Strange Globs Could Signal Water On Mars 186
Joshua.Niland writes "Strange globs seen on the landing strut of the Phoenix Mars lander could be the first proof that modern Mars hosts liquid water. Images from the robotic craft show what appear to be liquid droplets growing, merging, and dripping on the lander's leg over the course of a Martian month. Just when is NASA going to fix that leaking roof on the backlot?"
No, it proves there is water vapor (Score:4, Informative)
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Assuming of course that those globs are water and not Martian spit or something else.
Maybe a Martian dog walked by, took a whiff of the lander, and promptly took a piss on it?
Now that would be a headline for the press, "Traces of dogs found on Mars."
Re:No, it proves there is water vapor (Score:5, Funny)
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And what is condensed water vapor? I thought so.
Melted ice?
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That condensed on the metal parts of the rover. Assuming of course that those globs are water and not Martian spit or something else.
As frigid as Mars is, it would have sublimated onto the rover, not condensed.
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As frigid as Mars is, it would have sublimated onto the rover, not condensed.
God, I'm an idiot... it would have accumulated by DEPOSITION, not sublimation.
Still, the point is still there. It would have changed from vapor to solid without a liquid phase. The perchlorates that would keep it liquid wouldn't be in the vapor, and thus it would depose, not condense.
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Hey, Ferro, you been drooling in the landing bay again?
Re:No, it proves there is water vapor (Score:5, Interesting)
That condensed on the metal parts of the rover
Not to denigrate the achievements of the Phoenix lander, but this is exactly why the people who advocate robotic planetary missions over manned ones are wrong.
We didn't detect this water using Phoenix's million-dollar spectrometer designed to detect hydroxy compounds, or whatever. We detected it by adding a $20 digital camera that happened to be capable of pointing at some metal struts.
If you want to discover new stuff, you want to leave room for serendipity. Unfortunately, because Phoenix is a purpose-designed robotic platform, we can't ask any more questions about what the condensing substance is, or what else is in it. No matter how advanced they become, we can only tease ourselves with robots. To really check the place out, we have to go in person.
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First, we have to determine 1) if it is worth spending so much money and, likely, lives to go visit. And for that you can send a robot and 2) where to go when you send a human, and for that you can send a robot.
Yes, we will have send a person, but it makes sense to send a robot first, and send an orbiter to map the crap out of it. I'm as impatient as anyone, but a robot first makes more sense.
Now that we have decided that it's pretty interesting and have some data about what is where, _now_ is the time
Next mission... (Score:2)
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Next mission... (Score:5, Funny)
Some say I'm bipolar...
...and that there's a portrait of your left foot in the Louvre basement.
The only thing we know is: you're called The Stig.
Wrong domain (Score:5, Funny)
While I'm not saying that getting that first drop of Martian water would be cheap or easy, but it certainly would be cheaper and easier than setting up a full scale harvesting and shipping system for pure water.
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If other people say you are bipolar, you should get yourself checked out. Not knowing, or not being able to believe that you are bipolar is sort of a classic symptom of the disease... Trust me.
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Duh... (Score:5, Interesting)
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I thought we already had the signals with the sublimation we caught on camera. Then some more potential evidence with the snow. I think we should be reaching the point where we can start talking about this stuff as possible evidence rather than saying "signal" like we are surprised.
Well, there's a big difference between solid water and liquid water. Solid water exists at a vast range of temperatures and pressures, and sublimation can occur at a vast range of temperatures and pressures; liquid water, even liquid water loaded down with salts as in this hypothetical Martian mud, can only exist at a much, much smaller ranger of temperatures and pressures. So sighting stuff that looks like it's a liquid is significantly more interesting than seeing chunks of ice.
For example: consider that
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I will also point out that the possible candidate for a habitat for Earth based life is probably on more minds than Martian life.
Maybe it peed itself (Score:2)
Does the vehicle itself contain any liquids which could behave in this fashion?
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This could be profitable...
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My car does the same thing, but with oil. I was thinking that maybe because this water is 'created' from nothing and my car's situation is close, maybe I'm driving a perpetual oil machine?
Your driveway would already have been carpet-bombed had that been the case.
Better get on it.... (Score:2)
and submit my pattent for my Moisture Farm invention
http://wpcontent.answers.com/wikipedia/en/thumb/8/83/Luke-Treadwell_close_large.jpg/180px-Luke-Treadwell_close_large.jpg [answers.com]
Do I have this right? (Score:5, Funny)
Science has a high burden of proof. (Score:5, Insightful)
You do realize that scientists have a higher burden of proof, right? They aren't going to say it's water until they analyze it and can confirm with certainty what it is.
Damn right it's my tax dollars at work, and millions of us approve of it.
Re:Science has a high burden of proof. (Score:4, Insightful)
Damn right it's my tax dollars at work, and millions of us approve of it.
Well ... those of us who understand the logic behind science and the scientific method most certainly do. I'm just not sure how many of us fit that description, anymore.
Re:Science has a high burden of proof. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Science has a high burden of proof. (Score:4, Insightful)
The problem is, those of us that approve are rather silent.
Just at work, a highly educated person was complaining how a "third world" country was "wasting" money on space exploration rather than feeding and sheltering the poor.
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Depends on how you frame your purpose. It's a bit like giving a man trout as opposed to teaching him to fish. Also why can't they feed the poor *and* do space exploration.
Personally I think space exploration is very important. Eventually we're going to have to get off this rock to survive. Whether by resource depletion, disease, catastrophic event (something big crashes into Earth, supervolcanoes go apeshit or sun going supernova) something's going to make our time here limited and the sooner we find via
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<nitpick>Actually, as far as my limited knowledge of stellar chemistry goes, the sun isn't quite big enough to do that. It can go red giant, which is already enough to toast us. That's still a couple billion years away, though.</nitpick>
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It can go red giant, which is already enough to toast us.
Actually, Earth is toast much earlier than that. As the sun ages, its luminosity increases, and in only about a billion years, there will be no liquid water on Earths surface due to the increased temperature, even though the sun will live for another couple of billion years before becoming a red giant.
Re:Science has a high burden of proof. (Score:4, Insightful)
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Yes. Some people will starve. Some people will be unemployed. In every country. In every century.
It would be nice to minimize this, but what is the proper way to do so?
In one asian country, the president or prime minister (can't remember which) decided to place a TV satelite into orbit instead of using the money to feed the people. The side effect was that the people in rural villages were able to get educational TV shows for the first time ever.
Or to put it more simply, "Shoot for the Moon. If you mi
Re:Science has a high burden of proof. (Score:5, Funny)
Yes. Some people will starve. Some people will be unemployed.
It would be nice to minimize this, but what is the proper way to do so?
Feed the unemployed to the starving?
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You do realize that scientists have a higher burden of proof, right? They aren't going to say it's water until they analyze it and can confirm with certainty what it is.
You missed the point completelly. Why exactly did they send that probe there in the first place? to use it as a remote camera, or maybe to analyze some shit? Probe lands in the puddle, gets covered in droplets, thers some frost like growth .. and ALL this multi milion dollar probe can do is take pictures? ...
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It didn't have something to test for water on itself because when the mission was designed no one thought there might actually be liquid water splashing on the thing. It's easy to sit in your armchair and criticize something with 20/20 hindsight.
Re:Science has a high burden of proof. (Score:4, Interesting)
Damn right it's my tax dollars at work, and millions of us approve of it.
I agree except with the "at work" part. Scientific exploration on Mars is just an expensive hobby right now. For example, if there had been 5 Phoenix landers instead of one (five landers incidentally would have cost less than five times the cost of one Phoenix lander), we'd be able to compare the legs of the working vehicles. By launching one, they eliminated an important part of scientific observation, namely being able to repeat an observation. As it is, I don't see how this discovery will be "confirmed" over any reasonable length of time. It may well be decades before anything concrete can be said.
As I see it, there are three ways they could make those tax dollars work for Mars exploration: 1) faster probe development and larger batch sizes when a probe is developed and built, 2) sample return, 2018 is the scheduled date for the first sample return mission, and 3) a long term manned presence on Mars. Some of these options will drive up costs a bit. But if you're interested in your tax dollars "working"...
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I've read through this sentence 5 times and I still don't see how your math works. 5 times anything costing X will equal 5X in any math book that I saw (mumble) decades ago. What am I missing?
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Relax. I agree that it only makes sense to do analysis of some kind to confirm that it is water. And no, it didn't really make sense to line the whole probe with some kind of water detector.
However, I can still appreciate the irony in these jokes... :) I even laugh at computer jokes from time to time...
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Because most of their work is PR?
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Now I've heard it all.
Silly (Score:5, Insightful)
Another example of why the "why send humans, robots can do everything just as well" idea is bogus. If that was an astronaut up there this would be resolved in a minute, not a month.
Re:Silly (Score:5, Funny)
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Astronaut: "Mission Control, I see some strange liquid substance here on Mars, how should I proceed?"
Mission Control: "Hey, why don't you just pop it in your mouth, see what it tastes like"
Astronaut: "Mmm, yummy"
Mission Control: "You do realize that was a joke,...... right?"
Astronaut: "Must...kill...humans..."
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Hmm, I meant more like analyzing by other means that tasting it...
So we really just need his arm to transfer the droplet from the leg to the testing device. We should be able to send a robot capable of that with much less cost and time. If the first 10 attempts fail, we are still ahead...
And if takes another year or 5 years, it's not really time critical. Unless of course you have a human sitting on the planet waiting for a replacement testing device and a sandwich.
