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Ice Lake on Mars

DecoDragon writes "The ESA's Mars Express discovered an ice lake on Mars. The ESA has a number of images and an explanation of what was found. The lake was found in an unnamed crater. The report says it can't be carbon dioxide, because carbon dioxide ice had already disappeared from the northern polar cap at the time the image was taken." Coverage from the BBC also available. From the article: "The team has also been able to detect faint traces of water ice along the rim of the crater and on the crater walls. Mars is covered with deep gorges, apparently carved out by rivers and glaciers, although most of the water vanished millions of years ago. "

78 of 374 comments (clear)

  1. Cool... by It+doesn't+come+easy · · Score: 4, Informative

    Nice pictures. I think the article has one thing wrong, though. It should be possible for the ice to sublimate away above -103 F on Mars. Unless, of course this particular crater never gets that hot...

    --
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    1. Re:Cool... by Pxtl · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Hmm. What I wonder is how there appears to be snow on the hillside - I mean, that suggests that the ice is blowing away (unless that's a trick of their colour retouching). Maybe that ice lake is only temporary?

    2. Re:Cool... by Qzukk · · Score: 5, Informative

      See the phase diagram for water Here

      It'd be nice if there was some more marks on the axes, but you can see that somewhere below one atmosphere of pressure, you can get directly from ice to vapor.

      --
      If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
    3. Re:Cool... by It+doesn't+come+easy · · Score: 4, Informative

      Sublimnate is the word that describes the phase change from solid to gas without going through the liquid phase. This applies to all substances. There is usually a temperature range where a solid will sublimnate straight to a gas instead on melt then boil. Carbon dioxide (as well as most substances that we normally consider a gas) just happens to not have a liquid range at any temperature under low pressure (Earth atmosphere or below). Water, on the other hand, has a distince sublimation temperature range and a distinct liquid range in Earth normal (and Mars normal) pressure conditions.

      You probably have water sublimating in your very own house, in fact. We call it freezer burn.

      --
      The NSA: The only part of the US government that actually listens.
    4. Re:Cool... by jackelfish · · Score: 5, Informative

      I would agree with you, but I think that you assume a surface pressure of only 1 Pa. At the recorded pressures of 0.675-1 kPa for Mars' atmosphere, water remains ice until it reaches a temperature of somewhere between 240 to 275 K (-27 to 35 F). The average recorded temperatures of the surface of Mars ranges between 130-250K (-225 to -9 F) with a mean of 210K, so it is entirely possible for this ice to remain year round without sublimating, or melting at the extreme temperature (275K) and pressure (1 kPa) range. I am only extrapolating these values from a phase diagram for water, therefore the numbers are most likely off. This, of course, also assumes that the sun is not shining on the region in question, as soil temperatures of 300K (+81 F) have been reported.

      --
      "When Nature Calls We All Shall Drown" Johan Edlund
    5. Re:Cool... by geekoid · · Score: 3, Funny

      I mark my axes every time I kill an Orc.

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  2. HI-RES? by Agret · · Score: 4, Funny

    HI-RES JPG
    Size: 13,100 kb

    How big do you want to make it!? Good thing they are on a phat pipe or /. would've got them instantly ;)

    --
    Have you metaroderated recently?
    1. Re:HI-RES? by m_chan · · Score: 2, Informative

      Try jpeg2000 in lossless mode.

      Another decent overview is available at O'Reilly.

      2000's lossy mode is superior to jpg as well.

  3. Colonies? by tommertron · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Does this mean sustainable Mars colonies are possible?

    --
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    1. Re:Colonies? by khendron · · Score: 4, Funny

      No, just sustainable hockey and curling leagues.

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    2. Re:Colonies? by Pxtl · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Sustainable... no, but you might be able to use this to help a small outpost last a long time.

    3. Re:Colonies? by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 2, Funny

      Duh. Haven't you seen Total Recall? It also means there's a giant alien nuclear reactor just primed and waiting to heat up all that ice and make air for the entire planet.

    4. Re:Colonies? by dupup · · Score: 2, Funny
      sustainable hockey...leagues

      At last! From my point of view, this fact alone justifies all historical and future budget expenditures. I am pleased to see that my congressional reps are finally falling into line with my needs.

    5. Re:Colonies? by NardofDoom · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Not quite yet, but it does make exploration a lot easier. The water can be used to make rocket fuel, air to breathe, hydrogen or methane for fuel, irrigate crops, flush toilets and drink.

      Considering we'd have to, at the very least, carry a lot of hydrogen along with us to do the same things, this is very, very good news.

