NASA Has Found Evidence Of Oceans On Mars 117
An unnamed correspondent points to this Sunday Times story, writing: "They have discovered ocean beds on Mars." The "they" refers to NASA scientists relying on information from the Mars Global Surveyor, which has transmitted "detailed pictures of rocks that could only have been created by sedimentation." A full announcement is expected next week from NASA -- wouldn't it be nice if they would simply release news as it happens rather than create News Happenings?
Re:They seen to be buttering us up. (Score:1)
Your troll was stupid. If you're going to troll, at least post something funny.
Have a nice day.
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They're going back on the last backpedaling (Score:1)
It'll only be a few months until they take this back in favor of something else.
I don't think we'll know for sure until a man stands and spends some considerable time there.
Re:oxygen? h2o? (Score:1)
Water On Mars and Science in General (Score:2)
One of my perpetual frustrations with the scientific community, is thier insistance on putting forth possible answers and explinations as facts while working with only a relativly small amount of data. The water on Mars question has been "proven" and "disproven" about a dozen times already based on the same available data. I have nothing against scientific research, on the contrary, I belive it is a most worthy pursuit. But I get sick and tired of the incredible hubris of stating "such and such" as scientific fact when really all they are submitting are inducive/deductive leaps based on given persons way of observing given data.
Re:NASA PR? You must be kidding! (Score:1)
Re:oxygen? h2o? (Score:1)
By your argument, you should only have one server for a site; just a really expensive one to handle everything. One power surge/script kiddy/cracker/etc later, you have lost everything.
Despite you, the human species is valuable enough to me to warrant an off-site backup.
Too cold anyway... (Score:1)
Of course, I can't think of anything I'd want to do on a day with a high of -82F other than sit by a warm fire and drink hot chocolate.
Re:A better place to search... (Score:1)
Don't begrudge NASA dudes "making" news (Score:1)
Don't begrudge the NASA dudes the "hype" generated by pre-announcing an announcement. Though it is kind of annoying on some level, every bit of focus that is put to NASA work (and that of other related teams like those of NEAR) is another PR victory for the whole space-exploration effort.
If we don't want to be stuck on this ball long after we've depleted it (since we show few signs of stopping that trend) , we'd better get out there and look for other options for resources... which requires exploration.
Plus, it is kinda cool....
It's the magnetic field. (Score:1)
What mars DIDN'T have was a strong magnetic field. Mars' geothermal core cooled (partly due to the planet's smaller size insulating it less, and possibly it may have less nuclear isotopes buried in it (again, proporitional to its mass) so it probably generated less heat in the first place.)
A magnetic field shields the planet from solar wind. Channels the charged particles around the planet, or down to smack head-on into the poles (forming the aurora borealis). Without a magnetic field, they strafe tangentially through the outer atmosphere, sandblasting it away. A molecule here, a few molecules there, over millions and eventually billions of years the atmosphere gets eroded away.
When the atmospheric pressure dropped too far, the oceans evaporated, probably freezing along the way as the planet lost its insulating blanket. The water vapor was just more atmosphere, to be sandblasted away by the solar wind.
Same thing would have happened to earth if we hadn't had the van allen belt and all protecting us. Planets farther out (such as the gas giants) don't have to deal with as intense a solar wind, and can rely on their own gravity to attract and retain gas faster than it gets stripped even without a magnetic shield. But they don't get much light or heat from the sun, either.
Rob
Re:Water On Mars and Science in General (Score:2)
The real problem occurs when the media picks up on science. In this case, their audience has no way of telling fact from proposed theories. Even if magazines and others were to include references with their stories, most people wouldn't know what they were or what to do with them. Too many people believe everything they read in the papers or see on TV to be true, indisputable facts.
Who's to blame? Directly, nobody (or possibly everybody!), but it is somewhat irresponsible of the media to present information as facts when we don't know that they necessarily are. Stating that something is only a theory, or that some scientists believe that $X may be true isn't really "news"-like enough, and just won't sell. Ultimately, it all comes down to the marketability of the so-called news story.
