Tag: space

  • Adorable Google Doodle Celebrates Water on Mars

    Even Google couldn’t help but celebrate the incredible news that liquid water has been found on the surface of Mars.

    The Google Doodle for today (Sept. 29) features an adorable animation that gives a nod to the incredible news that liquid water flows on the Red Planet.

    In the short video, a cartoon-character version of Mars is shown slurping down a big glass of water. The expression on the Red Planet’s face is one of surprise — as if it didn’t know anyone was watching. But scientists have had their eyes on Mars for a long time.

    The liquid water on the surface of Mars is not in the form of rivers or lakes — instead, the water can be found soaking Martian hillsides, appearing as dark streaks called “recurring slope lineae” (or RSL), that were first identified in 2011. The water is mixed with a particular family of salts called perchlorates, which have the ability to absorb water from the air and create a salt-water mixture (a process called deliquescence). NASA scientists suggested that this finding increases the likelihood that Mars is habitable; it might also be possible for astronauts to use the water for drinking.

    Google has a history of highlighting space-related science with its daily doodles. Previous doodles have focused on the historic flyby of Pluto by NASA’s New Horizons mission, the ongoing comet encounter by the European Space Agency’s Rosetta mission, the Perseid meteor shower and the birthday of pioneering astronomer Annie Jump Cannon, to name a few.

    Follow Calla Cofield @callacofield.Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook and Google+. Original article on Space.com.

  • 'The Martian' Celebrates Discovery of Water on Mars

    Following NASA’s announcement that there is liquid water on the surface of Mars, Mark Watney, the fictional lead character in the upcoming movie “The Martian,” has a very special message for the world.

    Watney’s reaction to the news may seem a little familiar to those who have seen the trailer for the movie, which tells the story of an astronaut who is accidentally left behind on Mars, and must try to survive on the inhospitable planet while he awaits a rescue mission.

    NASA’s announcement of liquid water on Mars’ surface came yesterday (Sept. 28), just a few days before the movie’s premier this Friday (Oct. 2). The movie, which is based on the book of the same name by Andy Weir, stars Matt Damon as Watney.

    Scientists know that water ice exists at the Martian poles, and that water vapor can be found in the Martian atmosphere. This appears to be the best evidence yet that liquid water can survive on the surface of the Red Planet. No other planet or moon in our solar system is known to have liquid water on its surface, although there is evidence of entire oceans under the surface of a few moons in the solar system.

    Follow Calla Cofield @callacofield.Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook and Google+. Original article on Space.com.

  • New Documentary Follows Leonard Nimoy's Battle with Lung Disease

    Leonard Nimoy in Lake Tahoe
    Leonard Nimoy (left, Spock on “Star Trek”) and daughter Julie at Nimoy’s place in Lake Tahoe (between California and Nevada), which Nimoy later had to sell, as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease made it too hard for him to stay at that elevation.
    Credit: Nimoy Family

    Family members of the late Leonard Nimoy — Spock, to millions of “Star Trek fans” — are trying to raise half a million dollars for a documentary about the lung disease that claimed his life earlier this year.

    “COPD: Highly Illogical – A Special Tribute to Leonard Nimoy” is expected to be released in February 2016, regardless of the funds raised, but there is an active campaign on FirstGiving.com that now has about $203,000 pledged, including a $200,000 donation from Novartis Pharmaceuticals. The campaign concludes Nov. 30. 

    “We want to have amazing computer-animated graphics, and if we have the full budget, we’ll be able to use that footage,” David Knight, Nimoy’s son-in-law, told Space.com. “We will also reference Mr. Spock and ‘Star Trek.’ There are intellectual-property and licensing fees with CBS and Paramount. We want to be able to use those throughout the film.” [Astronauts, Obama Remember Leonard Nimoy]

    Trouble breathing

    Julie Nimoy and Husband

    David Knight and his wife, Julie Nimoy. Julie is the daughter of Leonard Nimoy, famous for playing Spock on “Star Trek.”
    Credit: Nimoy Family

    Knight and his wife, Julie (Nimoy’s daughter) first conceived the documentary after Nimoy gave an interview to television personality Piers Morgan in February 2014. Nimoy had been spotted by paparazzi in an airport using a wheelchair and supplemental oxygen, Knight said, and wanted to go on the air to talk about the condition that was killing him.