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Sure their programming sometimes goes bad and they start killing us, but don't EAT OUR BRAINS!
Entirely their loss, as far as I'm concerned.
*is treated to a thoughtful lunch*
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You obviously haven't seen any Martian Zombie Robot films...
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Does Futurama count?
Re:Silly (Score:4, Insightful)
Sending an astronaut is many times as expensive, since we need more safety, need to keep the astronaut alive during the long trip over, and need to bring the astronaut back. After all, we have already sent the lander, but are not scheduled to send people for many years. So it's probably better to send the machine and wait a month than to wait the many years before we can send a person.
It also helps to know a lot about the environment before we risk sending an astronaut.
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Why? Why not send the first astronauts on 1-way trips? Of course it would be a suicide mission, but i'm sure there would be plenty of volunteers.
If we could somehow convince the terrorists now in Gitmo there are Westerners there to blow up, we could solve the one-way trip-volunteer problem AND the what-to-do-with-the-detainees-when-Gitmo-closes problem in one fell swoop.
A twofer!
Strat
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I think that willingly volunteering for a suicide mission should be more than enough to disqualify you from becoming an astronaut.
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I'm not squeamish about it in the least, I just think it shows a massive deficit in not just their sanity but their ability to get the job done under intense isolation and stress. Not to mention anyone involved in organising something like this should be charged with 1st degree murder. Putting a price on a life is inhumane, but not as much as sending someone to their certain death. I would want a crew that fought for their lives to their last breath, not one who will willingly accept death.
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If you would have send humans, they would have already left the planet years ago and never made that discovery in the first place. Oh, an of course it would have cost 1000 times as much as those rovers. Humans in space really only serves the purpose of learning how to keep humans alive in space, if you want to get actual science done, you are much better of spending that money robots.
your math is lousy (Score:2)
The Phoenix lander had an arm; it could have easily touched these globules to see whether they were liquid as well. It didn't because they were discovered after mission end. The same can happen to you on a manned mission. But let's look at the costs...
The Phoenix mission cost $386 million (development, launch, mission). That sounds like a lot until you realize that a single space shuttle launch costs $500 million. A human mission to Mars costs at least $500 billion if everything goes right. That's mor
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Seeing as this is a 1-way trip, sure he's spent 1 minute sampling the water, but what's he going to do with the rest of his life?
Touch your right elbow with your right hand. (Score:2)
It is entirely possible that the sampling arm cannot touch the leg of the lander. The arm may have limit switches and/or physical blocks that prevent it. After all, you wouldn't want to get the sampling arm pinned in the landing struts if there is a software glitch. Besides, there may not be a tool on the s
If there is ice there is water (Score:2)
If there is ice there is water http://wever.wordpress.com/2008/07/18/its-official-water-ice-on-mars/ [wordpress.com]
But the droplets now seen are cooler... err, they're warmer (pun originally not intended)
JPL's next grant application: is it water? (Score:2, Insightful)
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Dear JPL. While we are thrilled about your discovery, Mars isn't going anywhere. We are trying to save the economy and lesten the impact of this economic down turn so that we can spend even more money on you guys in the future. Spending 10 billion on machinists creates more jobs than spending 10 billion on rocket scientists. Hope you understand.
Funding Agency.
Re:JPL's next grant application: is it water? (Score:4, Insightful)
Dear JPL. While we are thrilled about your discovery, Mars isn't going anywhere. We are trying to save the economy and lesten the impact of this economic down turn so that we can spend even more money on you guys in the future. Spending 10 billion on machinists creates more jobs than spending 10 billion on rocket scientists. Hope you understand.
Funding Agency.
Dear _Funding Agency_,
We here at JPL understand your position. Since you feel that the space program has no benefits worth funding, we'll be sending over a large fleet of trucks to collect all your computers and other technology made possible by research connected with said space program.
We understand your need to keep operating however, and in the spirit of mutual understanding you've shown us, we will be sending you Univac for your future computational needs. Please have a very large building with a large electrical power system and a team of vacuum-tube replacement technicians ready.
Best of luck,
JPL
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Just FYI, NASA _is_ the funding agency.
Below is a marginal summary of the process. My colleagues will no doubt correct me where needed. For the record, IAAPS (I am a planetary scientist). It's a terrible system, but it's better than any of the alternatives.
Congress gives NASA some amount of money each year (~0.6% of the total budget). The bulk of this goes to the shuttle and space station programs, but a significant fraction is leftover for science and mission operations. This is portioned out to the
Martian dog (Score:5, Funny)
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It proves that a Martian dog found a leg to pee on.
Guaranteed, that martian dog is now, Our Friend!
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I sincerely hope it didn't try to hump the pathfinder too.
Is that what the kids are calling it nowadays?