      --
      You have two hands and one brain, so always code twice as much as you think!
    6. Re:Colonies? by vsprintf · · Score: 2, Funny

      Not quite yet, but it does make exploration a lot easier. The water can be used to make rocket fuel, air to breathe, hydrogen or methane for fuel, irrigate crops, flush toilets and drink.

      Could you please put "drink" on the list before "flush toilets"? Thanks.

  4. This is not news! by jarich · · Score: 4, Funny
    Nasa has known this for months!

    Here's the photo: http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap050401.html

    ;) It's humour! Laugh!

    1. Re:This is not news! by srmalloy · · Score: 4, Informative

      Not a joke, still from the Astronomy Picture of the Day site, is this picture, which according to the page text, was actually taken back in February, and reported in the June 2005 issue of Nature. So while it's news, it's not new news.

  5. When can I move there? by alvinrod · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I'm curious about how long everyone thinks it will take before people are able to live on Mars. Now that we're pretty sure there's water there, it isn't a far stretch to believe that the planet is more than capable of supporting human life.

    1. Re:When can I move there? by Moo+Moo+Cow+of+Death · · Score: 4, Funny

      I'm curious about how long everyone thinks it will take before people are able to live on Mars. Now that we're pretty sure there's water there, it isn't a far stretch to believe that the planet is more than capable of supporting human life.

      Except for, you know...the sub zero temperatures and the lack of oxygen and all... :)

    2. Re:When can I move there? by Skyshadow · · Score: 4, Insightful
      It seems to be that "could" and "will" are two different things in this situation.

      Odds are, we could live on Mars right now -- learning to grow crops could take some work, but everything else is actually fairly straightforward. You can make bricks from the soil, make O2 from the atmosphere, mine water out of the soil, etc.

      Now, when *will* we live on Mars is something else. The answer is pretty much either "a couple of years after a major government decides it's worthwhile" or, more likely, "a few years after we find some way to make money by doing so".

      --
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    3. Re:When can I move there? by rebelcool · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Of course, motivating a government to pursue this goal results in enormous economic gains over the mid to long term. Look at apollo. The sheer amount of research and manufacturing buildup that had to happen to make it possible gave a huge boost to the US in every corner of the economy as it did so. Big govt money spurs research, factory construction, employment to man those factories etc... and don't forget the societal boost as you give your nation a purpose.

      Of course, Senator Joe Doofus just sees that taxes will be raised a few dollars to see this accomplished and strikes it down.

      --

      -

    4. Re:When can I move there? by jackelfish · · Score: 3, Informative

      Except for the fact that the average surface temperature of Mars is -63 C, the atmospheric pressure is 100x lower than earth and the O2 composition of the atmoshpere is about 1,000,000x less.

      --
      "When Nature Calls We All Shall Drown" Johan Edlund
  6. Amazing Photos by necrofluxneo · · Score: 5, Funny

    Excerpt taken from a chat session between ESA and NASA lead engineers: NASA: "Our Mars Rovers are both still going strong, moving at over an inch per day, and finding all sorts of great new types of reddish sand. I could possible arrange to send you some sam-" ESA: "WATER!! YEAH BABY!! WE pWnEd j0000!!! MWA AHHAHAHAHAH!!"

  7. What's more... by burtdub · · Score: 5, Funny

    Romance advice authors have found evidence of men on Mars. No word on Venus.

  8. Yes. by krell · · Score: 2, Funny

    Sustainable colonies are now possible, now that you won't have to deal with the expense of the colonists returning to Earth every winter to get in some ice fishing.

    --
    Where were you when the voynix came?
  9. Re:pool by Shadow+Wrought · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Lake hell. It looks like a swimming pool.

    Since the crater is 23 miles across and close to a mile deep, the patch of ice, judging from the picture, is actually fairly good size. Not enough for sustainable human development, but enough to demonstrate that there is water here and there.

    I wonder what a core sample would show?

    --
    If brevity is the soul of wit, then how does one explain Twitter?
  10. how did we miss that before? by option8 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    really. IANARS*, but how did previous missions miss that? haven't we already imaged most or all of the martian surface from orbit at a resolution high enough to see this glaringly obvious bullseye?

    and if it wasn't there a few years ago, where did it come from?

    * not a rocket scientist

    1. Re:how did we miss that before? by mattdm · · Score: 4, Informative

      really. IANARS*, but how did previous missions miss that? haven't we already imaged most or all of the martian surface from orbit at a resolution high enough to see this glaringly obvious bullseye?

