> 
> Nu penting mah aya hawa jeung cai we. Mun teu kitu, "Mun rek mandi
ngariung
> kumpul baraya, ceurik bareng bari ngumpulkeun sabatok cimata,"ceuk Ceu

Kang,

Bieu meunang beja. Di Mars aya cai cenah euy. Pindah ka Mars kitu?
Ah... keneh2 kehed mun ka dinya mah pindah teh! ;))

The Case of the Missing Mars Water
Plenty of clues suggest that liquid water once flowed on Mars
--raising hopes that life could have arisen there-- but the evidence
remains inconclusive and sometimes contradictory
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Feature Story: [EMAIL PROTECTED] occasionally presents "Feature Stories,"
where you can sit back, relax, and enjoy an in-depth look at ongoing
research (or sometimes a story that's just plain fun). This one is
courtesy of NASA's Astrobiology Institute.

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see captionJanuary 5, 2001 -- Mars may once have been a very wet
place. A host of clues remain from an earlier era, billions of years
ago, hinting that the Red Planet was host to great rivers, lakes and
perhaps even an ocean. But some of the clues are contradictory -- they
don't all fit together in a coherent whole. Little wonder, then, that
the fate of water on Mars is such a hotly debated topic.

The reason for the intense interest in Martian water is simple:
Without water, there can be no life as we know it. If it has been 3.5
billion years since liquid water was present on Mars, the chance of
finding life there is remote. But if water is present on Mars now,
however well hidden, life may be holding on in some protected niche.

Right: Sedimentary rock layers like these in Mars's Holden Crater
suggest that the Red Planet was once home to ancient lakes. [more
information]

Based on what we have observed so far, Mars today is a frozen desert.
It's too cold for liquid water to exist on its surface and too cold to
rain. The planet's atmosphere is also too thin to permit any
significant amount of snowfall. 

Even if some internal heat source warmed the planet up enough for ice
to melt, it wouldn't yield liquid water. The Martian atmosphere is so
thin that even if the temperature rose above freezing the ice would
change directly to water vapor. 

Signs of Heavy Flooding

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But there must have been water, and plenty of it, in Mars's past. That
is evident from the massive outflow channels that are found, mostly,
in the northern lowlands. The intensity of the floods that carved
these channels was tremendous, perhaps reaching discharge rates as
high as 10,000 times that at which the Mississippi, when flooded,
pours into the Gulf of Mexico.

What caused these giant floods? Was it a climate change, perhaps
brought about by a change in Mars's orbit? Or was the planet's own
internal heat responsible? And, whatever mechanism caused the floods
in the first place, where has all that water gone? Was it absorbed
into the ground where it remains today, frozen? Or did it dissipate
into the Martian atmosphere, where it was subsequently lost to space?
No-one knows for certain the answers to these questions.

Some scientists believe that the catastrophic floods that carved the
outflow channels occurred nearly simultaneously, releasing such vast
quantities of water that they merged into an ocean that covered the
northern lowlands. Tim Parker of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory
first proposed such an idea in 1989. Parker, examining images taken by
the Viking Orbiters, found what he believed were remnants of two
ancient ocean shorelines, which he called "contacts," one inside the
other, in the Martian north.

Expanding on this notion, in 1991 Vic Baker of the University of
Arizona, suggested that Mars might not be geologically dead and
permanently frozen. Instead, he proposed, Mars might undergo cycles,
or pulses -- first heating up, releasing groundwater and forming an
ocean in the north, then dissipating the ocean back into the planet's
crust and re-freezing. 

More recently, Jim Head and colleagues at Brown University, found
evidence that is consistent with a shoreline that might indeed have
existed at the inner of Parker's two proposed contacts, contact 2.
Head and colleagues examined elevation data gathered by the Mars
Orbiter Laser Altimeter (MOLA) on board the Mars Global Surveyor (MGS)
and found that the elevation at points along contact 2 were much
closer to a straight line than those at contact 1. They also found
that the terrain below this elevation was smoother than the terrain
above it. Both of these findings are consistent with the former
presence there of an ocean.

