Wheat-dogg’s world

Ramblings by a former physics teacher teaching ESL in China

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Posts tagged MArs

Meanwhile, back on Mars …

JISHOU, HUNAN — Most of my posts lately have been about China, for obvious reasons, but it’s hard to abandon being a physics teacher. So, here’s a science post.

While humans have been flitting around in low-earth orbit, NASA-JPL’s Martian probes have been busy on the red planet. The arctic explorer, Phoenix, has discovered water ice in the soil and in the sky, detected snow falling from the clouds, and photographed the sun creeping up above the horizon as the martian winter approaches.

This sequence just fascinates me in particular. It shows clouds scooting through the sky, much as they would here in Earth. These are water-ice clouds, like the high-altitude cirrus clouds here.

Clouds in the martian arctic

Aside from practical issues like not having any oxygen to breath and sub-sub-zero temperatures, you could almost imagine yourself standing there watching the clouds go by.

Phoenix has been operating for more than four months, but the approaching martian winter solstice may kill the little fellow off. Temperatures are dropping to -120C (-184F), which is bad for its electronics and especially its solar panels. Carbon dioxide frost is forming on the solar panels, cutting down sunlight reaching the solar cells. And the sun itself, as it does in Earth’s arctic region, will soon dip below the horizon, not to return for three months.

So NASA-JPL scientists are trying to keep Phoenix busy every waking hour before it’s lights out for the probe. For details, visit the website.

Mars is safe, for now

You don’t need to cancel any Martian vacation plans. The chances of asteroid MD5 colliding with the Red Planet are now 1 in 10,000, according to Near Earth Object Program experts. The image below shows the envelope through which the asteroid will likely pass on Jan. 30, when it intersects Mars’ orbit.
MD5's expected trajectory
Earlier estimates had the envelope overlapping Mars itself, and experts as late as yesterday had given MD5 a 1 in 40 chance of hitting the planet. Better telescopic observations of MD5’s path have narrowed the size of the envelope, reducing the odds of a collision.

Buddy, can you spare a dime?

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Jishou, Hunan, Weather

  • Cloud and Visibility OK
  • Jishou HN CN
  • Temperature: 55°F
  • Humidity: 47.1%
  • Wind: N at 2 mph
  • Dew Point: 36°F
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