      Well, this patch of ice looks like it has a surface area of what, 75 square km? All of Mars is about 145 million square km, so we're talking about 0.00005% of the surface -- I can kinda see how that might take a while to notice.

      Basically, planets are big -- Mars may be smaller than the earth, but since there's no ocean, it has about the same land area.

    2. Re:how did we miss that before? by delcielo · · Score: 4, Funny

      Are you kidding? With 200,000 troops, a herd of inspectors and millions of pissed off disaffected Iraqi citizens we couldn't find WMD in a country less than the size of Texas.

      Those rocket scientist kids are doing okay.

      Maybe we should have sent them into the desert.

      --
      Hot Damn! It's the Soggy Bottom Boys!
    3. Re:how did we miss that before? by gamer4Life · · Score: 2, Informative

      That implies that they are there ;)

  11. Too bad... by popo · · Score: 4, Funny

    ..its going to take Opportunity *forever* to get up there.

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    ------ The best brain training is now totally free : )
  12. Water implies Life by orthogonal · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Water => Life.

    I'll be damned surprised if we don't find life on Mars now that we know there's free-standing water (ice) on the planet.

    Our next responsibility is to try very very hard not to contaminate Mars with Earth-life, if we haven't already with our probes.

    1. Re:Water implies Life by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Water is needed by life. As a result, life implies water. Not the other way around.

    2. Re:Water implies Life by HyperChicken · · Score: 4, Informative

      Well, the only evidence of life is that which exists on Earth. On Earth, where there be water, there be life. The statement "All life needs water" is supported by the evidence. The evidences scope, however, is rather narrow.

      --
      Free of Flash! Free of Flash!
    3. Re:Water implies Life by daeley · · Score: 5, Funny

      On Earth, where there be water, there be life.

      And where there be water, there be pirates. Yarrrr!

      --
      I watched C-beams glitter in the dark near the Tannhauser gate.
    4. Re:Water implies Life by orthogonal · · Score: 2, Insightful
      "Why not?"

      A couple of very good reasons:
      1. We want to compare Mars life to Earth life. If Mars life has been contaminated with Earth life that'll be much harder to do. In particular, we'd like to know if, and to what extent, Mars life is similar to Earth life: does it use DNA, does its DNA use the same codons, are we descended from it. All of this will tremendously inform us about our own earth life, and will have strong implications for what life may be like elsewhere in the universe.
      2. And, if Mars life does exist, it's probably less complex than Earth life, and possibly easily overwhelmed by Earth life. Just for ethical reasons, we'd prefer not to destroy anything that is uniquely different.


      An analogy: European settlement destroyed much of the indigenous human heritage of South America. Catholic missionaries deliberately burned indigenous religious books, and pulled down indigenous temples. European explorers and settlers killed thousands of indigenous peoples with guns, and millions with European germs. We still have only a tenuous understanding of what human life was like before Europeans discovered South America, and that knowledge is slowly and painfully wrung from mall and inaccessible archaeological digs. (The same can be said of Australia and parts of Africa, where Europeans hunted natives for sport and received bounties for native scalps.) How much more would we know if we had an unbroken cultural history to learn from?

      The worst setback to our knowledge of Martian life -- and by extension, life anywhere other than Earth -- would be to heedlessly rush in and destroy the uniqueness of what we hope to study.

    5. Re:Water implies Life by I'm+Spartacus! · · Score: 5, Informative

      It's pretty clear that life requires a solvent of some kind to form the complex molecules needed for life. Try and imagine amino acids forming in ice or some other solid. Water is regarded as the universal solvent since virtually everything will dissolve in it. Add to that that water is pH neutral and it provides a very hospitable environment for these molcules.

      Also, water has the unique property of being less dense in solid form than liquid form, hence ice floats. Thus, when bodies of water freeze, the ice settles on top of it. In other words, water freezes from the surface down, unlike other liquids. This action provides an insulating layer which allows life to flourish under the surface instead of being driven to the surface by ice forming from the bottom up.

      Water also has strong surface tension due to the hydrogen bonding between water molucules. This allows for capillary action in which plant can pull water up against gravity. This isn't necessary for the formation of primitive life, but it's difficult to imagine higher forms of life without it.

      No, all science points to water being the one molecule which is able to nurture and sustain life. It's an amazing compound despite the fact that it's so prevalent that we tend to take it for granted.

      --
      "War is God's way of teaching Americans geography." -- Ambrose Bierce
  13. When do we start terraforming? by zardo · · Score: 2, Interesting
    If we combine NASA and ESA, and maybe China if they want onboard, we could start terraforming that mofo in a few years!