Of course, we (as consumers of the news stories) are also at fault. If everybody were just a tiny bit more skeptical and thought critically about what was presented to them by the media and other people, the world would probably be a much saner place.
That should be "Igneous", not "Ignatious" (Score:1)
Re:Oceans? (Score:1)
Water as a whole does not have an electrical charge - it is a neutral molecule.
in the case of water, a negative charge on the oxygen atom and a positive charge on the hydrogen atoms. This charge is weaker then the normal charges that bind atoms into molecules, so that the water molecules stay slightly connected to each other but aren't connected into a larger molecule...in other words, they become a liquid.
This is commonly called "hydrogen bonding". You are right in that is one of the major reasons that water exists as a liquid. However, your explanation is s drastic oversimplification - there are many other interactions that also increase the cohesive forces in liquids. Acetone and hexane and thionyl chloride and [substitute compounds of choice here] are liquids and yet lack any hydrogen bonding. Long- and medium-chain hydrocarbons (think oils) are liquids although they pretty much lack any polarity whatsoever.
As things stand on Mars now, the pressure is low enough that only traces (if anything) of liquid water on Mars.
What exactly do you mean by sulfur hydroxide? That kinda puzzled me.
there was never enough pressue to turn any fluid but water into a liquid.
I wouldn't go quite that far...
Re:A better place to search... (Score:1)
All generalizations are false.
I hope you're no serious! (Score:3)
<a href="http://www.hq.nasa.gov/office/pao/facts/HTM
Something like 14 billion a year. Given that the US GNP is close to hundreds of trillions of dollars...
Regardless of whether I'm correct or you believe me about the money, sedimentation, as a process, does not work with volcanic activity or wind. It's defined by the existence of a liquid and solutes, things dissolved into the liquid.
IE, a sediment. Take sand, mud, clay, etc, in a jar of water, and let the stuff settle down and compact into rock, stone, whatever. This process just isn't defined by wind or volcanic activity, where volcanic activity melts and reforges pre-existing stone, and wind wears down and erodes pre-existing stone.
Geek dating! [bunnyhop.com]
Re:They do have to market their projects (Score:1)
Re:Too cold anyway... (Score:1)
Re:They seen to be buttering us up. (Score:1)
Connah
Re:Where did all the water go? (Score:1)
All generalizations are false.
science ? improvements ? (Score:1)
Goodnight
Re:Not just fossil evidence? (Score:2)
Not again (Score:1)
Why not Mod this up? (Score:1)
Re:A better place to search... (Score:1)
Re:If Slashdot ran NASA (Score:2)
Awww, come on. The newsies are already in Florida and have to be wanting to cover something else. Witness the speed with which the newsies can throw something together and the plethora of extra resources they have. When you have money to pay a set of helicopters to fly along with a friggin' Ryder truck to Tallahassee, NASA can make this move faster.
Sports press conferences are laid on inside of a day--sometimes, inside of hours. Science news is, in general, a lot more interesting and a lot more important than sports. So why do we have to wait a month [at times]?
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Can you imagine... (Score:1)
Thank you.
-- Patrick Bateman, Esq.
Oceans? (Score:2)
They do have to market their projects (Score:1)
It does not seem very sad to me. Keeping up the public interest in the work seems like a very reasonable thing. Keeping up the interest of the folks paying for the work is what happens around the world to anybody doing anything. The only persons exempted from this reality are the independantly wealthy doing something as a hobby.
Billions of taxpayer dollars do not fall into the "just leave me alone while I just do stuff" category.
Kudos to NASA for keeping on top of the marketing game. What would be sad is if they lost the savy realization that this is what they must do to keep funding on track.
NASA PR? You must be kidding! (Score:2)
Of course it would, but that would mean that NASA would understand good PR. No, they like to hold things close to the vest, preferring pomp and circumstance to timely news. NASA's still stuck in the Sixties as far as their public relations shop runs.
