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Hollow Mystery For Mars Rover (Hollow Grains)
New Scientist ^
| 1-19-2004
| David L Chandler
Posted on 01/19/2004 7:16:26 AM PST by blam
Hollow mystery for Mars rover
13:27 19 January 04
NewScientist.com news service
The Mars rover Spirit has completed its first full set of scientific measurements with the instruments on its robotic arm, revealing mysterious hollow grains in the soil.
The one-metre arm used its microscope to take a close-up image of an undisturbed patch of soil next to the NASA rover. It shows mostly sand-sized particles, but with a large number of apparently hollow spheres or tubes. The image resolution is about 30 microns per pixel - about the width of a human hair.
Such grains were completely unexpected. But John Grotzinger, a geologist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, says they closely resemble formations he has seen in soils in the southwestern deserts of the US. "There are little tubes that build up by capillary action," he told New Scientist, as salty water evaporates from the nearly-dry soil.
The Martian grains must also be strong enough to withstand the region's strong winds and perpetual scouring by dust devils - tornado shaped vortexes that can tower to heights of kilometres.
Triple point
The pressure and temperature conditions at Spirit's landing site, Gusev crater, are close to the triple point of water, Grotzinger says. This means any water present could change phase between solid, liquid and gas in response to small changes in conditions, and it is an area whose temperatures vary widely during the daily and seasonal cycles.
Interactive Mars
Pure liquid water cannot be stable at the site under present conditions, says Grotzinger. But a brine might be as the dissolved salts would change the freezing and boiling temperatures.
Other scientists suggested in 2003 that brines in the soil might explain other puzzling Martian features seen in images taken from orbit by Mars Global Surveyor. These are thousands of dark gully-like streaks seen on the walls of some craters and canyons.
But Grotzinger warns that it is far too early to rule out alternative explanations, such as dust that has been clumped together by electrostatic forces. This has previously been suggested to explain some crusty soil seen by the Pathfinder lander in 1997.
But, whatever is causing these unusual features, Grotzinger believes the rover's multiple spectrographic tools and trench-digging capabilities give it a very good chance of finding out.
David L Chandler
TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: hollow; mars; mystery; rover; space
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To: Professional Engineer
I didn't do it!
It's NOT my fault!
"Darksheare's Fault" isn't up there as a keyword, see?
Not my fault this time.
41
posted on
01/19/2004 11:20:28 AM PST
by
Darksheare
(How to win friends and influence people: Scotch.)
To: myself6
My wife walked in while i was utilizing my improvised 3D glasses ( red cellophane draped over one lens of my glasses and holding a blue folder over the other side). She now believes that I have lost my mind. Mine came to that conclusion years ago. As far as the 3D glasses, I found some red and blue clear Mylar, cut it to the right shape, and used spray adhesive to affix it to an old pair of eyeglasses. Those cheesy paper-framed glasses never worked for me.
42
posted on
01/19/2004 11:24:28 AM PST
by
Johnny_Cipher
(The Pats will kill the winner anyway.)
To: Pan_Yans Wife; Phil V.
(I haven't been able to find 3-D glasses, anywhere!)\
Checi out the kiddie 3-D storybooks in your local stores.
I just borrowed a pair of the cardboard.red/blue glasses for the "martian duration"
...one of the many benefits of having grandkids... :-)
43
posted on
01/19/2004 11:25:13 AM PST
by
TXnMA
(No Longer!!! -- and glad to be back home (and warm) in God's Country!!)
To: myself6
What are you doing on FR while you're on your honeymoon?
To: Phil V.
I didn't know there was a Mars ping list. Yippee! Please add me.
45
posted on
01/19/2004 11:36:15 AM PST
by
lonevoice
(Some things have to be believed to be seen)
To: Old Professer; myself6
What?!
Isn't that a sign of FR addiction?
(Where IS that thread "Signs you're addicted to FR" I could SWEAR that "FReeping during honeymoon" was on that list..)
46
posted on
01/19/2004 11:58:11 AM PST
by
Darksheare
(How to win friends and influence people: Scotch.)
To: Darksheare; Professional Engineer
Yeah, static electricity is a thought too. Common clusters in dry high charged dust, one would think.
To: My back yard
Still, weird.
And hollow granule spheres tends to remind me of diatom skeletons.
But this is dirt instead of calcium.
48
posted on
01/19/2004 12:29:04 PM PST
by
Darksheare
(How to win friends and influence people: Scotch.)
To: Darksheare; Professional Engineer; Bear_in_RoseBear
Magnetite is possible, so grains sticking together and stacking may be evidence of magnetite existing somewhere. Face On Mars?
Or is it just one of God's big toys? --
To: Darksheare
yeah, still weird. But properties of dust/wind are so the same as properties of water/silt.
To: My back yard; Darksheare
Ya'll are getting cerebral like on me aren't ya'.
51
posted on
01/19/2004 12:45:40 PM PST
by
Professional Engineer
(Ya' mean there are other kinds of fish besides Trout?)
To: Johnny_Cipher
I found some red and blue clear Mylar, cut it to the right shape, and used spray adhesive to affix it to an old pair of eyeglasses.
Cool idea.
To: My back yard
Possibly one of HIS toys.
Just look at the Aardvark, echidna, platypus, and pangolin.
HE just HAS to have a sense of humor..
53
posted on
01/19/2004 12:46:51 PM PST
by
Darksheare
(How to win friends and influence people: Scotch.)
To: Professional Engineer
Umm.. no.
Never.
And it's still not my fault.
*chuckle*
54
posted on
01/19/2004 12:47:32 PM PST
by
Darksheare
(How to win friends and influence people: Scotch.)
To: Darksheare
Just look at the Aardvark, echidna, platypus, and pangolin.
HE just HAS to have a sense of humor..
hell, just look at me. ;)
To: My back yard
Yes.
The scrape from the airbacks in the dust resembles a 'clay slide'.
Kinda like when it rains lightly and there's surface mud but the stuff undernath is dry.
Step on the surface and it stick to your shoes leaving the dry subsurface exposed.
Since that is similar, I'd suspect we'll be surprised with other similar physicalities.
56
posted on
01/19/2004 12:50:53 PM PST
by
Darksheare
(How to win friends and influence people: Scotch.)
Comment #57 Removed by Moderator
To: My back yard
*LOL!*
Uh oh.
58
posted on
01/19/2004 12:51:31 PM PST
by
Darksheare
(How to win friends and influence people: Scotch.)
To: Grut
" I recall that when I was in the Air Force we frequently cited a hair-diameter standard that was finer than normal." Yes, the unit of measurement was the RCH, and it was determined by a specific color of hair and the location from wich it was located.
59
posted on
01/19/2004 12:54:28 PM PST
by
Outlaw76
(Citizens on the Bounce!)
To: kennedy
Presidential Candidate Hwrrrd Dnnne stated, "We need to look into amnesty for the illegal aliens on our soil.", while Candidate Wsssllly Cllrrrkk said, "If I were President this landing would not have occurred."
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