    Dream on, I know...

  14. New raffle -- Mars Rover Lake Thaw Drop by gearmonger · · Score: 2, Funny

    OK, taking entries now for when the rover will drop through the ice during the Spring thaw. Please format entries to indicate specific time, day, month and eon.

  15. Quick way to colonize by frank_adrian314159 · · Score: 4, Funny

    Now that we know there's ice there, we can tell the Canadians and they'll get a hockey team up there ASAP.

    --
    That is all.
    1. Re:Quick way to colonize by kin_korn_karn · · Score: 3, Funny

      No! We must not contaminate Mars with the neutral zone trap!

      Tell the scandinavian countries, they know how to play real hockey, not that canadian thug shit.

    2. Re:Quick way to colonize by DarthVain · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Trying to skate in low gravity would definatly be an interesting concept! Hiting would be fun too! Booooooing Booooing!

    3. Re:Quick way to colonize by zx75 · · Score: 2, Funny

      Oh great! Lots of sand, some ice that we thought shouldn't have been there... now MARS is going to have an NHL before we Winnipegers get our back!

      --
      This is not a sig.
    4. Re:Quick way to colonize by blincoln · · Score: 2, Funny

      I'll show you some Canadian thug shit ;)

      Funniest thing I saw when I was going to university in Canada:

      A mall store selling shirts and baseball caps with "South Central" embroidered on them in that gothic German "gangsta" font.

      Yayuh, I'ma V-town SOLDJAH, foo. Straight outta South Central Richmond, rollin' up on tha Commercial Drive crew. Ready ta drop like a Quebecois separatist on yo ass. Chillin' wit a Molson in one hand, butta-tart inna othah. Yo.

      offtopic, no karma bonus.

      --
      "...always new atoms but always doing the same dance, remembering what the dance was yesterday." -Richard Feynman
  16. Why is this important? by bcrowell · · Score: 4, Interesting
    I don't get it. The BBC article says:

    The existence of water on Mars raises the prospect that past or present life will one day be detected.

    ...

    It also boosts the chances that manned missions can eventually be sent to the Red Planet.

    Large reserves of water-ice are also known to be held at the poles on Mars.

    We've known for a long time that there was water ice at one of the poles. We also know there's ice underground at lower latitudes. If there's surface ice in crater at a slightly lower latitude, why does that say anything about past or present life on Mars? It's not obvious to me that this has any serious implications for human exploration either. If the idea is to get drinking water and/or hydrogen from local supplies, then is it really that significant that it can be done at a slightly lower latitude? And if the goal of the mission is to look for past or present life, then the equator is clearly where you want to visit, not high latitudes. Likewise if humans were going to set up a permanent presence on Mars, they'd probably want to do it near the equator, where the cold wouldn't be so devastating.
    1. Re:Why is this important? by It+doesn't+come+easy · · Score: 2, Informative

      Likewise if humans were going to set up a permanent presence on Mars, they'd probably want to do it near the equator, where the cold wouldn't be so devastating.

      Hmm, I would think that a difference of 50 degrees (-50 C vs. -100 C) would not be as much of a problem as being near to vs. far away from your life sustaining ice supply. Which is why everyone has been thinking that the first base should be at the south pole. However, craters like this would certainly expand the possibilities and make a base near the equator more practical...

      --
      The NSA: The only part of the US government that actually listens.
    2. Re:Why is this important? by Anthracks · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think it might be that the ice on the poles is frozen CO2 (like "dry ice"), whereas this is frozen H20. At least that's what I inferred fromt he article.

      --
      Rock over London, Rock on Chicago. Wheaties: Breakfast of Champions.
  17. Re:rover by Ford+Prefect · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The crater sides themselves seem pretty severe and pretty deep, I'd think driving (at least the current rovers) down would be a VERY long shot.

    The latitude could be a problem too, albeit for a different reason - it's thought the ice is there because there's so little sunlight getting to the crater's floor.

    This hypothetical rover had better have an RTG (Radioisotope Thermoelectric Generator), 'cause solar panels defintely aren't going to work too well... :-]

    --
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  18. Re:No by RickPartin · · Score: 2, Funny

    Yeah because ice is impossible to melt. But maybe one day we will develope some sort of heat technology.

  19. Planetary acne cream by blankoboy · · Score: 2, Funny

    Fools, that ain't water! Don't they know an dab of Oxy5 when they see it? Poor Mars is covering up a zit and you got it on camera....he won't be happy now. NASA get photoshoppin' on those pics before Mars finds out! He'll be kickin' them rovers off it's surface!