Anyone who's read NASA Watch [nasawatch.com] for some time knows how clueless NASA's PR shop is. But they were getting better under the late Brian Welch [spaceref.com], who, I feel, was working to improve the immediacy and efficacy of NASA press coverage. Welch was instrumental in the Dreamtime work done on ISS, and really had a thing for using Webcams on stuff. He initially opposed Keith Cowing's press accreditation efforts, but I really do feel that Brian "got it".
But in this era of "faster, cheaper, better", NASA PAO seems to be still thinking "slower, costlier, bad theater".
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Fuck NASA (Score:1)
NASA is just desperate for cash, so they resort to sensationalism to get support for their budget bills in Congress. As an astronomer, I think that space travel is great, but it shouldn't come at the cost of our collective dignity.
I can see the headline now--"NASA, the boy who cried 'Life!'"
Re:Oceans? (Score:2)
Well, Venus has a lot of Sulfuric Acid rain, but the air pressure is apparently too high for pools or oceans of the stuff to form. Light breezes carry half ton boulders around like grains of sand, and no probe has lasted on the surface for more than a couple of minutes.
So Mars is downright friendly by comparison
www.matthewmiller.net [matthewmiller.net]Re:A better place to search... (Score:1)
Re:Oh, please (Score:1)
-Kef
Cold there too. (Score:1)
We won't say "Pig F#%!er" in front of Jesus, even if you step on our toes! The Linux Pimp [thelinuxpimp.com]
Re:forgive me if I'm wrong (Score:1)
The polar caps are partly water and partly solid CO2 ("dry ice").
Re:sigh (Score:1)
Picture an interstellar gravity bong. (Score:1)
All generalizations are false.
Re:Where did all the water go? (Score:1)
Re:That should be "Igneous", not "Ignatious" (Score:2)
As the name implies, sedimentary rock is created by sediment precipitating out of a suspension (as you noted, on earth, water). And, as you pointed out, metamorphic rock is rock that has been subjected to high temps and/or pressure. But, you need either igneous or sedimentary rock to begin with. And, only igneous rock come from volcanoes.
RD
cjs
re: semen (Score:1)
All generalizations are false.
Not just fossil evidence? (Score:1)
If you were thinking of fossils of multicellular plants or animals, I'd bet a six-pack you'll be disappointed. Multicellular life appears as an afterthought in the history of life on Earth, whereas bacteria seem to have evolved almost as soon as the era of heavy bombardment ended. We probably live in a galaxy teeming with life -- all of it single-celled.
God is an anonymous coward? (Score:2)
Re:Oh, please (Score:1)
Well, then, we'd better let one go. What's on the agenda?
Reads: Government smuggling arms to fascist rebels, secretely importing Cuban cigars; Scientists have conclusive proof of life on Mars; and that you, sir, are romantically involved with Ms Iowa.
Damn. I was hoping we didn't have to reveal the fascists just yet, but looks like we're stuck.
Re:sigh (Score:1)
All generalizations are false.
Re:Molecular weight of water. (Score:2)
Star Trek Technology (Score:2)
This is a bigger issue than I think a lot of people here on Slashdot realize. Here's an illustrative example from one of my classes:
My Software Engineering teacher was talking about how many things you'd have to engineer into the space shuttle (she used to work for NASA, so this was an area of expertise for her) - she opened it up to the class so we could get an appreciation for how complex complex systems really were.
The suggestions were, for the most part, right on: Things like navigation, communication, life support. Then one person, the one sitting next to me, piped up.
"What about the gravity controller?"
Dead silence.
"You know, the part that controlls the gravity on the shuttle...."
"Um... we can't do that yet." I had to explain. It absolutely floored me - this person in my class seemed to believe that we had actually had that level of technology.
So yes, NASA has a long way to go before it's what the public expects.
Re:No more Scooby Doo! What about Starwars Two!? (Score:1)
You're welcome.
