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NASA Announces Water Found On Mars

Posted by timothy on Thu Jul 31, 2008 04:24 PM
from the so-val-kilmer-can-breathe-easy dept.
s.bots writes "Straight from the horse's mouth, NASA's Phoenix Mars Lander has identified water in a soil sample. Hopefully this exciting news will boost interest in the space program and further exploration of the Martian surface." Clearly, this has long been suspected, but now Martian water's been (in the words of William Boynton, lead scientist for the Thermal and Evolved-Gas Analyzer) "touched and tasted."
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[+] Water Ice On Mars 364 comments
cathector sends along a story from SpaceWeather.com on the discovery of water ice on Mars. "Scientists have figured out the mysterious white substance unearthed by NASA's Phoenix lander on Mars. It's frozen water. The breakthrough came last week when Phoenix's stereo camera caught the substance in the act of disappearing. Bathed in martian sunlight for four days, the white substance sublimated — i.e., it transformed from solid to gas without passing through the liquid state. This is how water behaves on Mars.... Some readers have asked, how do we know the white substance is not frozen CO2 (dry ice) instead of frozen water? Answer: Phoenix's landing site is too warm for dry ice. The average daily temperature is about -70 F while dry ice requires temperatures lower than about -109 F." The animated GIF showing the ice sublimating is pretty nice too.
[+] Phoenix Mars Lander To Begin Rasping Ice Shavings 80 comments
Rob writes with an excerpt from an article at spacefellowship.com: "A powered rasp on the back of the robotic arm scoop of NASA's Phoenix Mars Lander is being tested for the first time on Mars in gathering sample shavings of ice. The lander has used its arm in recent days to clear away loose soil from a subsurface layer of hard-frozen material and create a large enough area to use the motorized rasp in a trench informally named 'Snow White.' The Phoenix team prepared commands early Tuesday for beginning a series of tests with the rasp later in the day. Engineers and scientists designed the tests to lead up to, in coming days, delivering a sample of icy soil into one of the lander's laboratory ovens. 'While Phoenix was in development, we added the rasp to the robotic arm design specifically to grind into very hard surface ice,' said Barry Goldstein, Phoenix project manager at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif. 'This is the exactly the situation we find we are facing on Mars, so we believe we have the right tool for the job. Honeybee Robotics in New York City did a heroic job of designing and delivering the rasp on a very short schedule.'" I still can't get enough of pictures of a little hunk of metal on Mars.
[+] Mars Orbiter Finds Evidence For Ancient Rivers, Lakes 130 comments
Cowards Anonymous points out news that studies based on data from the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter have found that vast regions of Mars contained rivers and lakes when the planet was young. The studies also suggest that the water existed for quite some time, often in standing pools, which are conducive to the formation of basic organic matter. NASA provides a color-enhanced photo of a delta within a crater. Quoting: "The clay-like minerals, called phyllosilicates, preserve a record of the interaction of water with rocks dating back to what is called the Noachian period of Mars' history, approximately 4.6 billion to 3.8 billion years ago. This period corresponds to the earliest years of the solar system, when Earth, the moon and Mars sustained a cosmic bombardment by comets and asteroids. Rocks of this age have largely been destroyed on Earth by plate tectonics. They are preserved on the moon, but were never exposed to liquid water. The phyllosilicate-containing rocks on Mars preserve a unique record of liquid water environments possibly suitable for life in the early solar system."
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  • by clang_jangle (975789) * on Thursday July 31 2008, @04:27PM (#24423989)
    Here comes the neighborhood!
  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday July 31 2008, @04:27PM (#24423991)

    Meh. Call me if they find crude oil on Mars.

    • Re:Water? Big Deal! (Score:5, Informative)

      by Muad'Dave (255648) on Thursday July 31 2008, @04:56PM (#24424447) Homepage
      They found crude [wikipedia.org] oil [wikipedia.org] components [wikipedia.org] on Titan [slashdot.org].
      • by Penguinisto (415985) on Thursday July 31 2008, @05:01PM (#24424505) Journal

        True, but that's one gawdawful pipeline you gotta build to get at it, dontcha think?

