deimos fall too?

Deimos orbits farther out and is moving slowly away from Mars.


Could Phobos ever be saved?

No known natural or technological process could stop its orbital decay.

Phobos in the Context of Universe Map

Phobos connects multiple Universe Map themes:

  • Tidal dynamics

  • Moon formation and destruction

  • Planet–satellite interactions

  • Future space exploration

Related Universe Map topics include:

  • Deimos

  • Mars

  • Roche limit

  • Planetary rings

  • Orbital decay

Together, these objects show that satellite systems are temporary structures, not permanent ones.

Final Perspective

Phobos is a moon in decline.

It has survived massive impacts, extreme tidal stress, and billions of years of orbital evolution—but it cannot escape its final trajectory.

In the future, Mars may gain a ring made from its own moon. Long after that ring fades, the story of Phobos will remain written in Mars’s surface and in scientific records.

Phobos reminds us of a subtle truth of the Solar System:

nothing in orbit is forever.