Thursday, 19 March 2015

Mars probe finds super-active auroras and mystery dust clouds




MAVEN spots an aurora over Mars



As much as humanity knows about

Mars, the planet is still chock-full of surprises. Just ask NASA:

University of Colorado researchers using its MAVEN probe have discovered

phenomena in the Martian skies that you would never see on Earth. For

one, there are auroras that are so energetic (their electrons are 100

times more powerful than a spark of house current) that they plunge far

deeper into the atmosphere than back home, or even other places on Mars.

Scientists suspect that the Sun is to blame — Mars doesn’t have a

protective magnetic field like Earth does, so the solar wind sometimes

hits with full force.







Another discovery may be tougher to crack. MAVEN has spotted very

thin dust clouds flying at very high altitudes of 93 to 190 miles, where

they shouldn’t exist based on the current understanding of how Mars

works. The clouds could simply have been kicked up from the ground, but

they could also come from Mars’ moons or even comet debris. Whatever

the causes, both the dust and the auroras suggest that there’s still a

lot to learn about one of Earth’s closest cosmic neighbors.




Source Article from http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/AscensionEarth2012/~3/6PmKuOuAKtQ/mars-probe-finds-super-active-auroras.html



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