All generalizations are false.
surf's up (Score:1)
Re:Molecular weight of water. (Score:2)
Certain? No. However, there is very strong empyrical evidence - both Earth and Jupiter did. Both still have plenty. Fractioning effects would cause distribution to vary with distance from the sun, but they wouldn't just leave a gaping hole in Mars' orbit.
Another possibility is that it's all bound up in ammonium salts or bound up in nitrate rocks via mechanisms like the one you mentioned for water. I don't *remember* hearing about vast amounts of nitrates on Mars, but I'm not an expert on Martian geology, either.
Re:We can figure out Mars... (Score:1)
All generalizations are false.
screw Hawaii (Score:2)
News as it happens??? These are ancient oceans! (Score:4)
In this case, that would have meant releasing this information several million years ago!
Oceans on Mars? Looking to better Nasa's ratings! (Score:1)
This might just be me, but haven't they already established that there was indeed water on Mars in the past, leading to certain patterns of erosion and valleys and such. Stories like this [brown.edu] and this [go.com] and this [spacedaily.com] (all from about a year ago) make me less impressed by this "announcement."
I think Nasa is just trying to do ANYTHING to get rid of their bad rap from the "faster, cheaper, more crashes" approach that led to the Mars debacles.
Re:They seen to be buttering us up. (Score:1)
Where did all the water go? (Score:3)
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They seen to be buttering us up. (Score:3)
Say it already! Say there is life beyond this little rotten planet! Spill the f!@$!@#ing beans. Let go of the religous zealotry that says that life only exists on this planet.
And in the end, the Greys will thank you.
Water on mars. (Score:1)
Re:NASA competing with movies? No problem... (Score:1)
oxygen? h2o? (Score:1)
============
A better place to search... (Score:3)
A theory for where the water went (Score:1)
Space worms landed on Arr*cough* Mars and drank up all the water. They roam underground eating up tiny bacterium that managed to find water that the worm left behind. Prediction: We will all find our new narcotic on Mars that will be way better than caffeine.
Wait a minute. We don't beleive in aliens. And books arn't necissarily true either. Hmm, nevermind.
Roy Miller
Europe, not that one (Score:1)
Well, if anyone wants to see pictures of this water under Europe phenom, you can check them out here [geoman.net].
Re:This Just in from NASA... (Score:1)
I'd think not, especially considering that 100,000,000,000,000,000,000 (100 quintillion) years is far older than our ~13,000,000,000 (13 billion) year old universe.
=p
Press releases (Score:5)
NASA is, unfortunatly, competing with movies when it comes to gaining an audience. They have had to come up with marketing ideas, press releases, merchandise, and such to compete for public attention.
It's sad, because gone are the days when all their money could be poured directly into pure research. Now they have to justify all their advances to a public that wants the glitz of Star Trek but don't realize where our science actually is at technology wise.
It's sad, and it shouldn't be, but they have to have press releases to maintain their "market share", because the politicians force pure-research departments to compete with hollywood.
Re:This Just in from NASA... (Score:2)
Did you mean volcanos or Vulcans? If it's the later, then you can bet on a biological process. Naturally, I'd have to wonder why Vulcans would even want to do such a thing.
FWIW, if I recall my geology correctly ,sedimentary rock is generally not formed by volcanic activity unless the dust emitted by the volcanos were suspended in a liquid and then slowly precipitated out over time and under great pressure. Ignatious rock is formed by volcanic activity.
Of course, NASA hasn't made the offical announcement. So, we'll just have to wait to see what that is on December 7th.
RD
Molecular weight of water. (Score:2)
Actually, water vapour is much lighter than molecular oxygen, molecular nitrogen, or carbon dioxide. The nitrogen, at least, wouldn't have bound that readily to metals, and so would have had to boil off. The lightest simple nitrogen compound is ammonia, which has about the same molecular weight as water; if ammonia could boil off, then it's likely that water vapour could too, if I understand correctly.
