HiRISE (High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment), on board MRO, took this image of a small impact crater that was formed sometime in the last five years. Although the crater is small, the rays of ejecta thrown out by the impact are easy to spot, stretching out almost a kilometer.
How often does this happen on Mars? A 2013 study estimated that the red planet gets womped by more than 200 small asteroids or bits of comets per year, forming craters at least 3.9 meters (12.8 feet) across. Like on Earth, even a small impact would wreak havoc on any Martian settlement. But impacts of this size on Mars happen more frequently.
Mars is about half the size of Earth by diameter and the thinner air surrounding the planet has an atmospheric volume less than 1 percent of Earth's. The atmospheric composition is also significantly different: primarily carbon dioxide-based, while Earth's is rich in nitrogen and oxygen.
MRO has been in orbit of Mars since 2006, and one of the benefits of having a spacecraft in orbit around another planet for several years is the ability to make long-term observations and interpretations. HiRISE images over the years have detected numerous "fresh" craters that have formed, and since it has repeatedly imaged several regions on Mars, scientists can study the before-and-after images to calculate the impact rate based on new craters.
The 2013 study showed that the rate for how frequently new craters are formed, which are at least 3.9 meters in diameter, is about one each year on each area of the Mars surface, roughly the size of the state of Texas.
Just one more thing that will be a challenge for anyone who dares to try and live on Mars.
See the original image and more details from MRO on the HiRISE website.