Friday, January 13, 2012

Water Flowing on Mars? You betcha`

Is That Water Flowing on Mars? (Top 100 Stories of 2011 #75-DISCOVER)
There may be water—and even life—in them there hills.
by Adam Hadhazy
DISCOVER Magazine
From the January-February special issue; published online December 27, 2011

Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Univ. of Arizona


Dramatic images of dried-up floodplains and apparent riverbeds have most astronomers convinced that liquid water once gushed on Mars, perhaps supporting ancient life. But last summer NASA astronomers announced that water may still be flowing on the Red Planet.


The evidence comes from the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, which captured images of thin, dark streaks—quite likely soil—creeping down several slopes during Mars’s spring and summer (see sequence at right). Dry soil should not move that way, so a team led by Alfred McEwen, principal investigator for the probe’s camera, proposed that liquid water carried the soil downhill. In the journal Science, the scientists noted that water could flow sluggishly just beneath the surface and remain liquid owing to high concentrations of salt, which acts as antifreeze. The orbiter continues to scan for clues; later this year NASA’s Curiosity rover will begin studying Martian surface chemistry up close.



2 comments:

  1. amazing graphic animation of MRO data, theres no denying that running water does indeed exist on Mars currently, albeit in small a mounts and briefly but still liquid water

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  2. this false-color image of running water cascading down on Mars is the best evidence yet and adds to the growing consensus and evidences of water on the red planet

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