Not that I'm disagreeing with your mechanism; I'm just pointing out that direct escape probably happened too. Your mechanism nicely explains why Mars doesn't have an atmosphere rich in hydrogen compounds (water, methane, ammonia).
Re:Oceans? (Score:1)
Re:NO ocean NOW on mars (Score:1)
This isn't new?? (Score:1)
Also there is a type of impact crater on Mars charicterized by what is called "flow ejecta," meaning that the material ejected from the crater flows like a liquid. This is believed to occur when there is subsurface water (liquid or solid). Some believ that subsurface liquid water still exists on mars.
There are also countless indications water erosion, from ground water sepage leading to the collapse of the ground above (like whats happening in mexico city. In some places the ground is sinking by 30 centimeters a year), to massive flows carrying huge ammounts of sediment.
on the other hand, this may be the first time this sort of evidence has been gathered. But the conclusions are not exciting. Now hearing that there was NO water on Mars, that would be freaky.
Re:Water On Mars and Science in General (Score:1)
the election all over again! (Score:1)
Of course there's life on Mars. (Score:2)
All generalizations are false.
Re:H20 Oceans? (Score:1)
NASA competing with movies? No problem... (Score:1)
Holding off to make the anouncement... (Score:1)
Wouldn't it be great! (Score:1)
Oh, you mean like the media did when Bush... I mean Gore... wait, I mean Bush... won the presidency on the 7th?
Yeah, that'd be great!
With 1/3G, hooters can be 3X bigger! (Score:1)
VERY OLD NEWS (Score:2)
What admires me is that after 30 years of several investigators showing and proving that water existed in Mars, after bashing all of them with Hoaglands and "Elvis leaves Mars stage" we seem to see old detractors claiming they found "oceans"... First I would like to see how many oceans they found... Second if they will dare to remember 30 years of investigations and people knoking NASA'a doors. And if they will remember their participation as main detractors of "water in Mars". Until June, Malin was known as Mr. Thirst, as he didn't believe about any water in Mars and any evidence on "Dry Mars" was immediately published in his site.
And frankly he continues this story... People, THERE IS water in Mars. 90% of it flew into Cosmos. Believe me. We still don't have the reason WHY it happened. For this we need a systematic and VERY detailed map of Mars and not Malin's slideshow. But we know most of HOW it happened. Mars lost its atmosphere and went into cooking mode for some years. When the mess cooled down, most water was already gone. But not all. And the remaining 5-10% are still there. And not in Malin's high latitudes... well... only (good boy Malin but you didn't do all homework). Water is still flowing on Mars. Right on the equator.
Look:
http://ida.wr.usgs.gov/html/m08061/m0806185.htm
http://ida.wr.usgs.gov/html/m04018/m0401877.htm
http://ida.wr.usgs.gov/html/m04492/m0449202.htm
http://ida.wr.usgs.gov/html/m08059/m0805951.htm
http://ida.wr.usgs.gov/html/m08076/m0807686.htm
I mentioned this a few posts ago btw...
And they are only a fraction of the evidence. But, probably the best part. And about this and aliens. Mr. NASAoids, are we going to wait ANOTHER 30 years for some Dr. Tuckletacker FIND on YOUR name that there is water and aliens on Mars? Hey, hey, hey... Yeah, maybe I'm talking about those aliens that COULD have built the Face... But I think, we pretty well know WHAT aliens COULD have built such thing, correct? And WHAT LEVEL OF INTELLIGENCE these poor things had... And we pretty well know that that's not the first and last piece of evidence. The dark patches and mostly the dark dunes are also a good piece of evidence...