        (...and I don't even want to know how what's gonna happen once the Sierra Club crowd finds out...)

        (yes, I'm being facetious).

        /P

      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        No, crude oil has not been confirmed as a major surface component. The confirmation of surface liquids on Titan (in lakes previously observed by the ISS and RADAR instruments) demonstrate the presence of liquid natural gas, not crude oil.
        • Natural gas? Crude oil?

          Same shit, different phase.
            • Re:Water? Big Deal! (Score:4, Interesting)

              by Oktober Sunset (838224) <sdpage103.yahoo@co@uk> on Thursday July 31 2008, @06:23PM (#24425571)
              I was going for funny, I thought Slashdoters were dedicated pun connoisseurs.

              And as far as corectness, that's a matter of perspective. Crude oil is just a mixture of hydrocarbons with a large enough formula to be liquid, and natural gas is hydrocarbons with a small enough formula to be gas. The fact that ethane, propane, butane, and pentane are in both just goes to show the distinction is arbitrarily based on phase. Unless you know some special reason why all the hydrocarbons are counted as crude oil, except the ones that are gasses?
  • Hurray! (Score:5, Interesting)

    by inotocracy (762166) on Thursday July 31 2008, @04:30PM (#24424049) Homepage
    Now what?
    • Re:Hurray! (Score:5, Funny)

      by Penguinisto (415985) on Thursday July 31 2008, @04:58PM (#24424467) Journal

      ...now we find a way to launch approximately 40bn gallons of fine single-malt whisky to Mars.

      Oh, okay, - it really means that now we don't have to drag as much stuff with us when we finally do get sufficient testicular fortitude to get people out to Mars for exploration, perhaps settlement, etc etc.

      Now to answer your question specifically? We need to know how much H2O are we talking here, and in what concentrations and distributions.

      /P

    • Re:Hurray! (Score:5, Funny)

      by Eudial (590661) on Thursday July 31 2008, @05:01PM (#24424507)

      Now what?

      Now we move to mars. Naturally, we won't actually use or drink the readily available Martian water, but buy bottled water from earth instead.

  • Big deal... (Score:5, Funny)

    by Atreju (797728) on Thursday July 31 2008, @04:30PM (#24424051)
    NASA found water on Mars over three years ago [nasa.gov].
    • Your modders obviously didn't click on your link.
      • That's why i just LOVE this "serious" link pointing to nasa.gov. They really should put some more stuff like that to help people get modded up on slashdot.
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        The modders DID click on the link, they just realized that modding it "funny" would spoil the surprise... I was going to post the same comment myself, but somebody else beat me to it. True, it is only funny the first time you see it, so it is an old joke to 90% of slashdotters.
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      I love that this has been moderated "+5 Interesting" :D

      Obviously lots of people moderating without clicking on the link.

  • Are we surprised? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by g0bshiTe (596213) on Thursday July 31 2008, @04:31PM (#24424061)
    Seriously are we really that surprised we found water on Mars? Considering most of our galaxy is made up of the same compounds here on Earth, I wouldn't doubt if we found water on nearly all our planets, in one form or another.
    • by 19Buck (517176) on Thursday July 31 2008, @04:40PM (#24424195) Homepage

      Seriously are we really that surprised we found water on Mars? Considering most of our galaxy is made up of the same compounds here on Earth, I wouldn't doubt if we found water on nearly all our planets, in one form or another.

      from our perspective here on earth we might seem to have an overabundance of water, but on a universal scale it's a fairly rare compound. After all, water can only exist in a limited number of states under a limited number of conditions.

      • by meringuoid (568297) on Thursday July 31 2008, @06:17PM (#24425493)
        from our perspective here on earth we might seem to have an overabundance of water, but on a universal scale it's a fairly rare compound.

        On the contrary: I'd guess that water is the most common compound in the Universe.