    COPD, or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, is a condition in which a person has trouble breathing, and it gets worse over time. Symptoms of the disease include wheezing, coughing or chest tightness, according to the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute.

    Leonard Nimoy and Daughter Julie

    Leonard Nimoy (left, Spock on “Star Trek”) and daughter Julie in Malibu, California.
    Credit: Nimoy Family

    Nimoy, who was a smoker but quit decades before he was diagnosed with COPD, spent the rest of his life raising awareness about his condition, Knight said. It was around U.S. Thanksgiving in November 2014 that Knight and his wife approached Nimoy about doing the documentary.

    “We talked to Leonard first about it, and he gave us a lot of encouragement,” Knight said. “It was something he thought was really a great idea. Unfortunately, at that time, his health was changing.”

    The film will focus on COPD and will include an animated voyage into the body using the USS Enterprise, the ship that Nimoy was first officer on in “Star Trek.” There will also be interviews with doctors and other experts on COPD, which is one of the leading causes of death in the United States, Knight said.

    Two family documentaries

    Leonard Nimoy and Arielle Kebbel

    Leonard Nimoy (Spock on “Star Trek”) and family friend and actress Arielle Kebbel wearing “I Quit” buttons, representing the decision to quit smoking.
    Credit: Nimoy Family

    Nimoy’s death this past February was “a sad time” for the family, Knight said. It has already sparked two tributes: Besides this documentary, Nimoy’s son Adam is directing a more “Star Trek”-focused film called “For the Love of Spock,” which raised more than $600,000 on Kickstarter this year (warping far past its goal).

    Adam Nimoy is also directing “Highly Illogical,” which will be made by Knight’s and Julie Nimoy’s production company, Health Point Productions. The production company previously made a documentary called “Microwarriors: The Power of Probiotics” (bacteria and yeast that aid digestion) that was directed by Adam Nimoy and narrated by Leonard Nimoy.

    “Highly Illogical” will be made available for free on the Internet and will also play in special screenings across the United States when it is released, Knight said. More information about the campaign and film is available at
    http://www.firstgiving.com/fundraiser/COPDFilm/Nimoy
     or http://nimoycopdfilm.com.

    Follow Elizabeth Howell @howellspace, or Space.com @Spacedotcom. We’re also on Facebook and Google+. Original article on Space.com.

  • Pluto's 'Snakeskin' Terrain Revealed In High Resolution | Video

    Credit: NASA/JHPL/SWRI/mash mix: Space.com’s @SteveSpaleta

  • Water on Mars: Wet Martian Discovery Explained (Infographic)

    Chart of evidence for liquid water on Mars.

    Discovery Story: Salty Water Flows on Mars Today, Boosting Odds for Life

    The announcement that liquid, salty water has been found flowing on the surface of Mars came as no real surprise to astronomers. Mars is full of water, mostly in the form of ice at the poles and under the surface. Also, Martian air is surprisingly humid: up to 100 percent humidity on cold winter nights.

    The clearest evidence for liquid water on Mars comes from dark streaks known as recurring slope linnea (RSL). These streaks form in the spring and disappear later in the Martian year.

    Flowing Water on Mars: The Discovery in Pictures

    Spectroscopic analysis showed that the streaks are hydrated perchlorate, a briny liquid of perchlorate salt with water trapped in its crystals. 

    The salt causes water to remain liquid at much lower temperatures than on Earth. Perchlorate brine can stay liquid down to minus 94 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 70 degrees Celsius). The brine boils at 75 degrees F (24 degrees C), close to the highest summertime temperature on the surface of Mars.

    Scientists estimate that 4.3 billion years ago, Mars had a huge ocean covering its entire northern hemisphere. This ocean would have contained more water than Earth’s Arctic Ocean.

    The Search for Life on Mars (A Photo Timeline)

    Indications are that some of Mars’ water is still there, frozen beneath the surface. A giant slab of ice as big as California and Texas combined, and as deep as a 13-story building, lies beneath the surface of Mars between the planet’s equator and north pole, researchers say.

