Mars Plume

Author
Discussion

Moonhawk

Original Poster:

10,730 posts

226 months

Tuesday 17th February 2015
quotequote all
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-3149...

Not saying it's aliens but:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mlpl-RzsCck&t=4...

The chances of anything coming from Mars are a million to one they said biggrin

Eric Mc

122,861 posts

272 months

Tuesday 17th February 2015
quotequote all
The chances of using that line in a thread about Mars - 100%

Moonhawk

Original Poster:

10,730 posts

226 months

Tuesday 17th February 2015
quotequote all
Eric Mc said:
The chances of using that line in a thread about Mars - 100%
Yeh well, somehow "a Mars a day helps you work rest and play" just doesn't have the same impact biggrin

hidetheelephants

27,848 posts

200 months

Tuesday 17th February 2015
quotequote all
Dust cloud from a particularly large meteor strike or some kind of eruption event? Cool stuff either way, I wonder if Curiosity can detect seismic events?

Eric Mc

122,861 posts

272 months

Tuesday 17th February 2015
quotequote all
Clouds on Mars are quite common - whether it is water vapour, CO2 or dust.

Moonhawk

Original Poster:

10,730 posts

226 months

Tuesday 17th February 2015
quotequote all
Eric Mc said:
Clouds on Mars are quite common - whether it is water vapour, CO2 or dust.
Not like that though - its only been seen twice and it has the scientists stumped.

Seems to have gone up to around 200km above the Martian surface, twice the height of any clouds seen previously on Mars.

To put that into context - the highest altitude noctilucent clouds seen on Earth occur at around 85km.

Edited by Moonhawk on Tuesday 17th February 19:38

jmorgan

36,010 posts

291 months

Tuesday 17th February 2015
quotequote all
Not much of an atmosphere on Mars either.

citizensm1th

8,371 posts

144 months

Tuesday 17th February 2015
quotequote all
that's got to have scared the pants off of those 100 people selected to train for that one way mars mission

do you think its the Martians telling us to stay away lol

Eric Mc

122,861 posts

272 months

Tuesday 17th February 2015
quotequote all
They're obviously sending smoke signals.

citizensm1th

8,371 posts

144 months

Tuesday 17th February 2015
quotequote all
Eric Mc said:
They're obviously sending smoke signals.
I wonder if they are monty python fans?

jmorgan

36,010 posts

291 months

Wednesday 18th February 2015
quotequote all
citizensm1th said:
that's got to have scared the pants off of those 100 people selected to train for that one way mars mission
Judging from some of the comments from them, the Martians would be too late.

tonyvid

9,875 posts

250 months

Wednesday 18th February 2015
quotequote all
Moonhawk said:
The chances of anything coming from Mars are a million to one they said biggrin
hehe my favourite way of using up some departure gate time.

rhinochopig

17,932 posts

205 months

Wednesday 18th February 2015
quotequote all
Ogilvy assured me we were in no danger.

Nom de ploom

4,890 posts

181 months

Wednesday 18th February 2015
quotequote all
is it some sort of aurora?

I'm assuming mars has a magnetic field but without an atmosphere how would an aurora form...?


rhinochopig

17,932 posts

205 months

Wednesday 18th February 2015
quotequote all
tonyvid said:
Moonhawk said:
The chances of anything coming from Mars are a million to one they said biggrin
hehe my favourite way of using up some departure gate time.
Can't imagine digging a tunnel to re-start society goes down all that well with Homeland Security.

scorp

8,783 posts

236 months

Wednesday 18th February 2015
quotequote all
Nom de ploom said:
is it some sort of aurora?

I'm assuming mars has a magnetic field but without an atmosphere how would an aurora form...?
Mars has an atmosphere, just not as deep and as dense as Earths.

Could be a low gravity volcano like the ones seen on Io ? ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volcanology_of_Io )

Edited by scorp on Wednesday 18th February 10:35

jmorgan

36,010 posts

291 months

Wednesday 18th February 2015
quotequote all
scorp said:
Mars has an atmosphere, just not as deep and as dense as Earths.

Could be a low gravity volcano like the ones seen on Io ? ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volcanology_of_Io )

Edited by scorp on Wednesday 18th February 10:35
Thought Mars was inactive? That is its core has cooled too much, so much so Olympus Mons is its size because the crust is so thick it can support its weight, would not survive on Earth that size.

jmorgan

36,010 posts

291 months

Wednesday 18th February 2015
quotequote all
Thinking about it, there are holes in the Martian surface. Maybe their collapse triggers this event?

scorp

8,783 posts

236 months

Wednesday 18th February 2015
quotequote all
jmorgan said:
Thought Mars was inactive? That is its core has cooled too much, so much so Olympus Mons is its size because the crust is so thick it can support its weight, would not survive on Earth that size.
I was wondering that earlier. I'd imagine an asteroid would have an obvious heat flash so probably not that?

Could a storm of some kind throw up dust that high ?

Moonhawk

Original Poster:

10,730 posts

226 months

Wednesday 18th February 2015
quotequote all
scorp said:
Could be a low gravity volcano like the ones seen on Io ? ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volcanology_of_Io )
If it were due to a volcanic eruption - it's likely that both the MRO and Mars Express would have seen some evidence of surface changes by now (both were in orbit at the time these plumes were observed).