  20. You know what this means. by blair1q · · Score: 3, Funny

    Mars rovers Spirit and Opportunity sit on the Martian regolith listening to the news.

    They look at each other, then, after a beat, say, in unison, "ROAD TRIP!"

  21. Meddling Fools! by popo · · Score: 2, Funny


    I see you've found the sliding roof of my Martian lair!

    --
    ------ The best brain training is now totally free : )
  22. Re:No by krell · · Score: 2, Funny
    ' Yeah because ice is impossible to melt. But maybe one day we will develope some sort of heat technology. '

    This would almost certainly involve infrared radiation. We certainly don't want to get involved with radiation: it is deadly and it will turn us into mutants! Besides, I don't think you will want to transform this frozen lake with heat. This process typically produces a lethal substance known as dihydrogen monoxide

    --
    Where were you when the voynix came?
  23. Perhaps that ice wasn't always there. by ZSpade · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Isn't it possible that whatever made the crater is also what brought the ICE? I mean, if it was a comet it could have made a very large and localized ice deposit; since they already mentioned that most of the ice had disappeared years ago. Well, that's just my little hypothesis, who knows how old that crater is!

    --
    Go ahead and call me unreliable; reliable is just a synonym for predictable.
    1. Re:Perhaps that ice wasn't always there. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The heat created by the kinetic energy of an incoming comet being released as it slams into the planet was sufficient to move a LOT of regolith to create a crater. It was certainly enough to evaporate all the ice in the comet. The winds in the atmosphere would have spread the water around the planet rather than allowing it to condense right over the crater. As a first guess the water ice in the crater was thawed from the underlying regolith by the impact and flooded up into the crater.

  24. Canadian Exploration Plans by airship · · Score: 3, Funny

    Meanwhile, the Canadian Space Agency today released an artist's rendition of their new planned Mars Explorer Vehicle.

    http://www.zamboni.com/machines/model700.html

    They also announced that the expedition will be fully underwritten by the Canadian Hockey League.

    --
    Serving your airship needs since 1995.
  25. Green tendrils? by Digital_Quartz · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Grab the high-res overhead shot, and look at the bottom left edge of the ice patch. There's what a faint green discoloration which look like some sort of "tendrils" creeping up the side of the ice. Anyone have any theory what those are? Could they just be some sort of color distortion introduced by the camera? Or is this possibly some sort of organism?

    1. Re:Green tendrils? by polyp2000 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Indeed, these are very interesting. At first i thought they might be an artifact of the camera or something but after some minor investigation.

      Im pretty sure those are there in the physical sense. Try loading the hi-res overhead shot into gimp or whatever your favorite gfx proggy might be. Invert the colors on it (turns the water black) and then using the brightness and contrast adjustments you can really bring out the shapes. What is particularly interesting is that on the topleft corner of the ice are what can only be described as oblong crystaline structures. The green tendrils (when processed reveal regions that look very fractilious in nature. Wheras around the top and right side the edges seem to be pockmarked splodges showing the kind of distribution one might expect of bacteria on an agar plate.

      here's a pic (you'll get better resolution if you experiment on the larger image)

      http://80.68.88.97/~poo/analysis.jpg

      --
      Electronic Music Made Using Linux http://soundcloud.com/polyp
    2. Re:Green tendrils? by blincoln · · Score: 2, Informative

      It looks like an artifact of either graphics compression or a glitch in the sensor data to me:

      - The shapes are very angular, unlike everything else in the image.

      - It's only there in the blue channel. If it were really present, there should be *some* trace of it in red or green, but if you remove the blue channel the shapes disappear.

      - If I re-compress the image as a minimum-quality JPG, the amount of green "tendrils" dramatically increases.

      My best guess is that it's a JPG artifact due to the extreme colour change at the rock/ice boundary.

      --
      "...always new atoms but always doing the same dance, remembering what the dance was yesterday." -Richard Feynman
  26. APOD by Stonan · · Score: 2, Informative

    Was originally an Astronomy Picture Of the Day. (http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap050720.html) This is a good site or backgrounds!

    P.S. For other good/neat pics goto http://epod.usra.edu/archive.php3 (Earth Science Picture Of the Day)

    --
    The GEEK shall inherit the earth...
  27. What is NOT mentioned, though... by jd · · Score: 3, Informative
    ...if you look at the photograph, you will see two small impact craters in the ice and one large one. There are no others.


