[FPSPACE] More photos of possible water at Phoenix landing site (on lander down strut)
Peter Pesavento
pjp961 at svol.net
Thu Mar 19 15:24:57 EDT 2009
>From the Times (UK).pictures on website
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/science/article5931383.ece
March 18, 2009
Pictures of 'liquid water' increase possibility of life on Mars
Lewis Smith, Science Reporter
Pictures beamed back from Mars appear to provide the first photographic
evidence of water existing in its liquid state on the planet.
Shots of Nasa's Mars Phoenix Lander's leg struts appear to show droplets of
water forming and then vanishing as if they have dripped on to the ground.
The find, if confirmed, has important implications for the chances of there
being life forms, however small or primitive, on Mars.
Professor Nilton Renno, of the University of Michigan, is convinced the
photographs show water droplets forming. It had previously been thought that
Mars was so cold and the atmospheric pressure so low that water would exist
only as ice or vapour.
Professor Renno led analysis that suggested the water droplets may have been
prevented from freezing because they had absorbed salty chemicals which act
as anti-freeze.
Tests carried out by the Mars Phoenix Lander uncovered the presence of
perchlorate salts, probably including magnesium and calcium perchlorate
hydrates, which freeze at minus 68C and minus 77C.
Temperatures at the landing site ranged from minus 20C to minus 140C, but
the median temperature was above minus 60C while the craft was operational
from May to November last year. This meant there could be pockets of water
at the landing site and other parts of the planet which were too salty to
freeze for much of the year.
Professor Renno said that thermodynamic calculations predicted droplet
growth at the same rate as was observed on the lander's structs.
Astronomers studying the phenomenon believe the droplets began forming when
the space craft landed, with the rockets controlling the landing melting the
top layer of ice. Dirt that splashed on to the struts may later have
absorbed more water from vapour in the atmosphere, allowing the droplets to
get larger.
The possibility of there being water in liquid form at the surface of Mars
has implications for the search for life on the planet because bacterial
lifeforms have already shown themselves to be capable of surviving on Earth
in similarly chilly and salty conditions.
"Liquid water is an essential ingredient for life. This discovery has
important implications to many areas of planetary exploration, including the
habitability of Mars," Professor Renno said.
"A large number of independent physical and thermodynamical evidence shows
that saline water may actually be common on Mars."
The results of the analysis are to be presented to a conference in Houston
at the weekend, where they are likely to be contested.
Dr Michael Hecht, of Nasa's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, has already voiced
doubts that the blobs on the lander's leg were water droplets. He is also
unconvinced by the suggestion that salts are keeping water in liquid form.
Water on Mars
November 2006: Images taken in 2005 and 2006 and compared to pictures taken
in 1999 and 2001 by Mars Global Surveyor suggest water flowed in the
intervening periods.
March 2007: Mars Express confirms large quantities of ice are present at the
south pole. If it all melted the planet would be under 33 feet of water.
August 2008: Nasa researchers announce that Phoenix has confirmed the
presence of ice. It is the first probe to "taste and touch" water on Mars,
they say.
November 2008: Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter detects vast glaciers extending
dozens of miles under rocky debris much further from the poles than
expected.
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