    The Mars rover Curiosity weather station shows that the thin Martian air is surprisingly humid. Curiosity’s measurements range from about 5 percent humidity on summer afternoons to up to 100 percent (saturation point) on autumn and winter nights.

    Water on Mars Could Help Put Astronaut Boots on Red Planet

    Mars Gets More Habitable with Water Discovery, Scientists Say

    7 Biggest Mysteries of Mars

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    More Infographics

    NASA's Stardust spacecraft mission explained in this infographic.

    How NASA’s Stardust Comet Mission Works

    Facts about Star Wars lightsaber weapons.

    How NASA’s Gemini Spacecraft Worked (Infographic)

    As the Earth and moon orbit the sun together, the moon goes through several ‘phases.’ SPACE.com explains the 8 major named phases of the moon.

    Earth’s Moon Phases, Monthly Lunar Cycles (Infographic)

  • Space portrait


    A unique portrait of ESA astronaut Andreas Mogensen made for the Cupola observatory on the International Space Station by visual artist Vhils

  • Dark, Recurring Streaks on Walls of Garni Crater on Mars

    Dark, Recurring Streaks on Walls of Garni Crater on Mars

    Dark narrow streaks, called “recurring slope lineae,” emanate from the walls of Garni Crater on Mars, in this view constructed from observations by the High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HiRISE) camera on NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter.

  • Dark, Recurring Streaks on Walls of Garni Crater on Mars

    Dark narrow streaks, called “recurring slope lineae,” emanate from the walls of Garni Crater on Mars, in this view constructed from observations by the High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HiRISE) camera on NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter.

  • Astronaut Marks Mission Milestone with Amazing Image

    US from ISS by Astronaut Scott Kelly
    The United States glows in the early morning darkness in an image taken by Scott Kelly aboard the International Space Station.
    Credit: NASA

    On the halfway point of his year-long mission in space, NASA astronaut Scott Kelly captured this stunning image of the United States early in the morning.

    “Clear skies over much of the USA today. #GoodMorning from @Space_Station! #YearInSpace,” the astronaut wrote on Twitter Sept. 15.

    Kelly and his Russian counterpart, Mikhail Kornienko, are spending double the typical time of an International Space Station crew member in space. The goal of the mission is to better understand how the body changes in microgravity. [Liftoff! US, Russia Launch Historic One-Year Space Mission]

    Kelly and Kornienko are doing a suite of experiments to look at their bone loss, muscle tone, eye pressure and other indicators that commonly change for astronauts who are in space between four and six months.

    In addition, Kelly is doing a set of genetic experiments to compare with his twin brother Mark Kelly. Mark is a retired space shuttle astronaut who commanded one of the last missions in 2011.

    NASA says the year-long mission will help it better position itself for a future mission to Mars. While the longest single stay in space was 437 days (by Valeri Polyakov in 1994 to 1995, on the Russian Mir space station), a Mars mission would take at least 500 days.

    Prior to this mission, a few year-long (or longer) missions took place on Mir in the 1990s. Today’s better genetic technology and deeper understanding of how the human body is influenced by microgravity helped NASA and the Russian Federal Space Agency to go forward with the longer mission for Kelly and Kornienko.

    Follow Elizabeth Howell @howellspace, or Space.com @Spacedotcom. We’re also on Facebook and Google+. Original article on Space.com.

  • Water on Mars Could Help Put Astronaut Boots on Red Planet

    It might be a bit easier for humanity to get a foothold on Mars than people had thought.

    Yesterday (Sept. 28), scientists announced that the strange dark streaks — called recurring slope lineae (RSL) — that appear on steep Red Planet slopes when the weather is warm are caused by salty liquid water.

    The discovery boosts the chances that life may exist today on or near the Martian surface, researchers said. And it makes the outlook for putting boots on the Red Planet, which NASA hopes to do by the end of the 2030s, a bit rosier as well. [Main Story: Salty Water Flows On Mars Today, NASA Says

    Indigenous Martian water “may be an important resource for future human explorers and inhabitants of Mars, and decrease the cost and increase the resilience of human activity on the Red Planet,” said discovery team member Mary Beth Wilhelm, of NASA’s Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, California. 

    “Looking forward, it is imperative for us to further understand the source of the water for these features, as well as the amount,” Wilhelm said yesterday during a NASA news conference that announced the RSL find.