    Assuming that meteorites strike Mars fairly evenly, it should be possible to guess how old the ice lake is. It is certainly newer than the crater it is in (duh!) and from the lack of craters on the ice or in the crater the ice is in, there must be a very definite upper limit to how old it can be.


    There are two possible sources for the water (an issue the ESA and NASA don't really discuss on their sites): We know there's an underground ice lake, for a start. It is possible that when the impact occured, it burst through to such a lake, melting the water temporarily. The water would reach the surface and re-freeze.


    The second possibility is that the surface has indeed been warm enough for liquid water, despite evidence from those with martian meteorites. This is possible, as the meteorites may well have been from a cold part of Mars. It could well be that Mars couldn't -sustain- warm temperatures, so warm regions were geologically active regions. Water takes finite time to freeze, especially when flowing, allowing for water-formed features even outside regions that would have sustained liquid water.


    The latter explanation would be great for those looking for life, but the ice-spray on the rim of the crater, along with the bulge of land under the ice, is more indicitive of the former. Rats!

    --
    It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
  28. Re:No by blatantdog · · Score: 2, Funny

    Are you proposing some sort of "heating machine"?

  29. Pressure is a factor by Dr.+Zed · · Score: 4, Informative

    When you decrease the atmospheric pressure, you change the freezing and boiling point of water. Under pressure, water favors being a liquid. Without such pressure, the melting point and boiling point would come closer together.

    For more info see this PDF (in particular, figure 5.1). It illustrates the triple point.

  30. Re:pool by jdray · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Not enough for sustainable human development

    Why not? If that's water ice, there's a lot of water there. Now, it's not enough to suit the needs of a planet full of people, but it's certainly enough to sustain a community of humans of some appreciable size, so long as they don't do something stupid like convert it all to rocket fuel.

    --
    The Spoon
    Updated 6/28/2011
  31. Living On Mars? A Little Dose Of Reality by Cutting_Crew · · Score: 4, Interesting

    living on mars??

    get real.. we cant even send a shuttle into space to the ISS without foam coming off and jeopardzing the crew, not sure where thats gonna lead. the old shuttles are done for -- they arent going to build new ones. they are using these until the new "capsules" are built to go into space and even these wont be for humans.

    we've got at least 50 - 60 years before we even START to think about talking about sending humans to mars for anything.

    In the nine months it takes to get to Mars, Mars moves a considerable distance around in its orbit, about 3/8 of the way around the Sun. You have to plan ahead to make sure that by the time you reach the distance of Mar's orbit, that Mars is where you need it to be! Practically, this means that you can only begin your trip when Earth and Mars are properly lined up. This only happens every 26 months. That is there is only one launch window every 26 months.

    After spending 9 months on the way to Mars, you will probably want to spend some time there. In fact, you MUST spend some time at Mars! If you were to continue on your orbit around the Sun, then when you got back to where you started, Earth would no longer be where you left it!

    Just like you have to wait for Earth and Mars to be in the proper postion before you head to Mars, you also have to make sure that they are in the proper position before you head home. That means you will have to spend 3-4 months at Mars before you can begin your return trip. All in all, your trip to Mars would take about 21 months: 9 months to get there, 3 months there, and 9 months to get back. With our current rocket technology, there is no way around this. The long duration of trip has several implications.

    First, you have to bring enough food, water, clothes, and medical supplies for the crew in addition to all the scientific instruments you will want to take. You also have to bring all that fuel! In addition, if you are in space for nine months, you will need a lot of shielding to protect you from the radiation of the Sun. Water, and cement make good shielding but they are very heavy. All together, it is estimated that for a crew of six, you would need to 3 million pounds of supplies! The Shuttle can lift about 50,000 pounds into space, so it would take 60 shuttle launches to get all your supplies into space. In the history of the Shuttle, there have only been about 90 launches, and there are less than ten launches per year... So with the shuttle, it would take six years just to get the supplies into space. For this reason, you would probably need to develop a launch system that could lift more than 50,000 pounds into space. Even with a better launch vehicle, it is unlikely that you could launch the Mars mission all at once. You will have to launch it in several pieces and assemble them in orbit.

    Second, you are going to be in space for an extended period of time, and there a physiological consequences of being weightless for long periods of time. For one, your muscles do not need to work as hard. In response to being used less, your muscles begin to shrink or atrophy. Remember, your heart is also a muscle, and pumping blood around your body is easier in the weightless environment of space, so your heart gets weaker as well. On an extended space voyage, your muscles might become so weak that it would be difficult for you to stand upright once you return to an environment where you are subject to gravity.

