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Mars

Briny Water May Pool In Mars' Equatorial Soil 39

astroengine writes Mars may be a frigid desert, but perchlorate salts in the planet's soil are lowering the freezing temperature of water, setting up conditions for liquid brines to form at equatorial regions, new research from NASA's Curiosity rover shows. The discovery of subsurface water, even a trickle, around the planets warmer equatorial belt defies current climate models, though spacecraft orbiting Mars have found geologic evidence for transient liquid water, a phenomenon termed "recurring slope lineae." The findings, published in this week's Nature Geoscience, are based on nearly two years worth of atmospheric humidity and temperature measurements collected by the roving science laboratory Curiosity, which is exploring an ancient impact basin called Gale Crater near the planet's equator. The brines, computer models show, form nightly in the upper 2 inches of the planet's soil as perchlorates absorb atmospheric water vapor. As temperatures rise in the morning, the liquid evaporates. The levels of liquid, however, are too low to support terrestrial-type organisms, the researchers conclude. "It is not just a problem of water, but also temperature. The water activity and temperatures are so low in Mars that they are beyond the limits of cell reproduction and metabolism," Javier Martin-Torres, with Lulea University of Technology, in Kiruna, Sweden, wrote in an email to Discovery News.
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Briny Water May Pool In Mars' Equatorial Soil

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  • by Geoffrey.landis ( 926948 ) on Monday April 13, 2015 @02:22PM (#49465197) Homepage

    Yes, I've mentioned this before-- if there are bacteria on Mars, they will be extreme halophiles.
    http://online.liebertpub.com/d... [liebertpub.com]
    http://ntrs.nasa.gov/search.js... [nasa.gov]

    • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

      if there are bacteria on Mars, they will be extreme halophiles.

      Those kinds of politically-biased ad-hominem attacks are uncalled for!

  • Yeay! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Rei ( 128717 ) on Monday April 13, 2015 @02:27PM (#49465243) Homepage

    What great news for the prospect of life on Mars! Quantities of a chemical that destroys organics on contact are so great that they suck water out of the soil and air!

    Nasa's massive obsession with this self-sterilizing rock [scientificamerican.com] come at the cost of investigating much more interesting targets elsewhere in the solar system. The money going to Mars 2020 in particular could do so much elsewhere (we really could use a followup to Titan, there's so many mysteries there we're not even close to solving, while new missions to Mars are more trying to find new mysteries to solve and answering the same vague "questions" over and over again) At least Europe is going to get something now - not my personal favorite (if there is anything interesting there, which we don't actually know, it's buried way too deep for us to get at it for a long, long time). But at least it's not NASA's "All Mars Channel".

    • by Rei ( 128717 )

      Oh, and that infographic forgot Phoenix - so add yet another Mars lander to that list.

    • Re:Yeay! (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Sowelu ( 713889 ) on Monday April 13, 2015 @02:47PM (#49465343)

      Mars takes ~260 days to reach, with a payload that could theoretically bring humans...maybe 130 if we do some pretty crazy stuff. Europa takes three years minimum for a much smaller payload. Actually getting humans to Mars is already a big technical challenge, let alone living once we get there...it's going to take a heck of a lot more practical experience before we can get them to Europa.

      Say what you want about the pointlessness of living off-world, but Mars is great practice. It's closer, it has more solar power available, and we can send bigger things with our current technology. Same with the Moon...great practice, but even less practical reasons to be there than Mars.

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • Re:Yeay! (Score:5, Interesting)

        by Rei ( 128717 ) on Monday April 13, 2015 @03:14PM (#49465491) Homepage

        If your goal is living offworld, the most earthlike place in the solar system outside of Earth is the cloudtops of venus. A person could walk outside in shirtsleeves with just an oxygen-providing and eye-shielding face mask. Ordinary earth air is a lifting gas. Gravity is 0,9g. Aerocapture is simple. Water can be condensed straight from the cloudtops and oxygen hydrolized with the abundant solar power. There is zero dust to gum up the works (and the SO2 aspect is overplayed, even in the clouds it's not that concentrated).

        If your goal is science, Mars isn't the place either, it's been way more studied than everywhere else but Earth and possibly the moon. People differ about what's the most scientifically interesting place but I'd argue that Titan has the most interesting unanswered questions.

        If your goal is a colony that stands a chance of paying for itself (good luck with that), your best bet is an asteroid or cometary body (potentially with ice / CHONP, otherwise they can be shipped in with little delta-V from other asteroids / comets) that has abundant valuable metals in concentrated, non-oxidized forms for mining with little delta-V reqs for earth return or space use.

        If your goal is a self-sustaining colony (a "backup earth" or whatnot), step out of the sci-fi novels. We're centuries away from that at best.

