Skip to main content

Home/ Advanced Concepts Team/ Group items tagged martian

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Francesco Biscani

Proof of Martians 'to come this year': Scientific American - 0 views

  • David McKay, chief of astrobiology at NASA's Johnson Space Centre in Houston, says powerful new microscopes and other instruments will establish whether features in martian meteorites are alien fossils.
annaheffernan

Lost Beagle 2 spacecraft found intact on Martian surface - 0 views

  •  
    The UK-led Beagle 2 Mars lander, thought lost on the red planet since 2003, has been found partially deployed on the Martian surface. New images show that it successfully touched down on the planet's surface in 2003 but failed to deploy all four of its solar panels, thereby allowing no communication with scientists on Earth.
nikolas smyrlakis

Martian landscapes - The Big Picture - Boston.com - 2 views

  •  
    not an expert, but pattern recognising seems a bit tricky ?
Juxi Leitner

Launch Debris Could Be Tracked Like Vultures | Wired Science | Wired.com - 2 views

  •  
    also interesting (for the Earth Science girls): Nilton Renno of the University of Michigan, who studies how rocket plumes from Mars landers affect the Martian surface.
Christophe Praz

Mars Spacecraft Reveal Comet Flyby Effects on Martian Atmosphere - 1 views

  •  
    NASA and ESA spacecraft have gathered new information about the basic properties of the comet's nucleus (not 67p) and directly detected the effects on the Martian atmosphere. Dust from the comet impacted Mars and was vaporized high in the atmosphere, producing what was likely an impressive meteor shower. Eight different types of metal ions have been detected, including sodium, magnesium and iron. The satellites will now continue to look for long-term perturbations to Mars' atmosphere.
fichbio

Silica deposits on Mars with features resembling hot spring biosignatures at El Tatio i... - 0 views

shared by fichbio on 24 Nov 16 - No Cached
Paul N liked it
  •  
    Hydrothermal deposits on Mars may provide the best opportunity to find Martian biosignatures. Ruff and Farmer report that silica structures created by biotic and abiotic process in hot springs at El Tatio, Chile resemble those found in Gusev crater, thus making it an ideal location for future missions.
Luís F. Simões

NASA will send robot drill to Mars in 2016 - The Washington Post - 0 views

  • A German-built drill nicknamed “The Mole” will pound 16 feet into the Martian crust to take the temperature of the planet, while a sensitive French-built seismometer will detect any Marsquakes.
  •  
    slashdot describes the drill as "a self-driving mole developed by the German space agency (DLR)". This seems to be the drill: GEMS - a mole to explore the interior of Mars, http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/OCEANSE.2009.5278132. Interesting news for all the roots people :)
Nina Nadine Ridder

Earth's extremes point the way to extraterrestrial life - 1 views

  •  
    Seems a little speculative but pretty interesting thoughts. In regards to terraforming Mars this might be of interest: "During the daytime, plant-like microorganisms on a Martian-like surface could photosynthesize hydrogen peroxide. At night, when the atmosphere is relatively humid, they could use their stored hydrogen peroxide to scavenge water from the atmosphere, similar to how microbial communities in the Atacama use the moisture that salt brine extracts from the air to stay alive."
Joris _

NASA budget for 2011 eliminates funds for manned lunar missions - washingtonpost.com - 3 views

  • NASA's grand plan to return to the moon, built on President George W. Bush's vision of an ambitious new chapter in space exploration, is about to vanish with hardly a whimper
  • a commercial spacecraft that could taxi astronauts into low Earth orbit
  • Obama budget as disastrous for human space fligh
  •  
    Personally I think this is great.
  • ...1 more comment...
  •  
    what is great exactly ? No human beings will put a foot on the Moon, or Mars, in the next 22 yrs and more ... what an awful waste!
  •  
    Well, the constellation program was a waste of money in its current form, overrun by delays and insufficient budget. We would have had Apollo 2.0 sixty years later, for what? At least now they are talking about going to asteroids, martian moons and stuff like that.
  •  
    I agree that Constellation was a mistake. It is though a pity that now human Mars missions would certainly happen even later than initially hoped.
Juxi Leitner

Martian Projects Shall Use Nuclear Energy - 0 views

  • Since current rocket technologies are not sufficient for the future exploration of Mars and the whole Solar system, and since no alternative energy resources have been found as of now, the only possible way to implement those projects would be by using nuclear energy, Lopota said at an academic conference on aerospace.
  •  
    blablabla
Alexander Wittig

The Effort to Turn Martian Soil Into Rock Solid Concrete - 4 views

  •  
    Sounds like an interesting building material. Unlike concrete, after use it can simply be molten down (at seemingly reasonable temperatures) and used again to build different parts. Crack in the wall? Just iron it out (literally)! A group at Northwestern University wants to solve an engineering challenge now to prepare for the future: it's turning Mars-like soil into concrete. And, in turn, that concrete requires very little (if any) water. It's just the thing we may need to make life on Mars sustainable.
Marion Nachon

NASA Next Mars Rover Mission: new landing technology - 3 views

JPL is also developing a crucial new landing technology called terrain-relative navigation. As the descent stage approaches the Martian surface, it will use computer vision to compare the landscape...

technology space

started by Marion Nachon on 15 Jan 18 no follow-up yet
jaihobah

Exposed subsurface ice sheets in the Martian mid-latitudes - 1 views

  •  
    Some locations on Mars are known to have water ice just below the surface, but how much has remained unclear. Dundas et al. used data from two orbiting spacecraft to examine eight locations where erosion has occurred. This revealed cliffs composed mostly of water ice, which is slowly sublimating as it is exposed to the atmosphere. The ice sheets extend from just below the surface to a depth of 100 meters or more and appear to contain distinct layers, which could preserve a record of Mars' past climate. They might even be a useful source of water for future human exploration of the red planet.
darioizzo2

Architects are planning a Martian city for the desert outside Dubai - CNN Style - 0 views

  •  
    I had missed this project somehow :)
1 - 18 of 18
Showing 20 items per page