    Just like your muscles have to do less work to move you around in space, your bones are not needed as much. The main function of your skeleton is to support the weight of your body. When you are weightless in space, your body realizes that the bones are not being used as much and they begin to lose calcium, and become more brittle. These are serious effects which may impair the ability of the astronauts to carry out experiments and tasks when they get to Mars, where they will be subjected to gravity again.

    In order to study these physiological effects of

    1. Re:Living On Mars? A Little Dose Of Reality by ShoobieRat · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Without going into length, I think the poster both has little understanding in the amount of progress that can be made in just 10 years, the difficulties and politics involved that have lead to the current state of the space program, and, oh yeah, no understanding of any of the work done regarding getting to Mars.

    2. Re:Living On Mars? A Little Dose Of Reality by goosetheforce · · Score: 2, Informative

      Humans to Mars is completely realistic. Here's why all your showstoppers don't hold up.

      Yes, launch windows are only every 26 months and you have to spend over a year on mars before returning, but that's not a bad thing. You want to maximize the amount of time you spend studying the planet.

      No, you don't have to take fuel for the return trip. You produce it on Mars by extracting carbon from the CO2 atmosphere and combining it with a small store of hydrogen you bring with you. Then you have methane, a perfectly respectable rocket fuel. The oxidizer gets extracted from the CO2 atmosphere as well. You bring a smallish nuclear reactor with you to power all this.

      Yeah, you need a big heavy lift vehicle. We've made those before; remember Saturn V? Variants of the Space Shuttle stack can also be used. You can fit all the supplies and cargo and astronauts on one launch to Mars, and send them their return vehicle on a separate launch.

      Radiation in space can be dealt with perhaps by circulating water through the hull of the spaceship. For protection from the occasional solar flare, astronauts can cram into a small central heavily shielded area of the craft. Radiation on Mars isn't toooo much of a worry becuase it's got an atmosphere, albeit a thin one, and bags of Martian sand can be laid across the top of the habitat for extra protection.

      Yeah, there's a problem with the low gravity in space, but you're only in space for six months at a time. Astronauts recover pretty quickly from six month tours on space stations. Mars itself has over a third of Earth's gravity, so we're *hoping* that should suffice when combined with regular exercise.

  32. Lakefront property on Mars... by svtmunk · · Score: 3, Funny

    Get it fast before rates rise and the bubble bursts....

    As an added bonus - you can ice skate all year round!

  33. Not the only one by Ektanoor · · Score: 3, Funny

    Well at least I see that there is more than one lake in the northern hemisphere. Well, really what I saw is a lot smaller than this one. I would call it a pond. But what amazed me is that it showed that water could really keep for some time in open air (or more correctly "near open air"??). Moreover, the pond was getting water from a spring over the hill behind it. Considering this, I think there should be more places where water could gather.

    BTW, If I well remember, the borders of the pound showed some gradation suggesting it was drying up. And,and and if I really didn't mess anything, the pond was mostly covered by a wall. But it was not a crater. Probably a subduction as the shape was more similar to an ellypse over an highland. Yes, and what most critics may bash me was that the pond was in small highland. Yes pressure should a lot less there. But it was there...

    But please don't ask me for a proof. As I told once around here. I lost that frame. I hardly tried to pick it back but it was searching in a haystack as all my data went limbo back them. It is on one of MGS frames before Summer 2000. I worked with the original frames or with those processed by Malin's labs.

    Besides I am not here claiming first discoveries. Just leaving a note. Maybe someone finds it or catches something more interesting. Like underground rivers or something else :)

  34. What's CG, what's real? by exp(pi*sqrt(163)) · · Score: 2, Insightful

    They look like CG renders to me. One of the pictures has a comment pointing out that the depth has been exaggerated by a factor of 3 (not the anaglyph). So clearly at least one image is a fake. It's getting annoying just how processed images are these days without a suitable warning. Nowadays it seems acceptable, not just to apply filters or color transforms, but also use image based rendering to render from a new viewpoint.

    --
    Doesn't it make you feel good to know that our freedoms are protected by politicans, lawyers and journalists.
  35. don't minimize it... by erikus · · Score: 2, Funny

    when the picture is on the screen because when you open it up again it will scare the shit out of you because it looks like a giant eye.

  36. Re:pool by barawn · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I disagree completely with you and saying that this is not enough for sustainable human development. I'm sure this is enough water to sustain development for years to come, long enough for somebody to find water somewhere else.