        • >If your goal is a self-sustaining colony (a "backup earth" or whatnot), step out of the sci-fi novels. We're centuries away from that at best.

          It will never happen, if we never start working towards it.

      • by Nyder ( 754090 )

        Mars takes ~260 days to reach, with a payload that could theoretically bring humans...maybe 130 if we do some pretty crazy stuff. Europa takes three years minimum for a much smaller payload. Actually getting humans to Mars is already a big technical challenge, let alone living once we get there...it's going to take a heck of a lot more practical experience before we can get them to Europa.

        Say what you want about the pointlessness of living off-world, but Mars is great practice. It's closer, it has more solar power available, and we can send bigger things with our current technology. Same with the Moon...great practice, but even less practical reasons to be there than Mars.

        The moon is even closer and a better launch point for exploring anything in our solar system.

      • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

        The moon provides a manufacturing point for heavy bulk elements required in space ships and stations. This manufacturing point would be at the bottom of a significantly lessor gravity well and thus would eliminate sending up anything other than electronic components, no producible bulk components and of course people. I can assure, without a permanent moon colony access to the rest of the solar system will be severely limited. The moon is the key to gaining real access to the rest of the solar system and i

    • by sribe ( 304414 )

      At least Europe is going to get something now - not my personal favorite (if there is anything interesting there, which we don't actually know, it's buried way too deep for us to get at it for a long, long time).

      If you're really that curious about what's in Europe, why don't you just visit the next time you take a vacation?

    • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

      To be fair, it's cheaper to explore Mars than Titan, being much closer to Earth. But I agree Titan is one of the oddest places in the Solar System and a prime target for new discoveries. A floating "boat" probe on one of Titan's polar lakes would be the coolest thing.

      It's the only other body besides Earth known to have stable pooled liquid. (The Huygens probe was actually designed to float for a short period in case it had landed in liquid.)

      Such a probe would have to be entirely RTG (radiation) powered be

      • Correction: "relaying data", not "relying data".

        Also, I assumed the floating probe would last for months instead of a couple of hours, like Huygens did. Huygens was purely battery powered. Its "parent" probe, Cassini, was only in place to capture and relay data for a short period because it orbited Saturn, and not Titan. Thus, RTG power wouldn't have helped much by itself. Plus, Huygens was too small for longer-term studies. It was mostly an atmosphere probe, not meant for extensive surface study.

      • by Rei ( 128717 )

        It's not necessary to have a relay, though it helps. The AVIATR concept, for example, involved no relay. The atmosphere is dense but it's not as much of a radio absorber as Earth's.

        So many big questions. Are those suspected cryovolcanoes what we think they are, and if so, what's in that subsurface water ocean that they've been spewing out to the surface? What's eating up the acetylene and hydrogen? Where is the unexplained methane coming from? If something is breaking down the acetylene with hydrogen and it

        • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

          It takes a big antenna for decent direct communications with Earth. I'm not sure it's worth it to carry around such a load on a probe. Plus, an orbiter allows communications when the probe is on the "hidden" side of the moon as it rotates. A day on Titan is 16 Earth days. I don't trust AI to make decent "big" decisions yet.

          Further, what if you get to Titan only to discover the lake has moved or dried up? If you can go into orbit first, you have time to check and adjust plans. Thus, you might as well have an

          • by Rei ( 128717 )

            Indeed, I prefer a relay too; I was just pointing out that it's not a fundamental requirement and there are mission proposals that don't use one.

            Actually my "ideal" mission (a Titan sample return mission) has the relay probe be the propulsion stage (ion powered), and operating in a low orbit. While a tilt-rotor explorer would be exploring, the orbiter would be pumping its propellant tanks full of Titan's outer atmosphere (most ion engines are very propellant flexible, and the 1500m/s Titan atmosphere drag v

            • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

              A hopping "flyer" is certainly an interesting idea, but it seems kind of risky. Landings carry too much risk in my opinion.

              I would instead opt for a "beefy" lander with good chemistry tools, but maybe with a secondary balloon-based drone to take a look around, and perhaps bring back samples to the main lander. If the drone gets in a wreck, the main lander still exists.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    "The discovery of subsurface water, even a trickle, around the planets warmer equatorial belt defies current climate models"

    OMG! They must be DENIERS!

  • Apparently moisture farmers and 'vaporators can be a real thing on Mars.

  • Everything that is known about climate is in those models ... how can they be wrong?

    And don't go "... different planet ... ", it's thermodynamics (and a bunch of 'ologies) so ...

    Fact is: there is a long ways to go before current climate models predict anything validly/consitently.

Avoid strange women and temporary variables.

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