But the story doesn't end there. Shortly after Head and colleagues
published their findings, Mike Malin and Ken Edgett of Malin Space
Systems used the Mars Orbital Camera (MOC) aboard MGS, to take a
series of high-resolution images of contact 2 terrain. Their
conclusion: there's nothing there. 

Right: In this topographic drawing of Mars, blue indicates the area
where an ocean once may have existed. Credit: NASA Mars Global
Surveyor Project; MOLA Team Rendering by Peter Neivert, Brown University

And the debate continues. Says Mike Carr of the U.S. Geological
Survey, author of the book Water on Mars, "We're getting all this new
data from MGS, and I think a lot of it is just not understood yet.
It's very hard to understand. The whole business of the oceans, the
evidence is so contradictory."

Mysterious Valleys

Mars's small-valley networks, which occur mainly in the southern
highlands, pose another perplexing problem. Scientists who first
studied images of these valleys thought they resembled river valleys
on Earth. So, they reasoned, a similar process, the runoff of
rainwater, must have formed them. 

see caption

Above: Nirgal Vallis, south of the eastern part of Valles Marineris,
superficially resembles a river-cut valley on Earth. [more information]

For Mars to be warm enough to rain, however, it would have needed a
much thicker atmosphere than it has today. And no-one has come up with
a clear-cut explanation for how such an atmosphere could have formed.

One alternative theory is that a process known as sapping, or collapse
caused by the softening of the soil by groundwater, created the
valleys. Yet another notion is that perhaps glaciers covered the
regions around the valleys, and that glacial meltwater carved them. As
with Mars's other watery mysteries, however, the question of how the
valley networks formed remains unanswered.

And if these vexing problems weren't enough, recent images from MOC
reveal a startling new puzzle. In nearly a dozen different locations
on Mars - all of them far from the equator - there are signs that
water has been seeping out of the walls of valleys and craters,
forming small gullies. Some scientists speculate that this activity is
very recent, perhaps occurring within the past 10 years; others say 10
million years is more likely.

Yet many aspects of these seepage gullies defy common sense. "They
sure look like water-worn features," says Mike Carr, "but they seem to
contradict what we know about the stability of water." They occur not
only in the coldest regions on Mars, but on slopes facing away from
the Sun, where the temperature rarely gets above minus 50 degrees
Centigrade. Yet the water appears to be seeping out from only 100
meters below the surface, a depth at which scientists previously
believed Mars's crust to be frozen solid. Scientists are busily
working to devise an explanation for this phenomenon. 

Above: Martian gullies in Newton Crater. Scientists hypothesize that
liquid water burst out from underground, eroded the gullies, and
pooled at the bottom of this crater as it froze and evaporated. If so,
life-sustaining ice and water might exist even today below the Martian
surface -- water that could potentially support a human mission to
Mars. [more information]

There is one additional thorn in the side of those who study water on
Mars. No evidence of carbonates has yet been found anywhere on the
planet. Carbonates are minerals that form readily when liquid water
reacts with carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. If Mars had abundant
liquid water in its past, carbonates should be detectable in the
Martian rock record. The Thermal Emission Spectrometer (TES)
instrument aboard MGS was designed to look for just such a signature.
But so far it has found none. Perhaps other evaporites, such as
sulfates (as detected in Martian meteorites and interpreted from
landing site analyses), are the dominant material of this type on Mars.

What Next? 

New debates will undoubtedly emerge as data from Mars Global Surveyor
is digested. In 2001, NASA will send a new orbiter to Mars, which will
include a higher-resolution spectrometer to search for carbonates. In
2003, NASA will send two rovers to Mars to hunt for water's signatures
in rocks and soil on the surface. But many questions about the history
of water on Mars are likely to remain unanswered until samples are
returned from the Red Planet for examination on Earth. Says Carr, "I
think the sample return is what we want, particularly of sediments.
And if we could get samples of things like this back on Earth, I think
it would do an awful lot to help us understand what's going on [on Mars]."

http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2001/ast05jan_1.htm

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