    Getting to the bottom of these mysteries may not take long, NASA officials said.

    “Now that we know what we’re looking for with HiRISE, we can begin a better search; we can begin to be more methodical,” Jim Green, director of NASA’s Planetary Science division, said during the press briefing.

    HiRISE, which stands for High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment, is a powerful camera aboard NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO). HiRISE first spotted the RSL streaks in 2011, and their liquid-water nature was deduced thanks to data gathered by another MRO instrument called CRISM (Compact Reconnaissance Imaging Spectrometer for Mars).

    “We can look and see if we can determine if there is some sort of aquifer network that may be supplying these [RSL features]. We don’t know that — there are other theories, other ideas — but that is actually the next step,” Green said. “So if there is indeed those kind of resources that we can begin to probe, we might be able to answer that question pretty quickly.”

    Other possible sources of RSL water include moisture in the thin Martian atmosphere and melting subsurface ice, researchers wrote in their new study, which was published online yesterday in the journal Nature Geoscience.

    NASA would like its envisioned crewed missions to the Martian surface to live off the land as much as is safely possible. Indeed, the space agency’s next Red Planet rover, which is scheduled to blast off in 2020, will carry an instrument designed to exploit indigenous Martian resources.

    That instrument, called the Mars Oxygen ISRU Experiment (MOXIE), is a technology demonstration that will turn atmospheric carbon dioxide into pure oxygen and carbon monoxide. Mars pioneers could theoretically use a scaled-up version of such a device both to stay alive and to help them launch off the Red Planet when it’s time to go home. (Oxygen can be used to burn rocket fuel.)  

    Observations by MRO, NASA’s Curiosity rover and other spacecraft have shown that Mars has plenty of other resources that human outposts could potentially utilize, said former astronaut John Grunsfeld, associate administrator of NASA’s Science Mission Directorate.

    Grunsfeld mentioned perchlorates, chlorine-containing compounds that are widespread in Martian soil. The solid rocket boosters on NASA’s now-retired space shuttle fleet burned aluminum perchlorate fuel, Grunsfeld noted.

    “In principle, you could make solid-rocket fuel” on Mars, he said during yesterday’s news conference.

    But water is perhaps the most important resource for putative future Mars explorers and settlers, which is why the RSL discovery is so intriguing to the people mapping out NASA’s crewed path to the Red Planet.

    “The exciting thing is that, I think we will send humans in the near future to Mars,” Grunsfeld said. “They’ll be scientists looking for signs of life, and also to be able to live on the surface. And the resources are there.”

    Follow Mike Wall on Twitter @michaeldwall and Google+. Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook or Google+. Originally published on Space.com.

  • Intense Solar Flare Unleashed from Unruly Sunspot

    An intense solar flare took out low-frequency radio communications over South America and the Atlantic Ocean earlier today (Sept. 28), and the unstable sunspot is likely to erupt again.

    NASA’s Solar Dynamics Observatory spacecraft captured an amazing video of the solar flare from space.

    At 10:53 a.m. EDT (1453 GMT), the medium-size M7-class solar flareburst from the sunspot called Active Region 2422 (AR2422). The explosion unleashed extreme ultraviolet radiation that rushed over the Earth, officials at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Space Weather Prediction Center said in a statement. The peak of the action, when there was a brief radio communications blackout on the sunlit side of Earth, was about 5 minutes later, at 10:58 a.m. EDT (1458 GMT). The flare ended 7 minutes after that. [Biggest Solar Flares and Sun Storms of 2015 in Photos]

    Sunspots are caused by knots and complications in the sun’s magnetic field, and the particularly tangled field within AR2422 generated this recent solar flare when it released a buildup of magnetic energy suddenly — causing a burst of high-energy radiation that rushed to Earth and supercharged the atmosphere. Scientists do not expect an associated coronal mass ejection, where physical gas ejected from the sun hits Earth.

