Orbiter Reveals Rock Fracture Plumbing On Mars
Riding with Robots writes "Mars researchers report that a robotic spacecraft orbiting the Red Planet has revealed hundreds of small fractures exposed on the Martian surface that once directed flows of water through underground Martian sandstone. 'This study provides a picture of not just surface water erosion, but true groundwater effects widely distributed over the planet,' said one of the mission scientists for the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, which has been regularly returning terabytes of high-resolution images and other kinds of data from Mars."
Who cares about alien plumbing?
I want their electronics!
Why do we care about ground water in Mars? Don't we have bigger things to do here on Earth? All these Mars missions seem like a major waste of resources. Where is our moon base?
I really don't want to hear about Martian plumber crack, thanks.
not playing devil's advocate here but how's that even remotely related?
I was going to challenge this but it appears MRO transmits data about ten times faster than other probes. Nevertheless, at 6 Megabits/second it would take 370 hours (over two weeks) to send one Terabyte.
Ok.. so a probe is regularly returning terabytes across the solar system, but ISP's are forming lobbying pacs proclaiming they can't offer the speeds they advertised for people on earth.
Something's rotten in the state of denmark.
Yeah because one probe with line of sight to the planet is just as complicated as networking millions of homes across a country that's several thousand miles wide.
Look, I'm annoyed at Comcast too, but let's not create any new PHB dialogue for Dilbert.
"I like to lick butts!" by MobileTatsu-NJG (#32700246) (Score:5, Informative)
Ahhh! the true martian canals!
I'm quite certain if you paid as much for your data as NASA is for theirs, your ISP would be more than happy to run a dedicated OC-3 to your house. They might even toss in a complementary handjob.
Or complimentary, depending upon your happy ending preferences [damn I hate it when I write the wrong one of those two].
THIS IS HUGE!!!! Now lets see if we can find water.
Plato thought the earth was round because spheres were really really cool perfectness. But by the time of Eratosthenes ~1700 years before Columbus, Greek astronomers had a pretty good idea how big the earth was (within 5-10%, depending on quite how long a stadia was), and they had a reasonably accurate estimate of the distance to the moon as well. An Indian astronomer around 500 AD had the circumference to within 60km. Columbus, on the other hand, thought the Earth was only 25000 km around, not 25000 miles (though in other units; it wasn't really a metric-English confusion, but it was a confusion about which kind of miles were being used :-), so as MatskEE says, he got very lucky that he into the Americas before he ran out of food and water.
On the other hand, he got out of Spain just after the Spanish Inquisition took over, and while maybe nobody expected it before then, lots of people expected it to continue once it had arrived.
Bill Stewart
New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
I don't know, but my first reaction was that they were trying to say that rocks fractured the Mars Lander's plumbing, and my second reaction was that there should be a bad joke about plumber's cracks on Mars in there somewhere. Maybe you've just got better taste...
Bill Stewart
New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
What I wanna know is whether Mars has any oil, natural gas, or Brazilian steakhouses!
Undoubtedly.
OH NO the planet that has continued to serve us in no way has cracks. I actually only clicked on this because I thought it said Mars has crack and I had to do a double-take.
I guess I am in one of those technicality moods, but will reading the initial post I always read the from such-and-such-department. In this post it says for the more-evidence-of-hydrogen-hydroxide-department. Hydrogen Hydroxide, aka H2O, aka water, is a bit redundant and cumbersome wouldn't it be more correct to call it Dihydrogen Monoxide? Ok I'll shutup now.