        The most abundant substance in the by far in the visible Universe is hydrogen. The second most abundant is helium. The third most abundant element in the Universe is oxygen, but in the presence of elemental hydrogen oxygen is unstable and reacts exothermically to produce water. Probably most of the oxygen not locked up inside stars is in water molecules.

        Liquid water is rare, I'll grant. But the Universe is absolutely riddled with water vapour and with ice.

    • by iamlucky13 (795185) on Thursday July 31 2008, @05:43PM (#24425117)
      Overall, we're not surprised. Scientists have been pretty sure there was subsurface ice there for several years based on ground-penetrating radar on one of the orbiters. Confirming this was a major goal of Phoenix. There weren't a lot of other good explanations for all that hydrogen detected by radar, but that still wasn't considered proof. Nor even were the images of the bright, ice-like material uncovered earlier in the Phoenix mission. Also, we already knew for quite a while about water vapor on Mars, but the next question was about large quantities of surface water.

      The Phoenix team was a little surprised by exactly how it occurred, however. Because ice sublimates on Mars once exposed, they had to get the sample into the TEGA oven relatively quickly. It ended up being even stickier than previous samples (possibly due to melting of the ice by friction from the rasp) and didn't fall properly from the scoop into the oven. By the time the results were received, analyzed, and a conclusion reached, they considered the sample already spoiled, but because some likely made it into the oven, the oven was also "contaminated," which affects the accuracy of measuring relative abundance. So they managed to dump the "ruined" sample into the oven to compare it to the last "ruined" sample, but found there was water in it anyways. Unfortunately, because of the sublimation, this still doesn't give them the relative abundance. It also, as far as I know, was only inferred so far by calorimetry. In the next day or two, they should get spectroscopy results back, which will be even better verification.

      Because of all this, they're going to spend some more time practicing and polishing their delivery method so they can get a truly fresh sample into the ovens. They've got 6 empty ovens left, although there might be a problem with the doors on some or all of them.
  • Mars... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Poromenos1 (830658) on Thursday July 31 2008, @04:33PM (#24424097) Homepage

    I still can't believe we sent a small robot and let it run around on *Mars*. It seems so unfathomably far away that I find it hard to even imagine...

    Next stop: Bacteria.

  • "So what?" (Score:5, Insightful)

    by damburger (981828) on Thursday July 31 2008, @04:33PM (#24424113)

    ...is what most people will think. Whilst this is of earth-shattering (well, mars-shattering) importance to a lot a scientists it isn't going to motivate Joe Public to commit any more tax money to the exploration of space, because they don't benefit from it themselves. This isn't a condition of human nature, this is a conscious choice by a significant portion of the population to never grow out of adolescent self obsession. People are told its good to be totally egotistical, and here is a product that will help you do that.

    So no, it won't boost interest in space exploration; everyone who will raise an eyebrow to this news is already interested in space. People who didn't care before now won't care now.

    • Re:"So what?" (Score:5, Informative)

      by Phairdon (1158023) on Thursday July 31 2008, @04:49PM (#24424307)

      It's unfortunate that Joe Public is such an idiot. Yes, he doesn't benefit directly from space exploration, but he has many indirect benefits.

      You have to be seriously ignorant to not see the benefit of the space program.

      Ever used a cordless power tool? A smoke detector? Modern water filtration? Infrared thermometer? Edible toothpaste (this one is now used for baby toothpaste and we probably all used it as babies)? Composite forceps in the delivery room? Global communications?

      Here is a kid friendly site that Joe Public might be able to comprehend
      http://techtran.msfc.nasa.gov/at_home.html [nasa.gov]

      • by Red Flayer (890720) on Thursday July 31 2008, @05:26PM (#24424905) Journal

        It's unfortunate that Joe Public is such an idiot. Yes, he doesn't benefit directly from space exploration, but he has many indirect benefits

        ...

        Ever used [...] Composite forceps in the delivery room?

        FWIW, I think if Joe Public has used composite forceps in the delivery room, we have larger problems than NASA funding. For one, we need to fix the healthcare system so that when my wife delivers her next child, it's an obstetrician, not Joe Public, prying the little rugrat out of her dilated vagoogoo.