    Solar Flare of Sept. 28, 2015

    At 10:53 a.m. EDT (1458 GMT) on Sept. 28, a solar flare caused a blackout in low-frequency radio communications over South America and the Atlantic Ocean, with weaker effects farther out. The unruly sunspot may prompt more solar flares, according to NASA.
    Credit: NASA’s Solar Dynamics Observatory

    That M7-class flare was strong enough that the extra atmospheric charge interfered with low-frequency radio communications over South America and the Atlantic Ocean, with weaker effects farther out. And there’s a chance that sunspot AR2422 may release more solar flares.

    “AR2422 has an unstable ‘beta-gamma-delta’ magnetic field that could erupt again at any moment,” Spaceweather.com said in its forecast. At the time of this writing, there was a 40-percent chance of another, similarly sized solar flare and a 5 percent chance of a powerful X-class flare during the next 24 hours. X-class flares can cause planet-wide radio blackouts and radiation storms, and are 10 times more powerful than M-class flares.

    M7-Class Solar Flare Sept. 28, 2015

    An M7-class solar flare Monday (Sept. 28) burst from an active sunspot and caused radio blackouts over South America and the Atlantic Ocean. The sunspot responsible, Active Region R2422, is visible in the lower right of this image, taken by NASA’s Solar Dynamics Observatory spacecraft.
    Credit: sunspot, solar flare, nasa, noaa, solar dynamics observatory, m-class, x-class

    NASA’s Solar Dynamics Observatory is an observational spacecraft that has been orbiting the sun since 2010, taking incredibly high-resolution images of the solar surface, gathering data about the sun’s magnetic activity and helping to predict solar storms’ impacts on Earth.

    Email Sarah Lewin at slewin@space.com or follow her @SarahExplains. Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook and Google+. Original article on Space.com.

  • Something Strange Is Happening Inside Saturn

    Striking New Photo and Video of Saturn's Rings
    The movement of waves in Saturn’s rings offers clues to activity and conditions within the planet. This natural-color view of Saturn was taken from 764,000 miles (1.2 million kilometers) away.
    Credit: NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute

    Unusual ripples in Saturn’s rings are revealing the mysterious inner workings of the great gas giant. Planetary scientists and modelers are slowly picking apart that mystery.

    Billions of particles race around Saturn’s 170,000-mile-wide (273,600 kilometers) set of rings, which are mostly water ice with a smattering of rock. The rings are full of activity, including waves that ricochet outward in spiral patterns, most caused by the gravitational pull of Saturn’s 62 moons. Waves caused by the moons, which orbit outside the rings’ sphere, always travel outward.

    But then there’s a set of waves heading inward. That means there’s something moving inside, too. [Video: Fly Through Space ‘In Saturn’s Rings’]

    Most scientists’ models of Saturn and other gas giants assume the planet is pretty uniform — just a large gas envelope surrounding a small, dense core that’s perhaps the size of Earth. But by studying the rings’ waves, researchers are finding the picture much more complicated.

    “The one thing that might produce this [series of waves] is that some sort of disturbance inside Saturn itself is spinning around with a period that’s less than 7 hours,” Phillip Nicholson, a planetary scientist at Cornell University in New York, told Space.com. Researchers first noticed hints of that disturbance in the 1990s, and Nicholson’s team used more precise measurements to fully document the ring waves’ structures, which reflect the oscillations of the planet within — sort of like recurring Saturn quakes.

    Right now, measuring those oscillations offers scientists the best possible chance to grasp what’s going on far inside the planet, like Saturn’s internal rotation or structure, which appears to be more complicated than previously thought, scientists say.

    “Even dropping a probe into the atmosphere would not necessarily help a lot, because the probe will only get down to a pressure of five or 10 atmospheres before it gets cooked or squashed,” Nicholson said. “We need to go much deeper to understand this.”

    Everything is ringing

    Saturn isn’t the only astronomical body with a groove; for many years, researchers have been watching the vibrations of the sun and other stars. Even Earth has a hum, and scientists use whole-Earth oscillations, triggered by large earthquakes, to discern what’s going on inside.

    “The basic idea is that we know of many stars, including our own sun, that oscillate at certain frequencies that are determined by the actual internal structure of the planet or the star,” Jim Fuller, a researcher at the California Institute of Technology, told Space.com. Fuller studies and models those oscillations, including those in Saturn, building off of initial work by Nicholson and his collaborator Matthew Hedman, now at the University of Idaho.