Phoenix was above the triple point (Score:5, Interesting)
I don't see that this is that surprising. The Phoenix landing site was low enough to have the surface pressure above the "triple point" of water, so liquid water is just a matter of having it being warm enough (or having enough salts to depress the freezing point enough).
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The lander did have heaters [newscientist.com]...
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Thinking about it, if any parts of the Phoenix surface were heated above 0 C, liquid water condensation would have almost certainly formed there.
nice, but not surprising (Score:3, Informative)
The fact that liquid water can be stable on the surface of Mars has been known for a while. Direct observation, of course, is nice. The next question is whether there might be significant open bodies of water (brine) in some locations. Some satellite photographs could be interpreted that way.
The existence of perchlorates adds another dimension, though, because they are such an effective anti-freeze and a potential metabolite. The perchlorates might actually be biologically generated on Mars, somewhat similar to the way organisms on Earth have generated large amounts of oxygen and changed the environment on a global scale. On Earth, reduction in CO2 levels was an important factor in making the climate more hospitable, and on Mars, generation of perchlorates may make the water more accessible.
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Liquid water can be stable on Mars' atmosphere provided the water contains a LOT of perchlorate minerals in the water. That means the water with these minerals will vaporize much more slowly than just plain water, which will literally boil away at the equivalent of 90,000 feet altitude (which is pretty close to the atmospheric pressure of Mars).
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What the? (Score:2)
If the probe can take self-pictures, wouldn't wavelength-specific pictures be easily taken with a handful of filters, and then the pictures sent back to earth for spectrochemical analysis?
I'm tired of these "signal", "may", and "perhaps". The technology is definitely there to give a definite answer.
Wait... liquid??? (Score:3, Insightful)
Exactly. (Score:2)
I already see a few anti-science posts here, and it's astounding that these knuckle draggers don't understand that there is more than one substance this could be, and scientists won't say what it is until they can prove what it is.
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scientists won't say what it is until they can prove what it is.
You'd think they would have included a simple test to determine if any liquid they find is water since that is one of the main reasons they are there.
Also why is it so hard to detect life? I could get a crappy child's microscope and look at a drop of muddy water here on earth and easily find life. Why not include a simple microscope and look at a drop of the liquid?
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tasks that are simple here on earth, are shit loads harder when your a few million miles away on another planet....
I understand this but these are simple enough tests to include considering the more advanced testing they did include.
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Obviously, you don't understand.
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Obviously, you don't understand.
Ok you can tell people they don't understand, congratulations. Now can you tell us why you do understand, maybe enlighten us with your superior understanding or do you just shout out insults from behind the safety of your PC like some paranoid Tourette's patient?
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Things are a lot harder because these scientists don't have a full lab to work with. They chose which tests they would be able to run before the rovers and probes launched and chose not to include certain tests based on what they knew at the time.
Re:Not necessarily water... (Score:5, Informative)
Carbon Dioxide won't condense to water because
1) It's not water; and
2) if you're meaning 'liquid' CO2 doesn't appear in a liquid form at pressures below 5.1 (Earth) atmospheres of pressure. On Mars it will only appear as either gas or 'dry ice.'
Of course, there are plenty of other liquids it could be, and that's why no-one in the know has actually identified it as water.
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Well then, we just need to increase the gravitational constant of the universe as well.
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Of course it does, there is ample gravity for an atmosphere. The magnetic field isn't really the issue for an atmosphere, its the shielding from solar radiation that the magnetic field helps with. Without one, life will have a hard time taking hold, and living on the surface will be problematic.
Re:More Proof... (Score:5, Insightful)
Saying that "martians created humans" only takes the "why do we exist?" question and changes it to "why do martians exist?".
You didn't really answer anything, the whole "why does life exists" question still remains.
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What if it's true?
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Duh, the Venusians created the Martians.
Re:More Proof... [Robot Chicken] (Score:2)
More proof that the Martian race came to Earth thousands of years ago, interbred with humanity to create the white race, and has ever since been trying to take over the world. They will be done by 2012 when the Annunaki return.
Alien 1: "Dammit Dammit Dammit!"
Alien 2: "How were we going to take over the world with a white Michael Jackson anyway?"
Alien 1: "Dammit!
Re:Did I miss something? (Score:4, Funny)
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Actually the final year of my space science degree almost entirely revolved around martian geology and impact cratering (you wanna know how many craters per square km there are in amazonis planitia? or the southern highlands? TS, go count em yourself...)
So anyway, bite me.
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Which is not to say driving a buggy around mars is not pretty cool, but it's not really going anywhere.
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We'll spend your dime.
Your friends at the JPL
(PayPal donations welcome)
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would the perchlorate they suspect in there keep it liquid at the (what I believe to be is) low atmospheric pressure on Mars? Seriously don't know :)
Surface tension might be a factor as well. The forces which keep molecules stuck together on small scales can prevent water molecules from flying off.