        (My apologies to my as-yet-unconceived (I hope) second child).

    • Human condition (Score:4, Interesting)

      by PIPBoy3000 (619296) on Thursday July 31 2008, @04:50PM (#24424351)

      This isn't a condition of human nature, this is a conscious choice by a significant portion of the population to never grow out of adolescent self obsession.

      Actually, I'd rather spend the majority of my resources on my children, which is probably a trait shaped by evolution to become part of the human condition. If you can send a mission to Mars without impacting my kids' education, future debt, or well-being, I'd completely support it.

    • Re:"So what?" (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Turiacus (1316049) on Thursday July 31 2008, @05:20PM (#24424819)

      I'm sick of these constant attacks on "Joe Sixpack". When was the last time you were consulted on NASA's budget ? Ordinary folks have no control over this.

      And what did you personally do to encourage congress to spend more of space exploration ? Probably nothing. (whining on slashdot doesn't count).

      I also disagree with the idea that nobody cares. I care, and I bet a lot of people here care too. I remember the record number of visitors pathfinder's website had at the time. You are certainly not alone in finding a robot driving around Mars more exciting than a bunch of guys bicycling in orbit. But I guess having a superiority complex is fun.

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        For example, we don't know much about our own oceans and those are far more important to us as a source of food, minerals etc.

        [sarcasm]Absolutely. We should immediately stop space research entirely and focus ALL of our efforts on the oceans. I can't believe no one is looking into this subject already.[/sarcasm]

        I care if there is water on Mars. With the advent of nuclear and biological weapons, we now have the power to significantly fuck up our living space. Hell - one of these days there will be another asteroid strike.

        It would be nice to know if humans can be self sufficient in places other than earth. That won't happen tomorrow

  • This will be remembered in the textbooks as one of the biggest discoveries in human history - and yet it will of course be presently overlooked by uninterested masses.

    Will humanity ever get past our predilections with ourselves?

    I can't fathom the significance of this event fully, and yet the public applause so well deserved is again, starkly absent.

    oh well - I think it's great at least, maybe I shouldn't care so much what the masses think or care about.

    • This will be remembered in the textbooks as one of the biggest discoveries in human history

      No it won't, because water is a fairly common molecular arrangement. Electricty, atomic power, Earth being round, these are things that qualify as the biggest discoveries. In 10 years this particular incident of the rover will be forgotten, and in 100 years, the rover itself will be a historical footnote. How much do textbooks cover the Apollo program other than #11 and #13?

      Less than 100 years ago, people believed that Mars had canals full of water. Then with better optics people realized that no, those trenches, causing an extreme belief swing the other way - that Mars must be bone dry, any water having long since evaporated. Of course that ignores the polar ice caps which spectrography can easily identify.

      We've finally come into direct contact with H20 on Mars' surface rather than simply remote identification. While a milestone, it's a pretty damn tiny one. It will not be remembered in textbooks. Look how results of the Venus expeditions of the 70s are now glossed over.

    • Marketing (Score:4, Insightful)

      by copponex (13876) on Thursday July 31 2008, @04:49PM (#24424329) Homepage

      People are curious by default. But you can't make money on reveling in scientific breakthroughs. Since money is the only measure of success in our culture, R&D that doesn't directly translate into more capital is ignored and often ridiculed, though almost all real breakthroughs are performed through the state sector (through funding to universities or even directly by DARPA).

      Billions upon billions are spent convincing people to buy products they don't need with money they don't have. It's all fun and games until the currency crashes and the environment is left in ruins.

    • It is momentous only because it finally proves that sustainable human life is possible on Mars. However, since Mars is sadly lacking a Magnetosphere, the fact that water and oxygen are available there isn't as useful as we would like it to be. Hmm... how hard is it to build a dome that blocks out all harmful cosmic radiation, yet still lets in the sunlight necessary for photosynthesis? Since any Terran originated life on Mars would require a pressurized dome anyway, how big a win is a Martian colony over a
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        It is momentous only because it finally proves that sustainable human life is possible on Mars.

