Mars Is Practically Drenched in Water

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Killclaw Kilrathi

Crocuta Crocuta
Dec 28, 2010
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omega 616 said:
Think of all arguments future people will have "should people live off planet?", "who owns Mars (to enforce laws etc?) .... Maybe further into the future will relationships be an issue again? We've got a little passed inter-racial and we are currently getting gay marriage accepted, will inter-species be another polarising issue that will be accepted eventually?
It's an interesting prospect. Personally I think that if relationships with alien species ever becomes an issue, all the debates about gay relationships will evaporate overnight. Even the most right leaning religious people will turn their attention to the new "abomination", it will be a curious political landscape where you might find the most out and proud gay people lining up with Westboro types to denounce alien lovers as the most hideous thing ever. Mutual hatred towards another group is ironically a pretty unifying thing.

Personally though, I'm all for going all Captain Kirk on other civilizations. Sex on a first date? Try sex on first contact!

Oh, erm... yeah. Water on Mars. That's pretty cool too.
 

EightGaugeHippo

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Apr 6, 2010
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Dibs, I call dibs on that water, you all heard me right? International rule of dibs still applies when we're talking about stuff on other planets right? Who cares dibs.
 

prpshrt

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Jun 18, 2012
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Mr.Mattress said:
Calling it: Mars's surface is a secret cover for a planet that's innards are actually made of water, where Mermaid like creatures live planning to strike the Earth.

This is pretty neat news, actually.
More like keep us out of there. Why invade our crappy planet? Honestly humans suck :p
 

jesse220

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Sep 25, 2013
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Yuuki said:
Curiosity has an internal oven that can heat stuff up to 835c? Am I the only one who is amazed by this more than Mars having more water than we thought?
That was my first reaction too! My second reaction was, I wonder if it carries around a little frozen meal just in case it does come across intelligent life and doesn't want to be rude. Imagine it, "People of Mars! The human race has developed incredibly sophisticated technology in order to bridge the vast distances between our planets. And, we brought lasagna!"
 

RaNDM G

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Apr 28, 2009
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Fanghawk said:
That's impressive enough, but what's really exciting is how well the soil has retained the water and how easily it can be retrieved. If NASA ever gets around to building that Martian settlement, astronauts should be able to use the soil water as a drinkable resource. After it's taken care of the sulphur dioxide and toxic chemicals, of course.
Drinkable water may be out of the question, but with enough CO[small]2[/small] in the atmosphere that can be valuable farmland.

The only matter is dragging an entire planet closer to the Sun, but we still have 800 million years to get the technology down.
 

GamemasterAnthony

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Higgs303 said:
I'm pretty sure there was a Doctor Who episode where a group of scientists working at a Mars based research facility began turning into a mindless zombies after drinking Martian water.

This will be our reward should Martian settlers fail to listen to the wisdom of Doctor Who.

How did I bloody know someone was going to reference THAT?!?
 

thiosk

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Sep 18, 2008
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Eric the Orange said:
And if it's a lot of water why isn't it pooling anywhere.
This is a great question, and it has to do with the way water can stick inside certain materials. Just like a sponge can soak up liquid water into all its many holes and passageways, so too can a rock trap individual molecules in within ever smaller pores.

Crank up the temperature to 600-800 C or so, and all those locked-in molecules go POOF- free gaseous water.
 

Teoes

Poof, poof, sparkles!
Jun 1, 2010
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rhizhim said:
http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/img/big-idea/mars.jpg
It's stuff like that that makes me the saddest for having a puny mortal lifespan. Back to the research to get my consciousness uploaded to the internets..
 

RyQ_TMC

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Apr 24, 2009
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erttheking said:
To the people asking why not the moon first? Helium-3. Mars has it. The moon not so much. We thought it had it but it turns out to be too sparsely pocketed for a profitable mining operation. If we ever get fusion working, the stuff is gonna be the new oil. Granted all those valuable rocks on moon are worth chasing, but just remember that if we want Helium-3, Mars is the closest place that has it.
You mean... You mean we will never build GERTY?

Now you made me sad.


Mr.Mattress said:
Calling it: Mars's surface is a secret cover for a planet that's innards are actually made of water, where Mermaid like creatures live planning to strike the Earth.
Until they perfect their rendition of "Under the Sea", we're good.
 

james.sponge

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Mar 4, 2013
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This is amazing, curiosity is really changing our perception of Mars. This mission might be the first step to eventual colonization of the planet!

