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NASA Gets A Good Look At Mars Soil And A True Puzzle
Chicago Tribune/Yahoo ^
| 1-7-2004
| Jeremy Manier
Posted on 01/07/2004 3:41:30 PM PST by blam
NASA gets good look at Mars soil and a true puzzle
By Jeremy Manier, Tribune staff reporter
Opening its primary digital eyes for the first time, the rover Spirit on Tuesday transmitted the most detailed photos ever sent from the surface of Mars, revealing an alien vista of deep russet sands, a mysteriously sticky form of soil and a far-off mesa in the light orange haze.
The rocky scene is about four times sharper than any previous photos from the planet, and experts said the probe should be sending even larger, three-dimensional views of its terrain within a few days. Scientists will use those photos and information from an infrared imaging instrument to choose the most promising places for the rover to start visiting next week in search of signs that Mars once had a habitat suitable for life.
It's difficult to imagine life surviving now in the barren landscape around the rover--though mission planners have said one goal of the robotic Mars expeditions is to scout out possible landing sites in case the U.S. ever sends astronauts to Mars.
But on Tuesday, researchers analyzing the new images took a moment to look at the planet with simple wonder.
"My reaction has been one of shock and awe," said Jim Bell, leader of the mission's imaging team at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California.
The sticky-looking soil may be the first true puzzle of the mission, scientists said. Technicians believe the probe's landing airbags disturbed the dirt near the rover when they retracted back under the craft, soon after the landing. The dirt that was dragged by the airbags now looks oddly folded, almost as if it were damp clay.
"It looks like mud, but it can't be mud," said principal investigator Steven Squyres. "It's not like anything that I have ever seen before. It's very weird-looking stuff."
Researchers believe Martian soil in the rover's vicinity is bone-dry near the surface, adding to the mystery. Squyres said it's possible that moisture evaporating from below left a salty, cohesive crust at the surface.
(Excerpt) Read more at story.news.yahoo.com ...
TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: look; mars; martiandesert; nasa; puzzle; soil
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To: blam
All kidding aside, my first thought when I saw this on NASA TV was will this build u om the tires and cause problems not factored in...
101
posted on
01/07/2004 6:16:41 PM PST
by
tubebender
(Don't believe anything you hear and only half of what you see...)
To: Alas Babylon!
I don't think iron oxide is magnetic.
Actually, Frank, it is. AKA Ferric Oxide, it's the stuff that coats magnetic tape and disk surfaces that allows us to write bits on them in order to do what we're all doing now....
Hmmm. But isn't "iron oxide" your basic RUST? Isn't rust non-magnetic?
Found some answers here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ferric_oxide
Interesting stuff. Fe(2)O(3)... Three oxygen atoms in every molecule. If that's what's on Mars, then the most pressing matter for us humans is to find a way to release that oxygen in an efficient, economic manner!
Also, clicking on "Rust" in that link is interesting - if all that martian surface material *is* in fact "rust, or ferric oxide or similar, that page states that such a chemical reaction can only take place in the presence of water and oxygen... Life on Mars in the past, anyone? :-)
102
posted on
01/07/2004 6:19:58 PM PST
by
asb3pe
To: carlo3b
and the rings of Saturn are tortilla chips.
103
posted on
01/07/2004 6:20:49 PM PST
by
ChefKeith
(NASCAR...everything else is just a game!)
To: tubebender
"All kidding aside, my first thought when I saw this on NASA TV was will this build u om the tires and cause problems not factored in..." No mud flaps...Hmmm...could sling that stuff all over, huh?
104
posted on
01/07/2004 6:22:32 PM PST
by
blam
To: kcar
This is clearly a sign that MARS DOES contain LIFE.....
Can't you all see it this is MARTIAN POOP.....
Martian patties.....
Martian Poop.....unless.....maybe some passing alien emptied his "waste" on a flyby.....Space is full of tourists, in slightly used space winnabegos.