Oh these aliens.... Naaa their too insignificant to take time to write an article... What about bigger aliens? Well, if we wanna talk about the possibility of more serious aliens so we should go a little away from Cydonia... And we will not find pyramids and faces or even constructions but something else... Which does not fit on calculations... Oh yeah, send Hoagland bashing me and proving I'm talking about HyperSchyzics
Amazing (Score:1)
Another interesting point to make is that geology seems to be a bit of an art as well. Make a story to fit the facts (very little) and go from there. In a science such as chemistry we can see exactly what is happening, in real time if like. With geology, it seems that people have come up with reasons as to how and why these things occured without any proof. Note, this is not meant as a slight against that geologists that look at rocks and say, yes, that is that sort of rock, terrible to build on, you'll have to put the foundations down another 20m, but the sort that make claims, which they think have some scientific basis when there is none.
Next they have everyone believing that 90% of the photos of "the red planet" aren't doctored. Think I am being paranoid. Don't believe a word I say. Ask any remote sensing person (a good place to start would be the local surveying department), and they will tell you the same thing. Even those photos coming out the Jet Propulsion Lab are doctored (and this came from someone who work at JPL). The reason. The "red planet", isn't as red as it's nickname suggests. It is actually more of a orangy color.
Re:Molecular weight of water. (Score:2)
Re:surf's up (Score:1)
Oh, please (Score:4)
Did it ever occur to you that maybe they're telling the truth, and that they're releasing the information as soon as they're reasonably confident they have their facts straight? Wouldn't that be far simpler than some bizarre conspiracy theory?
Honestly, I think some people here need to take a frickin' break from the online world and get some fresh air from time to time. There are indeed evil/twisted/whatever people in the world, but not nearly as many as some people think.
Re:Oh, please (Score:2)
They are now reviving the truth. And why? Because there are OTHER things they still don't want to talk about. About present water in Mars. About VERY POSSIBLE LIFE in Mars. Dr. Van Flandern seem to have found some strong evidences about this in the South Hemisphere. I think that there is also some good chances to find it on Arabia Terra. And I should tell that this is EXTRAORDINARY. Because it means that "they" survived the tragedy that dried the planet in very short time. And temperatures then were probably uch bigger then simple pasteurization...
And, beyond this, there is the "weird" world. not pyramids or anything like that. Well there are pyramids in Mars but there is a chance they are a BIG NATURAL weirdness of Mars. Done with the probable help of aliens but those only wanted some sunlight... There are things much weirder than this. As one hill sorrounded by a compact set of craters all around and having a strange inner "valley" sorrouding its center... War Games? Don't know, frankly. But it is data that should not be ignored by any means. Until we get deeper in the facts and analysis.
But about NASA. We surely have that they release information to not release other information. It is intersting to note that the issue of "there is water in Mars" started to rise and NASA releases the announcement about something JUST IN TIME! It does not talk about what or where. But if Sunday Times is right then they are keeping their old policy. Try to shut down one issue by releasing another one... Why they do this? It seems that they know they made a very slippery move back then. And now it is PAINFUL to recognise they were wrong.
Or maybe they really have some Master Plans beyond 7 locks? And by some reason they do not want to open all doors? If they do then sorry people. I really don't know what you'll get from this. As far as I know half-world already knows about what you're trying to hide...
This Just in from NASA... (Score:2)
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Re:Oceans? (Score:2)
IANAC, but...this is a pretty simple question to answer. (If I'm wrong, I am sure that I will be corrected!).
On earth, the liquid that we see most often is water. The reason for this is that water is a polar fluid, meaning that it has an electrical charge...in the case of water, a negative charge on the oxygen atom and a positive charge on the hydrogen atoms. This charge is weaker then the normal charges that bind atoms into molecules, so that the water molecules stay slightly connected to each other but aren't connected into a larger molecule...in other words, they become a liquid.There are some other liquids that this is true of...alcohol, ammonia, sulfur hydroxide...all work under the same principle. And under enough pressure, nonpolar fluids such as methane and even helium can become liquid. But on the surface of Mars, there was never enough pressue to turn any fluid but water into a liquid. Hope this answers your question!
