|
Post by Niemmy on Sept 8, 2008 2:02:28 GMT -5
Why won't NASA let see the moon bases those bunch of cocks! If you look carefully you can still part of the image that those slobs over at NASA for got to smudge out! ;D ;D ;D
|
|
|
Post by Niemmy on Sept 8, 2008 2:34:14 GMT -5
Well you thought that was good look at these photos! Here are some space alien dudes leaving tracks on the moon in there space buggies
|
|
|
Post by Niemmy on Sept 8, 2008 2:59:47 GMT -5
Jezz Man it's a Darlek! Exterminate!!! I got a theory why the coverup's are so bad! It's because they won't people to find these anomalies!! Hmmm makes you think hey!
|
|
|
Post by Niemmy on Sept 8, 2008 3:10:54 GMT -5
You wanna see just how bad the coverup jobs get? Take a look at this image it purposely looks like it was pieced together by a 5 year old!Take a look at the smudgie base below the big chop out above in crazy contrast ;D ;D ;D But I wish they would leave the alien stuff in it would make funding NASA that more viable! ;D
|
|
|
Post by Niemmy on Sept 8, 2008 3:25:57 GMT -5
Here's a little something they forgot smudge out! they are two strange looking white dots just above smudgie base
|
|
|
Post by katzzz on Sept 8, 2008 10:14:11 GMT -5
those are interesting. Have you seen the one that is supposed to have a man on a rocky ledge ? If they were to tell that something really was going on up there there would be mass crazyness. There are some people that just would not be able to cope with anything like that. Some would go , well its to be expected. Over on myspace , a freind on there is very much into that kind of thing and she really thinks that others are here and they mean us no good. Did you ever see the movie "Fire From the Sky"? Very disturbing.
|
|
|
Post by Niemmy on Sept 8, 2008 16:36:31 GMT -5
I don't know wither there would be mass panic, I think it would make the universe a little less boring! I think it would rate as a news topic for about a week or so before we went back to unfolding Brittney's tragedy www.youtube.com/watch?v=kHmvkRoEowcCause lets face it Brittney is far more interesting than aliens ;D ;D ;D
|
|
|
Post by Niemmy on Sept 8, 2008 17:19:34 GMT -5
Mars figure Martian glass tubes
|
|
|
Post by Niemmy on Sept 8, 2008 17:41:48 GMT -5
This is going to blow your mind "Trees on Mars" Well maybe! We Just need Marvin the Martian to pop out of his spaceship "where's the load Kaboom? There was suppose to be an earth shattering Kaboom!" ;D ;D ;D
|
|
|
Post by Niemmy on Sept 8, 2008 19:16:51 GMT -5
Newly published findings suggest a solution to the mystery of the Martian trees – those dark, bristly spots on aerial photography of the Red Planet that some have compared to fans or forests. Even Arthur C. Clarke, the author of "2001: A Space Odyssey" and other science-fiction classics, has wondered whether Mars' seemingly branching "banyan trees" represent signs of biological activity.
But now researchers propose that the spots are of geological origin: They say the marks are left behind every spring when gas and dark sand blast through rumbling fissures in the ice. "If I was ever going to go to Mars, I'd want to observe this," said Arizona State University's Phil Christensen, one of the authors of the research, which appears in Thursday's issue of Nature.
The key observations behind the latest claims were made with the Thermal Emission Imaging System, or THEMIS, an infrared camera aboard NASA's Mars Odyssey orbiter.
Previous imagery, gathered by another orbiter called Mars Global Surveyor, provided ample documentation of the mystery spots, particularly in Mars' south polar region. That imagery led scientists to suggest the spots were the result of a defrosting process that exposed the darker ground beneath the carbon dioxide ice.
However, thermal readings from THEMIS indicated that the dark spots were about the same temperature as the ice. That led Christensen and his colleagues - Hugh Kieffer and Timothy Titus of the U.S. Geological Survey - to conclude that the dark material was actually sitting on top of the ice layer, rather than exposed below the ice.
NASA / JPL / MSSS Dark spots (left image) and fans (right image) cover the icy landscape near Mars' south pole in two images taken by Mars Global Surveyor during spring. Each image is about 2 miles (3.2 kilometers) wide. Click on the image to see a larger version.
So how did the stuff get up there? Here's the scenario sketched out in this week's research paper, based on about 200 days' worth of THEMIS surveillance:
The process starts during the Martian winter with the buildup of carbon dioxide ice over a layer of dark sand and dust. That dark material is thus sandwiched between a couple of feet of CO2 ice on top, and the permanent polar cap of water ice below.
As spring approaches, sunlight shines through the CO2 ice and warms the dirt enough to make the ice just above it sublimate - that is, turn directly from a solid into a gas. Pressure builds up beneath the remaining CO2 ice, eroding the dirt layer in the process. Eventually, that pressure becomes so great that a blast of gas, sand and dust breaks through fissures in the ice - spewing out at speeds of 100 mph (160 kilometers per hour) or more.
The activity leaves behind a dark burst of dirt, surrounding the vent on the ice sheet. Wind may blow the dust into a fanlike pattern. But as the CO2 ice fades to nothingness, so does the burst pattern. All that's left is a spidery pattern of erosion carved into the underlying water ice. Those "spiders" provide a template for the process to begin all over again during the following winter.
NASA / JPL / MSSS Spiders trace a pattern on top of the residual polar cap after the seasonal CO2 ice slab has disappeared. This image is about 2 miles (3.2 kilometers) wide. Click on the image to see a larger version.
"Once a spider becomes established, it affects the surface so that a vent will form in the same place the following year," Christensen said in today's ASU news release.
Christensen told me that "it was that day-to-day-to-day imaging that really allowed us to unravel what's going on." A companion paper, yet to be published, will go into the detailed physics behind the phenomenon, he said.
"There isn't anything like it on Earth," Christensen said. "On Earth, this doesn't happen."
However, some researchers have suggested that a similar process may be at work on Triton, a moon of Neptune that also is speckled with mysterious dark spots.
As for those Martian banyan trees, Christensen said the phenomenon probably has its roots in a process similar to the one he and his colleagues have sketched out.
"It's a geologically sound explanation," he said.
Do you agree? Feel free to weigh in with your comments below.
|
|
|
Post by Niemmy on Sept 8, 2008 19:19:45 GMT -5
But me for my money if NASA can't deliver anything of interest "What use is it!" If mars is dead why bother going there at all?
|
|
|
Post by Niemmy on Sept 10, 2008 9:34:22 GMT -5
|
|