    Tools like NASA’s orbiting Kepler Space Telescope, which precisely measures the brightness of distant stars while searching for planets orbiting around them, can send back information about changes in brightness detailed enough to see the stars’ shifting— a field called astroseismology. Helioseismology, which measures sound waves below the sun’s surface, has given researchers a detailed understanding of the flow of materials deep within the sun. Seismographs can measure whole-Earth vibrations directly, using the same process as ordinary seismology, which has told researchers about conditions deep inside Earth. But it is much more challenging to detect movements within planets humans aren’t sitting on.

    Enter kronoseismology, the study of oscillations within Saturn. Nicholson and Hedman chose the name because Kronos (or Cronus) is the Greek equivalent of the Roman god Saturn, a mighty Titan, whose namesake planet has correspondingly mighty rings. Those rings act as a rare window into the movements at the heart of the planet.

    NASA’s Cassini spacecraft, which is currently exploring Saturn and its moons, has carefully measured how much light from individual stars shines through the rings with its Visual and Infrared Mapping Spectrometer, which allows scientists to calculate the changes in the rings’ density at different locations. Researchers can pull out the patterns of ring density, in the form of waves, caused by the oscillations of mass within Saturn itself, and use those patterns to learn about the planet, like using the sounds made by a violin or a drum to determine its shape. [Star Tunes: Composer Sets Twinkling Data to Music]

    Something strange

    When Nicholson put together the series of waves caused by Saturn’s movement for a 2013 paper, they didn’t quite add up. Instead of a regular pattern of vibrations all building on one another, he was seeing multiples of some waves and missing others.

    Diagrams illustrating the different wave patterns in Saturn's rings caused by the planet's movement.

    Caption: Different oscillations of Saturn cause certain distinctive patterns in the planet’s rings. By analyzing them, researchers are determining what’s happening inside the gas giant. If the planet were very simple, it would have only one of each of these oscillation patterns, rotating at different speeds; instead, it has multiples of some and is missing others.
    Credit: Matthew Hedman

    “If Saturn were a nice big ball of liquid hydrogen and helium, liquid and gas, it really should only have one frequency associated with each of these overtones,” he said. Instead, the measurements were like a violin that plays multiple discordant tones when one string is strummed. There’s “something a bit wrong with your violin, if that’s the case,” he said.

    Fuller has conducted follow-up research to try to find the possible causes of the discord. “Saturn must have a layer deep down inside of it that’s stably stratified,” he said. “For some reason, the fluid is very stable and doesn’t move around very much … And that part is new, because the conventional models of giant planets are just convective envelopes [where the materials move freely to exchange heat] all the way down to their core. But what I found is that those very simple models can’t explain what we’re seeing in the rings.”

    Fuller suggested that the stable layers could have a number of causes. By modeling each potential scenario and measuring the waves it would create, he and others are hoping to narrow down the possibilities. One explanation, he said, is that the helium is separating from its mix with hydrogen lower down in the planet, because of higher pressure, and condensing into helium raindrops that fall even deeper. Then, the boundary between the high-helium area below and the mostly hydrogen area above would be a stable border, Fuller said.

    Another explanation might be that the ice and rock of the core are dissolving upward into the hydrogen and helium that make up most of the planet. That, too, would create smooth layers of fluid beneath the turbulent gas above.

    “In the past, people have thought of these ideas, but it’s been very hard to test them because we have no way of seeing what’s inside of Saturn,” Fuller said. “But with the seismology, for the first time, we’re starting to get a glimpse of that interior structure. It’s still pretty primitive, because we can only detect some of Saturn’s operations, but it’s enough to give us some interesting prospects, at the very least.

    Lifting the veil

    New models of a gas giant’s interior will help reveal which of these possibilities, or others, could match Saturn’s real oscillations. “We’re mainly waiting for theoretical developments,” Nicholson said. In the meantime, the Cassini orbiter is continuing to grab detailed data that will lend greater focus to the findings. When it spirals into even lower orbits, it might be able to reveal more about subtle changes in the planet’s gravity as well.