Re:Molecular weight of water. (Score:2)
If the oxygen part of the reaction remains in the upper atmosphere, the reaction eventually reaches an equilibrium. If the oxygen binds to materials on the surface, and is effectively taken out of the reaction, the reaction keeps going one way, until water stops reaching the upper atmospere...
next space conference (Score:2)
continuinng debate (Score:2)
Re:Molecular weight of water. (Score:2)
You also mentioned that molecular water was too heavy to boil off readily, which turns out not to be the case. This is what I was responding to (by noting that nitrogen in some form _did_ boil off, indicating that molecular water could too).
Re:Where did all the water go? (Score:2)
Re:Water On Mars and Science in General (Score:2)
With this whole "internet" thing, and computers, and nanotechnology, and the space-race, we've had the unfortunate illusion that things in Science have to develop at an ever-accelerating pace. Certainly Moore's law was a huge contributor. (but is it even valid anymore? P IV anyone?)
But the reality is, maybe the pace does increase for certain fields, at certain points, but overall, we've only known about atoms for about 100 years. Until we, as a species, are financially robust enough to have the luxury to send a person to Mars, we have to make all of these indirect observations, and even when we have direct observations, the data are going to be interpreted differently by different people, and the scientific community is going to have to do as they traditionally have done, duke it out until the most likely theory based on the evidence is most generally accepted. And the crackpots, vitally important to this process, will accept the others, and continue to attempt to prove them. Yes, there's a bit of rivalry and competition, and spite going on, because people who only live 80 or so years are trying to get in and get their funding (either public or private) within their lifespans. That's to be expected. That's why we're getting all these questionable and contradictory press releases. But the reality is, until more and better observations come in, and more debate happens, it's going to go back and forth, and the truth isn't going to come next year with the Pentium 5, it's going to come in 50 years with the first manned Mars mission (I'm being very optimistic). Be patient. Maybe you'll be dead by then, but did poor Galileo live to see Voyager snap pictures of Jupiter's moons? It's a tough reality.
If Slashdot ran NASA (Score:4)
Uh, put more soberly:
The official press release [nasa.gov] about the news conference was released 12/1, a week in advance, which is completely normal. This is the way this sort of thing has always been done, it's just that 99% of the time you don't hear about the news release that told you there'd be a press conference. (When you're on the internet, this happens -- geez, get used to it.)
Obviously if you're going to hold a major news conference you want to give the newsies plenty of time to show up, run up the antennas on their satellite trucks, and prepare good questions for the reporters. You also want the scientists around the world who are going to be eagerly watching this live the opportunity to set up conference rooms with cable feeds.
NASA's science news is of a different nature than its space program news. Technical news can be issued immediately, but science news does not, technically, belong to NASA: it belongs to the scientists who discovered it. All science results are "embargoed" based on the precedence of the science team in question, so that they can publish their results and get the career credit and institutional credit that they deserve for devoting, probably, years of their life to an obscure niche of science. They get this one chance to shine in the sun; NASA gets 'em every other week or so (though rarely as big as this one may prove). So NASA patiently waits for the release of the published science results until they can officially announce anything.
Another thing: Science news, when it's reported prematurely, is often distorted. (Prime example: early orbital results for NEO asteroids always seem to result in Tuesday's DOOM IS NIGH headline being replaced by MAYBE NOT the next day. This leads to public disrespect for science, among other deleterious effects.) By refusing to issue breathless incomplete press releases as soon as pimple-faced slashdot readers demand, NASA increases the chance that:
There's more, probably, but that's it in a nutshell. This leisurely approach works; peer review is better than press-release sniping.
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Re:This Just in from NASA... (Score:2)
First - hills. And here Cydonia is one of the best places. These hills possess assymetrical erosion. They are eroded more in one direction than the other. No significative but still visible.
First II - hills again most hills seem to present a "mesa" morphology that is common by its height. This is probably the best evidence of how deep were Mars waters. The tops were cleaned out by rains and winds, while the base was protected by water.