        It proves no such thing. It only hints at the possibility.

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        "How hard is it to build a dome that blocks out all harmful cosmic radiation"

        You don't build a dome. You dig a cave. You use nuclear or solar power to light lamps and let plants use that light instead of sunlight. You could also use mirrors, but you would need a lot of them because Mars is farther from the Sun than we are and Earth plants evolved for earthly amounts of light.

        Alternatively, if you really want a dome, you could build two and fill them with water. Then, if you are really clever, you can build

  • Quantum Fingerprints (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Doc Ruby (173196) on Thursday July 31 2008, @04:44PM (#24424265) Homepage Journal

    I wonder if we'll someday be able to look at the quantum state of the molecules, atoms and subatomic particles making up even pure water, to learn about its history. The way that we look at the chemical composition now, with more familiar instruments.

  • by speedtux (1307149) on Thursday July 31 2008, @04:47PM (#24424295)

    The Viking landers observed frost in the 70's. Mars obiters found huge amounts of water underground. Ice is clearly exposed in many photographs. Knowledge of ice and water on Mars goes way, way beyond "suspected". If detecting ice is all this mission yields, it's a big waste of money. This mission was intended to give detailed information about what's in the ice and soil, but that doesn't seem to be happening.

    The question for the last decade or two has been whether there is liquid water on Mars. Despite the low air pressure, even pure liquid water can exist in some places and times: aquifers, briny puddles and lakes, lakes enclosed in ice, etc.

  • by katakomb (1328459) on Thursday July 31 2008, @05:18PM (#24424789)

    Just to reiterate a point that a few others have made: the presence of water ice at the surface of Mars has been understood since at least the 1970's for high latitudes. This goes for parts of the polar caps (also made up of CO2 ice), and the seasonal frosts that are known to coat the very study area visited by the Phoenix lander.

    Here's a snippet from an abstract of an article from 1982 (Journal of Geophysical Research, 87:367-370): "A new reflectance spectrum of the Martian north polar cap is analyzed, and it shows water ice absorption features. This evidence confirms the result of the Viking IRTM and MAWD experiments, which indicate that the north residual polar cap of Mars is composed of water ice during the season observed." The Viking 2 lander directly saw seasonal frost in the late 70's, as the Phoenix lander will in the coming months: http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/jplhistory/captions/vikinglander-t.php [nasa.gov]

    The Phoenix results are new in that ice has been directly confirmed for shallow regolith ("soil") materials at the Phoenix site (as opposed to spectroscopically identified from orbit or from the Earth). This is a nice and important result, but is not a huge surprise (the site is known to be seasonally coated with water-ice frosts, and its sediments are distributed in a polygonal pattern that is analogous to what we see at high latitudes on Earth where freeze-thaw action dominates).

    Phoenix is a great mission, but let's also give due credit to earlier workers.

  • Department (Score:3, Funny)

    by HTH NE1 (675604) on Thursday July 31 2008, @05:24PM (#24424887)

    from the so-val-kilmer-can-breathe-easy dept.

    Val Kilmer? Don't you mean Dan Quayle?

    "Mars is essentially in the same orbit ... Mars is somewhat the same distance from the Sun, which is very important. We have seen pictures where there are canals, we believe, and water. If there is water, that means there is oxygen. If oxygen, that means we can breathe."
    -- Vice President Dan Quayle, 1989-08-11 (reported in Esquire, 1992-08)

      • Re:First ? (Score:5, Funny)

        by Kugrian (886993) on Thursday July 31 2008, @07:20PM (#24426161) Homepage

        Many, so very many.

        A bottling plant on Mars would make crazy money. "Don't drink earth water, drink E.T water!" (even more if they pluralize that and convince people alien urine will give them super health).

        And then the Mars [mars.com] company will give everyone hell for calling it Mars Water.

        Mod parent Insightful, and mod me drunk troll!