![]() |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#21
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Ralph Nesbitt" wrote Here's a shot of what looks to be dust on Opportunity's solar cells, sol 26: http://tinyurl.com/2f6et The "track area" in the above image has the image of soggy material squeezed together similar to that created by tracked equipment in frozen wet soils. A lot of people have said that, but there seems to be a little hydrophobia on the subject. Present water has hardly been addressed officially. The only question about the tracks seemed to flummox the panel. As for brine, there has only been some handwaving about briny water possibly "hundreds of meters" below the surface. Safely out of reach. That's the great thing about Mars. Anything is possible if you only go deep enough, out of the range of current sensors. Short of pools of water or snowbanks, the current equipment has no means to detect water directly. However, taking a step back from the cult of the latest press release/mission, last year the Mars Odyssey orbiter's neutron spectrometer inferred large quantities of water (20%) in the top *1 meter* of the surface at both the Gusev and Meridiani sites. How can this be? Wouldn't pure ice sublimate, so it would have to be continuously replenished? So is there a flux of water from below? Or does it accumulate via frost or by some other transfer from the atmosphere? And with all that salt, why can't it be liquid at least in transition? Why was the brine placed only hundreds of meters down in last week's press conference? Whatever the round objects in the undisturbed area are, some appear to have a hole in them. Is this a common phenomena in the area traversed to date? I don't think very many of them have those holes. Do the rovers have any provision for detecting/determining the temperature of the actual surface material? Not sure. Maybe they can infer the surface temperature with the mini-TES? Joe |
#22
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Joe Knapp wrote:
"Ralph Nesbitt" wrote Here's a shot of what looks to be dust on Opportunity's solar cells, sol 26: http://tinyurl.com/2f6et The "track area" in the above image has the image of soggy material squeezed together similar to that created by tracked equipment in frozen wet soils. A lot of people have said that, but there seems to be a little hydrophobia on the subject. Present water has hardly been addressed officially. The only question about the tracks seemed to flummox the panel. As for brine, there has only been some handwaving about briny water possibly "hundreds of meters" below the surface. Safely out of reach. That's the great thing about Mars. Anything is possible if you only go deep enough, out of the range of current sensors. Short of pools of water or snowbanks, the current equipment has no means to detect water directly. However, taking a step back from the cult of the latest press release/mission, last year the Mars Odyssey orbiter's neutron spectrometer inferred large quantities of water (20%) in the top *1 meter* of the surface at both the Gusev and Meridiani sites. How can this be? Wouldn't pure ice sublimate, so it would have to be continuously replenished? The water could be bound as crystal water in some salts, e.g. the sulfates in the white rock. So is there a flux of water from below? Or does it accumulate via frost or by some other transfer from the atmosphere? And with all that salt, why can't it be liquid at least in transition? Why was the brine placed only hundreds of meters down in last week's press conference? Whatever the round objects in the undisturbed area are, some appear to have a hole in them. Is this a common phenomena in the area traversed to date? I don't think very many of them have those holes. Do the rovers have any provision for detecting/determining the temperature of the actual surface material? Not sure. Maybe they can infer the surface temperature with the mini-TES? They already did this, and there wa a press release about it some time ago. Joe -- http://www.geocities.com/carla_sch/index.html |
#23
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Carla Schneider" wrote However, taking a step back from the cult of the latest press release/mission, last year the Mars Odyssey orbiter's neutron spectrometer inferred large quantities of water (20%) in the top *1 meter* of the surface at both the Gusev and Meridiani sites. How can this be? Wouldn't pure ice sublimate, so it would have to be continuously replenished? The water could be bound as crystal water in some salts, e.g. the sulfates in the white rock. I suppose this could be tested by seeing if the levels of jarosite (~10% of El Capitan) and kieserite (dehydrated epsom salt; ~40%) is consistent with the hydrogen levels found by Odyssey. Here is an article for reference: http://mars.astrobio.net/news/article210.html "In the map of hydrogen abundance from orbit, Gusev shows a high hydrogen abundance. The hydrogen abundance at Gusev and Meridiani are similar to that closer to the poles (~50% latitude) and could represent between 20-50% of subsurface H2O within one meter of the surface. This is particularly intriguing because Gusev and Terra Meridiani (the destination for the companion Opportunity rover) are positioned as one of only several equatorial areas with high hydrogen compositions." Joe |
#25
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Carla Schneider" wrote in message ... Tech people are telling press release writers: It is getting winter on Mars( meaning the whole mars, as it is moving away from the sun). Are the maxium/minimun/mean temps during maxium/minimum orbit distances well constrained at the current time? If so a link would be apreciated. Ralph Nesbitt |
#26
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Doug..." wrote in message ... In article m, says... "Ralph Nesbitt" wrote snip Do the rovers have any provision for detecting/determining the temperature of the actual surface material? Not sure. Maybe they can infer the surface temperature with the mini-TES? Um... yes. That's exactly what the mini-TES is -- a "visual" thermometer. The name means "thermal emissions spectrometer." It shows the intensities of various wavelengths of heat energy. Not only does this let you directly observe the temperatures of various materials, it lets you characterize the mineralogical make-up and other characteristics of the materials viewed by the instrument, because certain materials have very characteristic heat emissions, reflectance and "thermal inertia" at given wavelengths. So, the mini-TES lets you *directly* observe temperatures. What it lets you *infer* is mineralogical content and thermal inertia. Doug Thanks. Ralph Nesbitt |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Mars Exploration Rovers Update - February 21, 2004 | Ron | Astronomy Misc | 0 | February 23rd 04 02:02 AM |
Mars Exploration Rovers Update - February 15, 2004 | Ron | Astronomy Misc | 0 | February 16th 04 03:07 AM |
Mars Exploration Rover Mission Status - January 23, 2004 | Ron | Astronomy Misc | 16 | January 27th 04 11:36 PM |
Mars Exploration Rover Mission Status - January 22, 2004 | Ron | Astronomy Misc | 1 | January 23rd 04 12:07 PM |
Mars Missions Have International Flavor | Ron Baalke | Astronomy Misc | 0 | December 3rd 03 04:51 PM |