Look what's growing on Mars..

Analog

Lifer
Jan 7, 2002
12,755
3
0
It’s Mars, a dune field in the far north; at latitude 83.5° to be precise, less than 400 km (240 miles) from the north pole. The eternal Martian wind blows the heavy sand into dunes, and you can see the hummocks and ripples from this across the image. The sand on Mars is from basalt, which is a darkish gray color. The red comes from much smaller dust particles which settle everywhere. But what are those weird tendril thingies?
In the Martian winter, carbon dioxide freezes out of the air (and you thought it was cold where you are). In the summer, that CO2 sublimates; that is, turns directly from a solid to a gas. When that happens the sand gets disturbed, and falls down the slopes in little channels, which spreads out when it hits the bottom. But this disturbs the red dust, too, which flows with the sand. When it’s all done, you get those feathery tendrils. Note that at the tendril tips, you see blotches of red; that’s probably from the lighter dust billowing a bit before settling down.
http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/badastronomy/



 

Locut0s

Lifer
Nov 28, 2001
22,205
44
91
It’s Mars, a dune field in the far north; at latitude 83.5° to be precise, less than 400 km (240 miles) from the north pole. The eternal Martian wind blows the heavy sand into dunes, and you can see the hummocks and ripples from this across the image. The sand on Mars is from basalt, which is a darkish gray color. The red comes from much smaller dust particles which settle everywhere. But what are those weird tendril thingies?
In the Martian winter, carbon dioxide freezes out of the air (and you thought it was cold where you are). In the summer, that CO2 sublimates; that is, turns directly from a solid to a gas. When that happens the sand gets disturbed, and falls down the slopes in little channels, which spreads out when it hits the bottom. But this disturbs the red dust, too, which flows with the sand. When it’s all done, you get those feathery tendrils. Note that at the tendril tips, you see blotches of red; that’s probably from the lighter dust billowing a bit before settling down.
http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/badastronomy/

SNIPPED

Yeah I've seen a couple of these pics of the polar region where frozen CO2 is starting to sublimate. Really beautiful pics. I wish we would put more money into exploring the universe, and science in general, than into other wasteful things.
 

M0oG0oGaiPan

Diamond Member
Dec 7, 2000
7,858
2
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digitalgamedeals.com
18599_copyof2yl379s.jpg
 

Rubycon

Madame President
Aug 10, 2005
17,768
485
126
They have flies - those be venus flytraps on Mars. :eek:

It's probably some sick joke of a drop of melted Ben & Jerry's from last summer scooped up on a slide and microphotographed with atomic force. ;)
 

13Gigatons

Diamond Member
Apr 19, 2005
7,461
500
126
They need to get a long steel space craft there fast...land then take off, then land again then take off then land again...