+ Reply to Thread
Results 1 to 2 of 2

Thread: Astronomy In Dire Need Of A Complete Overhaul

  1. Link to Post #1
    France On Sabbatical
    Join Date
    7th March 2011
    Location
    Brittany
    Posts
    16,763
    Thanks
    60,315
    Thanked 95,902 times in 15,481 posts

    Default Astronomy In Dire Need Of A Complete Overhaul

    Mystery dust cloud and aurora spotted on Mars

    MAVEN spacecraft discovers surprises in the planet's upper atmosphere.
    Alexandra Witze 18 March 2015 The Woodlands, Texas


    Univ. Colorado -- The MAVEN spacecraft (artist's impression) arrived at Mars in September 2014 to study the planet's atmosphere.


    NASA's MAVEN spacecraft has discovered a dust cloud billowing over Mars, up to 1,000 kilometres above the planet's surface. The dust does not threaten spacecraft orbiting the red planet, but the unexpected finding poses big challenges to atmospheric researchers, who are trying to explain where the cloud came from.

    This is the first discovery of dust or debris at orbital altitudes around Mars,” says Bruce Jakosky, a planetary scientist at the University of Colorado Boulder and the mission's principal investigator. It's hard to understand how this stuff got here.”

    Jakosky reported the finding on 18 March at the Lunar and Planetary Science Conference in The Woodlands, Texas. But the dust cloud was not the only new finding from the MAVEN (Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution) craft, which has also discovered a diffuse, aurora glowing above Mars's northern hemisphere.

    The spacecraft arrived at Mars last September to fly through and study the planet's upper atmosphere. One of its instruments, called the Langmuir Probe and Wave instrument, measures the densities and temperatures of electrons. It has picked up small whiffs of plasma that form when dust hits the spacecraft and vaporizes, says Jakosky. Similar tiny impacts have been measured elsewhere in the Solar System by other spacecraft, such as the Voyager and Cassini probes, but have never previously been found at Mars.

    The dust seems to be concentrated between about 150 and 500 kilometres above the Martian surface, and there is more on the day side, the hemisphere lit by the Sun, than on the night side of Mars. It has been seen ever since the spacecraft arrived at Mars, so it is not related to Comet Siding Spring, which whizzed past the planet in October and dumped a load of fresh dust in the Martian atmosphere.

    The dust may have come from earlier comet visits, or have arrived from outside the Martian system in another way. Another possibility is that it is being shed from Mars's moons, Phobos and Deimos. It might even have been kicked up from the surface somehow.

    Christmas lights
    Separately, MAVEN has spotted a diffuse aurora unlike anything seen before at the planet. Mars does not have a planet-wide magnetic field as Earth does, so it does not have regular northern and southern lights like those seen above Earth's poles. However, in 2005 the European Space Agency's Mars Express team reported auroras glowing above patches of the Martian surface that have a magnetic field1.

    For five days in December, MAVEN saw another dim aurora, which the team dubbed the “Christmas lights”. Rather than being focused above specific magnetic features, it was distributed across the entire northern hemisphere. It appeared at the same time as a storm of charged particles was blasting from the Sun and past Mars: the particles penetrated deep into Mars's atmosphere, down to altitudes where the aurora appeared, so the solar storm might have caused the aurora.

    Jasper Halekas, a space physicist at the University of Iowa in Iowa City, says that the MAVEN findings are already rewriting what scientists know about the magnetic realms around Mars. “It's not your grandfather's magnetosphere,” he says.

    Naturedoi:10.1038/nature.2015.17152

    Related stories
    More related stories
    "La réalité est un ręve que l'on fait atterrir" San Antonio AKA F. Dard

    Troll-hood motto: Never, ever, however, whatsoever, to anyone, a point concede.

  2. The Following 18 Users Say Thank You to Hervé For This Post:

    Atlas (19th March 2015), betoobig (19th March 2015), Bill Ryan (19th March 2015), ChristianSky (20th March 2015), Daughter of Time (19th March 2015), DDavis137 (19th March 2015), Fellow Aspirant (19th March 2015), Gardener (19th March 2015), ghostrider (19th March 2015), jc71 (19th March 2015), justntime2learn (19th March 2015), meeradas (19th March 2015), MorningSong (19th March 2015), Nasu (19th March 2015), Shadowself (19th March 2015), Sierra (19th March 2015), Snoweagle (19th March 2015), Sunny-side-up (19th March 2015)

  3. Link to Post #2
    On Sabbatical
    Join Date
    10th July 2013
    Location
    Project Avalon
    Posts
    3,649
    Thanks
    19,216
    Thanked 16,230 times in 3,216 posts

    Default Re: Astronomy In Dire Need Of A Complete Overhaul



    A map of IUVS’s auroral detections in December 2014 overlaid on Mars’ surface. The map shows that the aurora was widespread in the northern hemisphere, not tied to any geographic location. The aurora was detected in all observations during a 5-day period. (Image credit: University of Colorado)

    http://astronomynow.com/2015/03/19/m...sa-spacecraft/

  4. The Following 6 Users Say Thank You to Atlas For This Post:

    betoobig (19th March 2015), ChristianSky (20th March 2015), Hervé (19th March 2015), jc71 (19th March 2015), Snoweagle (19th March 2015), Sunny-side-up (19th March 2015)

+ Reply to Thread

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts