The United Arab Emirates' Hope space probe on Monday revealed Mars' smaller moon Deimos in unprecedented detail, shedding new light on the origin of the mysterious lumpy satellite.
The probe, the Arab world's first interplanetary mission, has been orbiting Mars for two years, regularly flying past Deimos and its big sibling moon Phobos.
It came within 110 kilometres (68 miles) from Deimos, a rocky object the shape of a bean just 12 kilometres wide, according to the Emirates Mars Mission (EMM).
The probe -- named "Al-Amal", Arabic for "Hope" -- sent back to Earth the most precise images and observations of the moon ever captured, using instruments that measure the infrared and ultraviolet wavelengths.
It also observed for the first time the far side of the moon, revealing regions whose compositions have never been studied, the mission said.
The probe could also prompt new debate over how exactly the strange moons ended up in the Martian orbit.
"We are unsure of the origins of both Phobos and Deimos," the EMM's science lead Hessa Al Matroushi said in a statement.
One leading theory is that the two moons were once asteroids passing by when they were unexpectedly captured into the orbit of Mars.
But Al Matroushi said that "our close observations of Deimos so far point to a planetary origin".
Christopher Edwards, a scientist in charge of one of the probe's instruments, said that "both of these bodies have infrared properties more akin to a basaltic Mars" than an asteroid.
That could mean the rocky bodies were once part of Mars, and were potentially shot out into orbit by a massive impact.
UAE Prime Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum tweeted that the probe "refutes" the theory that the moon was once an asteroid.
Instead it
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