“La sabiduría de la vida consiste en la eliminación de lo no esencial. En reducir los problemas de la filosofía a unos pocos solamente: el goce del hogar, de la vida, de la naturaleza, de la cultura”.
Lin Yutang
Cervantes
Hoy es el día más hermoso de nuestra vida, querido Sancho; los obstáculos más grandes, nuestras propias indecisiones; nuestro enemigo más fuerte, el miedo al poderoso y a nosotros mismos; la cosa más fácil, equivocarnos; la más destructiva, la mentira y el egoísmo; la peor derrota, el desaliento; los defectos más peligrosos, la soberbia y el rencor; las sensaciones más gratas, la buena conciencia, el esfuerzo para ser mejores sin ser perfectos, y sobretodo, la disposición para hacer el bien y combatir la injusticia dondequiera que esté.
MIGUEL DE CERVANTES Don Quijote de la Mancha.
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28 de septiembre de 2015
NASA Detects Liquid Water on Mars
Scientists confirm that strange streaks on the Red Planet are formed by flowing water
Dark,
narrow streaks called "recurring slope lineae" line the walls of Garni
crater on Mars. The dark streaks are up to a few hundred meters in
length. Researchers believe they may provide evidence of flowing, briny
water on the Red Planet.
NASA/JPL/University of Arizona
The
holy grail of space exploration is to find extraterrestrial life. An
important precursor to that is finding liquid water—and
that's exactly what NASA today announced scientists have discovered on
Mars.
The findings, which are described in the journal Nature Geoscience, offer
an explanation for peculiar, long streaks that sometimes appear on
sloping Martian terrain. The dark features, which can reach 5 meters
wide and more than 100 meters long, were first noticed in 2010. By
analyzing their reflected light signature, a team of eight scientists
has concluded that the streaks consist of mineral salts that easily
absorb moisture—and that flowing water is the likeliest explanation for
their appearance.
The Red Planet has been known for years to have
ice, and its surface bears the topographical scars of ancient water
flow. This latest research, though, is the first to provide compelling
evidence for the ongoing existence of flowing water on Mars.
Called
recurring slope lineae, these dark, narrow, 100-meter-long streaks
flowing downhill on Mars are thought to have been formed by contemporary
flowing water. Recently, planetary scientists detected hydrated salts
on these slopes at Horowitz crater, corroborating their original
hypothesis that the streaks are indeed formed by liquid water.
NASA/JPL/University of Arizona
The findings date back to 2010, when Lujendra Ojha,
then a University of Arizona undergraduate and now the lead author on
this new research, started sifting through images from a powerful NASA
camera orbiting the Red Planet. His professor, Alfred McEwen,
is another co-author on the research and the camera's lead scientist
for NASA. "There were these stark, linear, narrow features forming" all
over the planet, Ojha said, "and they were only forming when the
temperature was ideal for liquid water." In the Martian winter, the
features, called "recurring slope lineae," disappeared.
Another instrument, called the Compact Reconnaissance Imaging Spectrometer for Mars, or CRISM, records
the wavelengths of light reflecting off Mars's surface. Scientists use
CRISM to collect light spectra, match them to the known light signatures
of minerals, and then conclude, for example, what soil might be made of
on another planet.
Now a graduate student at the Georgia
Institute of Technology, Ojha began looking at the CRISM data for Mars's
sloping streaks at the end of last year, unpacking pixel after pixel.
Using these images, he and his colleagues confirmed what they had
already suspected—the presence of salts called perchlorates that are
terrific at absorbing water.
These dark, narrow, 100-meter-long streaks are thought to have been formed by flowing water on Mars.
NASA/JPL/University of Arizona
The
significance of the finding goes beyond scientists' usual glee at the
discovery of anything Earth-like in the heavens. Liquid water is a
necessary precursor to life. So if Mars has water, it might also ...
Well, don't go there just yet.
The
new images don't actually show flowing water, which doesn't last long
on the Martian surface. It evaporates quickly, and the thin atmosphere
wicks it up and away. The orbiter collects its data at about 3 p.m. Mars
time. That's a bad time for watching water, because the relative
humidity is so low. Eight hours earlier or later, the scientists may
have caught the water itself, Ojha said.
Instead, what's left are
these patches of freshly hydrated salts, which bond with molecular water
whenever it's around, leaving dark streaks. That's what Ojha and
colleagues see in the images, and how they know there's water on Mars.
It's locked in these salts, and couldn't be there without some recent
influx.
Planetary
scientists recently detected mineral salts that attract water on these
slopes at Hale crater. The finding corroborates their original
hypothesis that the streaks are formed by liquid water. The blue color
seen upslope of the dark streaks is thought not to be related to their
formation, but instead is from the presence of the mineral pyroxene.
NASA/JPL/University of Arizona
The ultimate question, whether Mars can host living things, belongs squarely to astrobiology, the study of life's origins.
Toward
the end of their new paper, Ojha, McEwen, and their co-authors say that
the conditions on Mars—arid and salt-rich—are similar in some ways to
the Atacama Desert in western Latin America. There, water-retaining salt
beds provide an oasis for microbes. Unfortunately for E.T.-hunters, on
Mars "the water activity in perchlorate solutions may be too low to
support known terrestrial life," the authors wrote.
There's an
irony in searching for life-friendly conditions on Mars, or elsewhere.
The more promising the discovery, the more thoughtful humans (or our
robots) should be in approaching it. Areas where life might propagate
are declared "special regions" and treated with caution by scientists.
That's because virtually everything on Earth—your smartphone, the
doorbell, bananas, yesterday's socks, spacecraft—is slathered with
microbes. NASA has an entire Office of Planetary Protection to ensure that the search for extraterrestrial life doesn't turn up expat terrestrial life.
"Maybe
in the future we can have a mission to go there," Ojha said, "but I
think we have to be really careful about transferring of life from Earth
to Mars. We might be the ones creating the second Genesis."