Turbinator
New member
MSL 2.0
Gale is still part of the "follow the water" strategy.:Shouldn't there be more scientific value here? Is MSL going to Gale because of some "sedimentary deposits" or somesuch? To do more geology?
“It’s a huge crater sitting in a very low-elevation position on Mars, and we all know that water runs downhill,” Grotzinger said. “In terms of the total vertical profile exposed and the low elevation, Gale offers attractions similar to Mars’ famous Valles Marineris, the largest canyon in the solar system.”
:blink: What? Dan Goldin, is that really you posting on Orbiter-Forum? That mantra worked so well, didn't it? :dry:. The realities are that rover missions don't come very often so you need to choose your targets to maximise the science benefit. To me, this means looking for evidence that allows you to make better predictions.We all want bigger and better at some point. But sometimes better means smaller or cheaper or lighter, if it can get a job done well.
What? Dan Goldin, is that really you posting on Orbiter-Forum? That mantra worked so well, didn't it? .
The realities are that rover missions don't come very often so you need to choose your targets to maximise the science benefit.
In my humble estimation (I'm guided by the comments from NASA scientists here), you are more likely to find some sort of evidence for life, past or present, at Gale than you are at Newton. That makes Gale a more viable target for the available mission.
Besides, what are the landing constraints for MSL/Curiosity. Newton is a long way south, possibly outside of the specs for MSL that have been long defined
I guess lots of people care about life, and I'm certainly interested. The whole "follow the water" strategy was devised because people wanted to find out if life (past or present) could exist on Mars. They cared enough to make it has been the basis for all the US Mars missions in the last ~15 years.Do we actually care about life on Mars?
Do we?
I care about a lot more things on Mars than some extinct bacterium.
There are pretty low chances of finding living organisms. But who cares if we find living creatures or dead creatures? Either would be scientifically remarkable.And what are the chances of living organisms at the surface at Gale? Where are the outflows of water at Gale? Are we going to find living organisms in some bone-dry soil just because it's part of a "sedimentary deposit"?
http://marsprogram.jpl.nasa.gov/msl/mission/overview/As far as I know, MSL is based more around geology than biology- so analysing potential living organisms is not quite part of the mission.
Its mission is to determine the planet's "habitability."
Thanks.Wikipedia states that engineering constraints limit possible landing sites to below 45 degrees latitude and less than one kilometer above the reference datum.
Google Mars gives the latitude of the gullies at Newton at around 41 degrees, with an altitude of between -200 and -700 meters. One of the other final four sites (Mawrth Vallis) is said to have an altitude of more than -2000 meters, so presumably low altitude targets are far less of a problem than high altitude targets (where there wouldn't be enough air to slow down sufficiently).
I guess lots of people care about life, and I'm certainly interested. The whole "follow the water" strategy was devised because people wanted to find out if life (past or present) could exist on Mars. They cared enough to make it has been the basis for all the US Mars missions in the last ~15 years.
There are pretty low chances of finding living organisms. But who cares if we find living creatures or dead creatures? Either would be scientifically remarkable.
Its mission is to determine the planet's "habitability."
manned missioon with men
Nobody wants men on Mars
lol... Speaking of that, we should remember that no woman ever set foot in the Moon. They make good crew members though : smaller, lighter, consume less calories.
The tantalizing seasonal flows observed on Mars last year may indeed be caused by liquid water, a new study suggests.
The melting and subsequent evaporation of frozen salty water could cause the intriguing dark streaks, researchers said. These lines, which were spotted by NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter spacecraft, extend down some Martian slopes during warm months and fade when winter comes.
“In one day we could form enough liquid to create these flow features on the surface," lead author Vincent Chevrier, of the University of Arkansas, said in a statement.
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The researchers plugged different forms of salt into their model, attempting to find one that exhibits the desired behavior.
"We had to find a salt-water mixture that would come and go," Chevrier said.
They determined that calcium chloride fits the bill. In their models, the researchers could melt enough calcium chloride brine that it would not all evaporate immediately, leaving some liquid behind to conceivably create the flow features.
The researchers say their model fits the observed phenomenon well. For example, it explains why the streaks — known as Recurring Slope Lineae — occur seasonally on equator-facing slopes, and why imaging spectrometry on Mars hasn't identified water signatures in such places (because the liquid would evaporate quite quickly).
"No other current model really explains all the observations," Chevrier said.
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