105
posted on
01/07/2004 6:22:50 PM PST
by
Michael121
(An old soldier knows truth. Only a Dead Soldier knows peace.)
To: TXnMA
That stuff looks really wierd! It's hard to imagine how dragging an airbag across a (supposedly) dry, sandy surface (with a litle gravel tossed in) could form such a gummy-looking surface mark... If the airbags were constructed of rubber and nylon or similar synthetic materials, then dragging them across the surface might create static electricity just as our walking over a synthetic carpet does. We'll have to admit, the environment is perfect for the creation of static electricity: extremely cold and dry. Until further investigation reveals otherwise, the static electricity hypothesis is most appealing to me.
106
posted on
01/07/2004 6:24:02 PM PST
by
ngc6656
To: blam
NASA Gets A Good Look At Mars Soil And A True Puzzle
Soil and a puzzle..............
How much did this cost the taxpayers?
(I've got soil & puzzles in my garage, have NASA send over an intern and a disposable camera)
107
posted on
01/07/2004 6:25:23 PM PST
by
WhiteGuy
(Congress shall make no law... abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press...)
To: asb3pe
Bringing Mars Into The Iron Age"If you look at the soil composition of Mars, the one thing that really strikes you is that it's 5 to 14 percent iron oxide," said Dr. Peter Curreri, a materials scientist at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center. "It's almost ore-grade material."
108
posted on
01/07/2004 6:26:53 PM PST
by
blam
To: Slicksadick
Looks like the lander squshed a Martian or a Martian "soil" patty.
109
posted on
01/07/2004 6:29:26 PM PST
by
DonnerT
(Rinos are Jackasses in Elephant drag!)
To: RightWhale
There should be a magnet on the end of the geology arm.
There is, actually.
To: blam
Apparently the scientists did not notice a strange black crusty pant suit lying nearby the lander. This explains the apparent wetness, strange odor and fungi Spirit has detected.
To: blam
Come an' listen to a story 'bout a man named Jed.........
The Rover struck sub-soil oil!
/ wishful thinking.
To: blam
The second landing site was chosen primarly because it's got huge amounts of Hematite (Iron Ore) that may have been precipitated from water, the same way Earth's iron ore is.
To: Husker24
Like you, I think 'fine dust' is a much more logical answer than 'mud'.
114
posted on
01/07/2004 6:40:13 PM PST
by
DefCon
To: blam
Sort of a "Rusty" perma frost???
115
posted on
01/07/2004 6:43:54 PM PST
by
winker
To: blam
My take on the soil is that it is ALIVE! (Dang I've been watching too much Jean Luc Picard Star Treks lately!)
116
posted on
01/07/2004 6:51:25 PM PST
by
Indie
(Hopefully my vocabulary was void of hate speech and spurious flames)
To: Slicksadick
There must be life on Mars. Why? It looks like doggie poo.
To: WhiteGuy
Sorry I stepped on your "patty", hadn't read this far when posted 109. :)
118
posted on
01/07/2004 6:55:54 PM PST
by
DonnerT
(Rinos are Jackasses in Elephant drag!)
To: BobS
Have you ever wondered at the similarity between the Starship Enterprise and a roll of toilet paper?
They both circle Uranus searching for Klingons!
119
posted on
01/07/2004 7:03:02 PM PST
by
D2
To: asb3pe
"My take is that perhaps any remaining iron in the "iron oxide suface material" is slightly magnetized" THANK YOU, I HAD THE SAME THOUGHT ( I guess great minds think alike) My thinking goes like this--Cold and extremely dry air blowing across the iron composition soil builds up a static charge that eventually develops a magnetic field effect and then (TA DAAAH) you have magnetized dirt..well,,,,it COULD happen.... : 0
120
posted on
01/07/2004 7:05:24 PM PST
by
contrarian
(Contrarian....well I just have my own way of thinkin..)
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