Posted on 07/09/2004 11:52:10 AM PDT by LibWhacker
WASHINGTON - Solar storms, like the one that affected Earth last year, might have torn away the water that used to cover parts of Mars, Nasa scientists said on Thursday. Astronomers believe Mars once had oceans of surface water, enough to support long-ago life, but they have not determined where that water went some 3.5 billion years ago. Now researchers monitoring the after-effects of a monster solar storm that hit Earth in October and November 2003 said they think repeated buffeting by this kind of space weather could have ripped away Mars watery veil. "These (solar) radiation events can affect the surface of Mars because Mars has so little protection," said Ed Stone of Nasas Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California. Unlike Earth, which has a protective magnetosphere that guards the planet against bombardment by high-energy particles during a solar storm, Mars has only isolated zones of protection, astronomers said in a telephone-and-Internet briefing. Observations by the Mars rovers Spirit and Opportunity have bolstered the idea of plentiful Martian water, according to Thomas Zurbuchen of the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor. "Where did it go?" Zurbuchen asked rhetorically about Mars water. "One of the key ideas that people are talking about is the connection to these space storms ... Over 3.5 billion years, theres kind of a gradual erosion of this water." The astronomers referred to a video simulation on the NASA website of what might have happened on Mars. The brief video showed water seemingly blowing away from the planet. Scientists worked with a small fleet of robotic spacecraft to watch the impact of last years "Halloween" solar storm, the most powerful ever monitored. Starting with the SOHO spacecraft which monitors the sun from its vantage point near Earth, the astronomers also tracked the solar blast wave with the Ulysses craft near Jupiter and the Cassini craft that just began orbiting Saturn. They followed the wave all the way out to the fringes of the solar system, where the two relatively ancient Voyager probes, launched in 1977, are aiming for interstellar space. On Earth, the storm caused the rerouting of aircraft and the disruption of some long-distance radio communications and satellite operations. In space, astronauts aboard the International Space Station had to move periodically into the Russian-supplied Service Module, which offered better shielding from solar storms. - REUTERS |
Mars water went to the same place as Iraq's WMDs.
We will never know what really happened on John Kerry's home planet.
Terrorists have Mars' water?
Water on Mars Destroyed?
Bush's fault
I thought he was from Uranus.
The mag field is caused by the moisture in the atmosphere. When Mars had an atmosphere with moisture it had a mag field and was protected. Methane could substitute for water moisture. Mars lost its atmosphere and a portion of its crust due to a near collision with something that is long gone, possibly the body that gave rise to the Asteroid Belt. A similar thing happened to earth.
I thought Earth's magnetic field was generated in the core.
Buried in the ground and virtually invisible.
Water cannot be torn. This is silly.
A scientist said that many years ago when somebody asked him; due to nobody having a different idea, we have run with it. It was just a suggestion, one of those back of the envelope doodles.
Mars' greedy business class raped the planet a billion years ago.
Now Halliburton will make billions on the re-watering contract!
D*mn Republicans.
No, thats just where he has placed his head.
I feel your pain.
I'm soory but I will withhold judgment until we get expert opinion from Al Gore. He is the go-to guy on all issues of this type!
I thought that was proven. I know the Earth's surface has a lot of water, but not enough to generate the massive magnetic field we have.
Whaaaa?
However, since the atmosphere of Mars only contains about 250 parts per million of water vapor, the inevitable conclusion is that there never has been and never will be surface water on Mars.
The inventor of astronomy?
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.