Second - sedimentary layers. Dust sediments would not produce such a common and large sedimentary layering. Volcanic ones could have produced them but still there is the question that we are dealing with quite regular layers. And a very powerful deepness of sediments. For a volcanological explanation this would mean a constant periodic work for a very large period of time. Anyway not far from possible. Let's remember Io...
Third the river basins. In several places one can see large rivers that end in a surface much similar to sea basins. And there are very clear traces of the same sedimentary deposition rivers produce on Earth. Note that the form of this deposition is very peculiar. In the center of the depositions blanket, there are small valleys. As if the river continues to flow a little bit inside the sea. The way they form can only happen if they go inside water.
Fourth the "aftershock" sediments - After the huge water movements, water started to evaporate into space. Much like what you see on seaside, during low tide, there are several regions of Mars showing lines of sediments. In some places there are even evidence of the "last pools of water"
Fifth the "stairs" formations - some investigators, and even Malin noted this. Talked about hte fact that several places in Mars present a clear "stairs"" formation which is very common on Earth. On Earth, land tends to rise and fall into Ocean for very large periods of time. In some places you can see "stairs" (one such case is in California).
Sixth - the Water Layers - On Arabia Terra water is still flowing. And it seems to have a property of being trapped only in some specific layers. Much the same way as in Earth. For such thing to happen we should take into consideration that the history of these sediments is clearly differentiated. Some hold water others not. So what we have here is not only the demonstration that these sediments could not be formed by volcans or dust (here chemical differentations are mostly insignificant). What we have here is that not only water formed them but that they were formed on different physico-chemical conditions. And probably biological ones.
But this would also mean that what happened in Mars did not happen 100000000000000000000 years ago...
Re:If Slashdot ran NASA (Score:2)
On what concerns these conferences itself. You points are good. But that's not the way NASA has been acting recently. We all know that they speak a lot about "AMAZING", "EXTRAORDINARY", "WE ARE ALL EXCITED" in these things. And it does not sound science. It sounds much more as Marketing PR and people sniffing glue. And which causes serious glitches. Before getting offended pick up that some NASA conference. Like the one about "Life from Mars" and look and listen very well to it. You wanna tell me that these are professional answers? That people are talking in a qualified voice? That they are answering to what reporters ask them? To me it looks much like a press-conference done after a Watergate-like scandal...
Slashdot people may be too demending. But lots of Slashdotters have not seen one conference but many. And we know that sometimes the quantity of "amazings" and "excitements" of NASA's experts sound much more like "GIVE SOME MORE LSD TO BE MORE EXCITED". Because apart of babling a few facts, stating a pair of fuzzy photos, and presenting two three badly made diagrams, there is no real Science on it. Yeah, frankly. Not all NASA conferences look like this. But some, and SPECIALLY the ones on Mars may look to anything except Science...
Re:Where did all the water go? (Score:2)
Re:oxygen? h2o? (Score:2)
Why o' why we spend all these time discovering these stuff on Mars? Should be spend all these resources to improve our Earth first?
Same logic:
Why o why are we spending all this time discovering new stuff about AIDS? Shouldn't we spend all these resources to keep healthy people alive first?
What happened to Mars probably won't happen to Earth, but then again we don't really know what happened to Mars...or to Venus for that matter. If Mars once had life, we'd be able to study the fossils and possibly see just exactly how fragile a planet sized ecosystem really is. To say nothing of just studying it's weather to get a better understanding of what's happening here on this planet.
Pictures of Mars (Score:5)
Re:Oceans? (Score:2)
News Happenings (Score:5)
Sounds more like they're doing what reputable scientists normally do -- don't hold a press conference until the paper is published.
Re:Oceans? (Score:2)
And note that Mars is not far from the Sun. While this is questionable in some points, some theories talk about the terodynamical layers of the solar system. For example most water is vapour in Mercury/Venus, liquid on Earth/Mars, solid on outer planets. Well, we have Europe showing that things may not be so simple. But still there is some sense on it.