• @money_loo
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    1111 months ago

    Perseverance and its helicopter companion, Ingenuity, landed in Jezero Crater on February 18, 2021, to search for signs of ancient microbial life.

    It still blows my mind we live in a time statements like that are so casual to be mostly forgotten by the time you’re at the next paragraph.

    Astounding work by the engineers and scientists and all the people at NASA.

    • m3t00🌎OPM
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      411 months ago

      right, the thought, work and skill are amazing. space science is the human spirit in action

  • @Zrybew
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    511 months ago

    Let me guess: it’s gone

    • @money_loo
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      311 months ago

      lol for this area, yes, but there actually is water ice on Mars!

            • @fenynro
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              11 months ago

              Did you read the article? Because nowhere in the article does the phrase “due to water vapo(u)r” exist. In fact, they explicitly talk about why water vapor is prevalent and related to ice, and why subsurface ice scanning is so important (and is the only text I could find referencing vapor at all):

              The need to look for subsurface ice arises because liquid water isn’t stable on the Martian surface: The atmosphere is so thin that water immediately vaporizes. There’s plenty of ice at the Martian poles – mostly made of water, although carbon dioxide, or dry ice, can be found as well – but those regions are too cold for astronauts (or robots) to survive for long.

              They also talk about how NASA is not only aware of this but helping to fund the scanning technology that’s being used to detect the subsurface ice. It’s literally all in the article

            • @money_loo
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              111 months ago

              It’s true that water is itself unstable because of the pressure or lack thereof, but I was always talking about water in its ice form my friend, you should read the article I linked from NASA, it’s super neat!