Huge Ice Reservoirs Found on Mars!

by Nathan Natas 12 Replies latest jw friends

  • Nathan Natas
    Nathan Natas

    link: http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/sci/tech/newsid_2009000/2009318.stm (See the source for photos & add'l notes)

    Sunday, 26 May, 2002, 14:08 GMT 15:08 UK

    Ice reservoirs found on Mars

    The findings were made by the Mars Odyssey spacecraft

    By Dr David Whitehouse
    BBC News Online science editor


    Water-ice has been found in vast quantities just below the surface across great swathes of the planet Mars.

    The finding by the American space agency (Nasa) is undoubtedly one of the most important made about the Red Planet.

    It solves one of its deepest mysteries, points the way for manned exploration and reignites the question of whether life may exist on the planet.

    Insiders suggest that, partly as a result of this finding, Nasa may now commit itself to a manned landing within 20 years.

    Where the water went

    The US space agency will make the dramatic announcement about the water-ice next Thursday. And full disclosure of the findings will come in the journal Science later that day.

    The discovery was made by the Mars Odyssey spacecraft, which has been gathering data since late last year.

    This finding will answer a question that has puzzled Mars researchers for decades: many lines of evidence suggest that the Red Planet was water-rich in the past, so where did all that water go?

    The answer appears to be that it is in the regolith - the layer of loose rock and dust on the surface.

    Mars Odyssey has been returning high-quality data about Mars' surface composition.

    The spacecraft contains an instrument called a gamma-ray spectrometer that looks for gamma-rays (high-energy light) with a specific signature showing that they come from hydrogen less than one metre (three feet) beneath the Martian surface.

    Astronomers believe that the hydrogen is locked up in crystals of ice.

    Moon discovery

    The same design of instrument was used on the Lunar Prospector spacecraft that discovered ice in the shadowed regions of the Moon's poles in 1998.

    Also on board Mars Odyssey is a neutron spectrometer that registers evidence for underground ice in the same regions of the planet.

    Researchers were amazed at the strength of the signal of the ice. They had expected to take a year to gather enough evidence but managed to do so in just a few weeks.

    They announced preliminary findings in March but now have good data confirming large amounts of the water-ice just beneath the surface south of 60 degrees latitude.

    Researchers suspect the same to be true of the northern hemisphere, but cannot make the appropriate observations until later this year due to the Martian winter in the north.

    Nasa scientists were scheduled to hold a major news conference on Thursday when they would say that their earlier findings had been confirmed and extended. But this may be brought forward after a British newspaper leaked the news.

    Look for life

    The dramatic discovery may also guide the selection of future landing and exploration sites on Mars, and may suggest areas to look for evidence of past life.

    The presence of such a vast amount of ice - if it were to melt it could cover the planet in an ocean at least 500 metres deep (1,640 feet) - will change profoundly the direction of future exploration.

    The discovery may indicate areas on Mars where scientists can search for life forms

    Although landing probes are planned - the European Beagle 2 and Nasa's twin Mars rovers next year - neither are targeted at the region where the ice may exist.

    The Mars Polar Lander was to touch down in exactly the right spot in 1999 and would have undoubtedly detected the ice had it not malfunctioned on the way down.

    Having water just below the surface will be an enormous boon to astronauts on Mars.

    Water is essential for life, so the discovery enhances the belief that Mars could have had life in the past and perhaps in the present as well.

    Because of this, bringing a sample of the ice and rock back to Earth by an unmanned sample return probe will become a top priority.
    "The spacecraft has seen evidence of vast icecaps stretching from the poles"


    Mars Society president, Robert Zubrin
    "If we can colonize Mars, humanity could become a multi planet species"


    Beagle 2 project leader Professor Colin Pillinger
    "It's something we've been searching for for decades"

  • Satanus
    Satanus

    Very interesting. Life or past life on mars? And they want to bring back a space craft and some ice sample, possibly with life in it. I'm sure they know that there are risks involved. Imagine setting loose a hardy martian life form on the earth, to which there are possibly no predators and no defences. I guess it's a risk that must be taken, if humans are to ever settle on mars.

    SS

  • refiners fire
    refiners fire

    Apparently they are sending a boring probe out to Europa, the Ice moon,which has subteranean volcanic activity, plus, expected under ice oceans. Chances are, if there is life on other planets, they will find it there.
    What happens if they do?

  • julien
    julien

    Someone else estimated the ice layer on Europa to be like 21 km or something .. So they might be rethinking the boring probe.

  • Realist
    Realist

    isn't Titan the best candidate for having life?

  • gsx1138
    gsx1138

    All I can say about this discovery is, "Start the reactor Quaid. Start the reactor."

  • think41self
    think41self

    Very interesting Nathan,

    Thanks for sharing it with us. I am fascinated with what we might find on Mars or other planets.

    Frankly, I'm tired of The God we have down here...so I'm kind of hoping there's a better one somewhere out there!

    think41self

    This side of Eden, whether we realize it or not, we feel the stain on our souls, and at every opportunity, we try to scrub it away with steel-wool guilt.

  • SYN
    SYN

    Now all we need to do is nudge a few of those big chunks of rock in the Oort cloud into spiralling orbits that impact on Mars to warm it up a bit. This is a quick & easy method of terraforming, as it will jump-start the planet's heating system by injecting giant amounts of kinetic energy into it. Sure, the surface will be stuffed for a few decades while it cools down, but then we should have an Arctic climate at the very least!

    "Vaccination has never saved a human life. It does not prevent smallpox." The Golden Age, Feb 4 1931 p. 293-4 - The Sacredness of Human Blood (Reasons why vaccination is unscriptural)

  • D wiltshire
    D wiltshire

    I think since the laws of physics are universal that the prospects of like on other planets is not only possible but inevitable.

    Matter keeps on evolving to more and more complicated forms thru out the universe(Hydrogen to helium to carbon and oxygen and on and on by fusion in the stars). Then on to molecules, amino acids,then protiens, all the way to conscious life.

    The galaxy not to mention the universe must be teamming with life.

    Join the Watchtower or you will die.
    Only Jehovah's Witnesses have the TRUTH all other religions EVIL and from the Devil.
    You must beleive the Watchtower or you're going to die a painful death forever, isn't that really GOOD NEWS?
  • gsx1138
    gsx1138

    Umm, don't the JW's not believe in alien life?

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