    Researchers are also looking at Uranus’ rings to see if they can discern anything about the inside of that planet — and there are many other rings to consider out in the solar system. But for now, Saturn offers the best glimpse into the depths of a gas giant, which can be compared and contrasted with the distant planets seen around other stars. Exoplanet researchers like Jonathan Fortney at University of California, Santa Cruz, are eager for anything that will pierce the veil of the gas giants. In fact, he said, one of his graduate students is waiting until Cassini plunges into Saturn, in 2017, to combine the new gravitational data with kronoseismology to get an even more detailed picture.

    “There’s a paradigm of giant planets being pretty simple objects, where they have a core of ice and rock, and this tremendous envelope of hydrogen/helium on top of that,” Fortney told Space.com. “That’s how people have mostly modeled giant planets for 50 years. But what the kronoseismology tells us is, there’s some region that is strange, there’s some part of the bottom of the envelope that’s not simple, that’s not convective. It tells us that Saturn is not a simple object; there’s something more going on there.”

    Email Sarah Lewin at slewin@space.com or follow her @SarahExplains. Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook and Google+. Original article on Space.com.

  • 'The Martian' Dust Storm Would Actually Be a Breeze

    In the science fiction film “The Martian,” a powerful dust storm puts astronauts in danger on Mars. In reality, dust storms on Mars don’t pack such a huge punch, NASA says.
    Credit: 20th Century Fox

    Without giving away too many spoilers about “The Martian”, there’s an opening scene in the book (and upcoming movie) in which a dust storm causes major damage and literally blows away an astronaut. But could that actually happen on the Red Planet?

    Despite the amazing space travel details in “The Martian,” a film based on the book by Andy Weir, that Mars dust storm scene, which ultimately sets up the entire film, is itself blown away by Red Planet realities.

    It turns out the atmosphere on Mars is so thin that even a strong wind wouldn’t make that much of a difference, according to a NASA planetary scientist who studies planetary dust storms regularly (though he hasn’t read the book). “You would probably feel a breeze, but it wouldn’t be knocking you over,” Michael Smith, who works at the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, told Space.com. [“The Martian”: An Epic Space Film in Photos]

    Martian dust storm brews in concept art

    A Martian dust storm might crackle with electricity, as in this artist’s concept.
    Credit: NASA

    Back in 1971, when the Mariner 9 spacecraft arrived at Mars, a gargantuan dust storm engulfed the entire planet. Not much was known about Mars at the time. Scientists saw a set of odd circular shapes poking through the dust, but couldn’t figure out what they were until storm settled. Then the scientists realized these circles were the tops of gigantic dormant volcanoes.

    Global Red Planet dust storms are rare — there were others in 2001 and in 2007 — but local dust storms pop up frequently. The causes of global storms are still unclear, Smith said, although these tempests tend to happen during summer in the planet’s southern hemisphere. The 2007 storm hit while the Spirit and Opportunity rovers were on the Martian surface. The rovers hunkered down and took pictures of the darkening sky.

    Smith said a person standing on the planet’s surface would have trouble seeing — how much trouble is unclear, but it would be darker. The grinding sand would also get into everything: spacesuits, habitats,  rovers and other equipment, Smith said.

    “The dust is electrostatic, like foam peanuts,” Smith said, adding that the 1-micron size of sand particles “is so small that it coats everything.”

    But the wind, even at 60 mph (97 km/hr), would seem more like a breeze, because the density of Martian air is only 1 percent that of Earth. With an understanding that wind force is a function of atmospheric density as well as velocity, calculations show the speed of a 60-mph storm on Mars would feel more like 6 mph (9.6 km/hr), Smith said.

    “It’s not blowing people over, but these are dramatic events and they would have real-world consequences,” he said.

    NASA’s entire fleet of Mars spacecraft monitors dust storms, particularly in visible wavelengths and thermal wavelengths (which shows the density). The Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter is used for most observations.

    In the past decade, MRO’s Mars Climate Sounder has provided extensive information about the appearance of different layers of the atmosphere during dust storms, Smith said. Results indicate the density varies by altitude, making the storms even more complex than they look.

    “The Martian,” directed by Ridley Scott and based on the book by Andy Weir, opens in theaters nationwide on Oct. 2.

    Follow Elizabeth Howell @howellspace, or Space.com @Spacedotcom. We’re also on Facebook and Google+. Original article on Space.com.