Movie of Mars Dust Storm
Bamfarooni writes: "The hubble isn't the only spacecraft looking at Mars.
The Mars Global Surveyor has been mapping the surface and
atmosphere of Mars for the past 3 years,
and has a cool movie
of one of the largest Martian dust storms in recorded history."
There's no reason that dust storms should pose a particular problem for colonists. The optical density of a dusty martian atmosphere is like a hazy day on earth.
While winds of 200kph sound awful, they really only pack the punch of a 10mph breeze on earth. (although a windmill on mars would probably look a bit different than its terran counterpart.)
Underground development is a good idea for other reasons, though. For heilding from cosmic rays and solar flares, a thick layer of regolith will come in handy.
I found it interesting that the storm spread from the low-altitude (high air-pressure) region of Hellas to the high-altitude Tharsis. Surely if storms of this scale repeatedly follow this pattern Tharsis is only going to get /lower/?
It was also interesting to see the way the storm spread around Olympus Mons; with something of a shadow of calm as the storm spread.
I've been posting on the net since 1994 and I still haven't come up with a good sig!
I can't imagine why they chose the animated GIF to distribute this image. It may have more platform independance that using mpegs, but other video formats have the advantages of being able to freeze and rewind.
Did anyone else notice the amount of error pixels that were apparent? Particularly the Jul 8th image at 90W. Surely that's transmission noise? Could the weather pattern really be that fine?
I've been posting on the net since 1994 and I still haven't come up with a good sig!
Also, I suspect that surface buildings would be quite badly damaged (sandblasted windows anyone?) and our solar panels wouldn't last long either.
Perhaps colonising Mars under the surface is the way to go - that could resolve some of the problems due to the temperature as well.