Meanwhile media is occupied with sports, celebrity news and meaningless politics -.-
 

Nikolaz72

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Apr 23, 2009
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Sleekit said:
and screw NASA...lets talk geological survey and selling claims to private enterprise...we have to monetise the process beyond the scientific research...
Well.. The problem with selling it to private enterprises is.. Nobody owns it, so nobody can sell it. And the Private Enterpises can't claim it. Because nobody can own it.

If any nation that agreed upon those rules decides to break the agreed upon treaty that no-one can claim ownership of things in space. That nation is gonna be incredibly unpopular to such a degree that all the Helium3 on Mars would not be able to make up for it.

Hence selling claims to private enterprises is pretty much impossible. That has not stopped private enterprises from trying to gather funds to establish colonies/mine asteroids but, well.. Its illegal. So if they ever gather enough money and start doing it they will most likely be stopped. By the space police we would have to found to stop people from doing that if they ever start doing that.

No doubt privatization might make us reach those places faster. But being impatient would just cause us hiccups later anyway.
 

O maestre

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Nov 19, 2008
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Imagine if the world focused all its resources in the pursuit of space exploration, it is a shame that something with such potential benefit is being borderline neglected. The only major international space missions being conducted are in Kazakhstan.
 

omega 616

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May 1, 2009
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That Hyena Bloke said:
This is getting a little off topic but I think in the next 100 years or so gay and inter-racial won't be an issue. Look how quickly we have gone from black people being sub-human to being respected (I am by no means saying race issues are a thing of the past but they can ride the same bus as whites and aren't property any more).

Being anything other than heterosexual was a huge no no, now there are gay prides and gay marriages. They still get a phenomenal amount of abuse but things are getting better.

Just a thought that will there be a "can humans date aliens" ... What will the aliens say about it? Will they be all for it? All against it? Will they be split about it?

Just sad I will never be a part of that discussion.
 

Exterminas

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Sep 22, 2009
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I don't think NASA will ever get around to settling the Mars. Frankly, ever since the cold war ended, NASA's influence on Space Travel only seems to have decreased.

At this point I actually put my money on that obscene Mars One-Project, even though it is almost certainly going to end like a crossover of Cannibal Holocaust and Event Horizon.

Also: What exactly would be the benefit of colonizing mars? It's not like we have run out of hostile living space and impractically expensive resource deposits here on earth.
 

Atmos Duality

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Mar 3, 2010
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That explains an awful lot.
There are clear river beds and striations in the topography on the surface of Mars that only could have been made by free flowing liquid (at the average sidereal temperature of Mars' surface).

Awesome.
 

Spaceman Spiff

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Sep 23, 2013
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This is exciting news. Someday we'll see an actual colony on another planet. The future is coming. Now if I could only fly an X-Wing before I die.

piinyouri said:
I gladly rub this bit of news in the face of anyone who bitched and complained and made 'cute' remarks about the US launching this rover in the first place.

"Yay, we launched a space SUV meanwhile there's shit that need's to be done here wah wah"

We learned that Mars's soil is saturated with WATER.
So sit down and shut up. : )

Sorry, I'm just rather passionate about these things.
Don't apologize, you've done nothing wrong. Some people open their noise hole without seeing the big picture, they should be called out on it.
 

Psychobabble

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Aug 3, 2013
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Wait. So I'm guessing this means that crappy Arnold Schwarzenegger film from the 90s was spot on. All NASA needs to do now is have the rover find that weird alien push button thingy and press it. BOOM! Instant Earth 2.
 

latiasracer

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Jul 7, 2011
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Mr.Mattress said:
Calling it: Mars's surface is a secret cover for a planet that's innards are actually made of water, where Mermaid like creatures live planning to strike the Earth.

This is pretty neat news, actually.

Oh don't be so absurd!



The chances of anything coming from Mars are a million to one!



OT : Well, as soon as i can move in a shall! (By that i mean, When Fibre-Optic internet is installed)
 

Requia

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Apr 4, 2013
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erttheking said:
To the people asking why not the moon first? Helium-3. Mars has it. The moon not so much. We thought it had it but it turns out to be too sparsely pocketed for a profitable mining operation. If we ever get fusion working, the stuff is gonna be the new oil. Granted all those valuable rocks on moon are worth chasing, but just remember that if we want Helium-3, Mars is the closest place that has it.
You have that backwards, the moon has He3, Mars doesn't. Not that it matters, we can make He3 half a dozen different ways that are easier than going to the moon.