    Well, it's of order 20 trillion liters (10mi*10mi*200 feet) of ice (which is about the same volume as the equivalent liquid water content - ice is only about 10% less dense).

    A random site says that Americans use on average 80-100 gallons per day, which means that water would supply a colony of 10,000 for 11,000 years.

    Yes, the water needs for a colony are higher than the water needs for a person, but an off-planet colony probably is going to recycle water (one would hope), so I'd imagine actually that it probably works out pretty well.

    So yah, I agree with you. This is a heckuva lot of water.

  37. Re:I have a suggestion... by The+Angry+Mick · · Score: 2, Funny

    Since it's a lake, why not name it after Fredo?

    --

    I'm not tense. I'm just terribly, terribly, alert.

  38. Don't be silly by nightsweat · · Score: 3, Funny

    The NHL has already proven there is no such thing as a sustainable hockey league.

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    the major advances in civilization are processes which all but wreck the societies in which they occur - A.N. White
  39. What about the Martian Poles by popo · · Score: 2, Insightful


    There's something I've never understood about this quest for water on Mars.

    First off, this "ice" thing doesn't seem like a big deal to me. When I was 8 years old I had a picture of Martian ice caps on my wall. (Yeah.. I was like that). So why is this a big deal? Because its at the bottom of a crater in a less than frozen area? How does that make life more likely? Clearly the bottom of that crater's pretty inhospitable too...

    Secondly -- I've never understood why we don't look for water in a place I would think is the most obvious: in the periphery of the ice caps. Wouldn't liquid water most likely be in the place where the caps melt? It seems highly likely that Martian ice caps perform similarly to Earth's ice caps -- sloughing off ice into a temperate zone.

    Why do Mars' frozen poles not get more attention in this quest for water?

    Anyone?

    --
    ------ The best brain training is now totally free : )
  40. Posterization, JPEG compression by RedBear · · Score: 2, Informative

    After looking at the highest resolution color version I noticed that you can see the square patterns of the pixels, or more likely sets of compressed pixels. This happens often with JPEG images that have been compressed a little too much. Each square of X pixels gets compressed separately and some information is lost, so that when the same square is uncompressed it doesn't always blend smoothly into the surrounding squares with regard to color and lightness. I believe this is referred to as posterization, a loss of smoothness in the color transitions where it changes in steps that can be clearly seen rather than in tiny increments.

    If you look at the patterns of squares, the image seems to have been tilted counter-clockwise about ten degrees, so the vertical and horizontal lines aren't straight up and down or left and right. Oddly enough, the long green "tendrils" seem to line up very well with the lines of squares, especially the big one in the bottom left. Notice how the tendril is very straight. Looks like those areas were supposed to be slightly blue-greenish but because of the compression the color jump is a little too much and they appear to be somehow different than the colors that surround them. I don't think they were meant to be that color.

    You can see the posterization, or compression artifacts, most clearly in the transitions between light and dark colors. And you'll only see it when you view the image at 100% pixel-for-pixel on your screen. If you have Photoshop or Elements open the levels dialog and drag the black slider up to about 200. The green areas will turn black and it will become very apparent that they are perfectly straight in many areas. There are some horizontal ones and some vertical ones and some nice 90-degree angles in there. Life forms of course do not make perfectly straight patterns, especially on a large scale.

  41. Re:pool by mikael · · Score: 2, Funny

    I can just imagine what the property development advert would read like:

    Live on Mars!

    This exclusive development of luxury apartments designed by an award wining architect is set to become reality. Each apartment is located in its own biodome with a 360 panoramic view of the martian surface. Access to communal area is provided by a underground tunnel which also doubles as storage space.

    Other features include an private 10 kilometre wide ice lake with privacy guaranteed by a 17 kilometre crater ridge approximately 2 kilometres high.

    Prices range from 1 billion to 10 billion dollars. For further information and a brochure contact your local Century 25 agent. Hurry, these properties won't be on the market for long!

    --
    Vintage computer adverts: http://www.vintageadbrowser.com/computers-and-software-ads
  42. Re:Replacing what's there by Suicyco · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Very nicely? The damn place went and lost most of its water and atmosphere, has little or no volcanic activity (anymore) and is a desolate chunk of dirt. Remember, it had vast oceans, flowing water, etc. for some lengthy period of time.

    How do you know "we aren't supposed to be there" reason or no? If we weren't "supposed" to be there then why can be go there? Of course, you mean that by divine plan we "aren't supposed to be there". If your god makes things that we aren't supposed to do, then why can we do them?