Welcome to Space Station Threshold Sign in | Join | Help
CS Search | Live Search Search

Space Station Threshold

A community driven jumping off point for reaching space
Knowledge Management and Collaboration Platform

Browse by Tags

All Tags » Mars
Showing page 1 of 20 (197 total posts)
  • Mars Atmospheric "Bubbles" Carried Away by the Solar Wind

    Mars is a strange planet. There is evidence that the Red Planet once played host to a thick atmosphere and vast oceans. However, at some point in its evolution, the planet seemed to leak the majority of its atmospheric gases into space, and its oceans evaporated (or froze and then sublimated, depending on how fast [...]
    Posted to Aggregated News (Weblog) by Anonymous on November 21, 2008
  • Despite Dust Storms, Solar Power is Best for Mars Colonies

    Dust — a solar panel's worst nightmare. Is sending solar-powered robots to the Red Planet is a bad idea? Mars is a very dusty planet, and Mars dust sticks to everything, especially solar arrays. After all, Phoenix's death was probably hastened by a Sun-blocking dust storm, and rover Spirit was battered by the combined solar ...
    Posted to Aggregated News (Weblog) by Anonymous on November 20, 2008
  • MSL News: Landing Sites and Naming Contest

    Landing sites for the Mars Science Laboratory have been narrowed down to four intriguing places on the Red Planet. The car-sized rover will have the capability to travel to more scientifically compelling sites, and with its radioisotope power source, it won't need to rely on solar power, allowing for more flexibility in locations say project ...
    Posted to Aggregated News (Weblog) by Anonymous on November 20, 2008
  • MRO Finds Huge Underground Glaciers on Mars

    There's more than just a little ice under Mars' surface. According to data from the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter radar system, vast Martian glaciers of water ice lie buried under rocky debris. And this ice is not just at the Arctic region where the Phoenix lander scratched the surface in searching for ice. MRO [...]
    Posted to Aggregated News (Weblog) by Anonymous on November 20, 2008
  • Evidence For Vast Oceans On Ancient Mars

    Data from the Mars Odyssey orbiter's Gamma Ray Spectrometer provides new evidence for the controversial idea that oceans once covered about a third of ancient Mars. Spacecraft images going back to Mariner 9 in the early 1970s and the Viking orbiters and landers later in the 1970s up to the current orbiters and rovers have [...]
    Posted to Aggregated News (Weblog) by Anonymous on November 17, 2008
  • Mars Rover Spirit Surviving on a Low Energy Diet

    Last week, Mars Exploration Rover Spirit looked as if its sols were numbered. Hot on the heals of the demise of the frozen Phoenix lander, Spirit was about to succumb to a low-energy death brought on by a dust storm. The build-up of dust on the rover's solar panels were already causing a serious problem, [...]
    Posted to Aggregated News (Weblog) by Anonymous on November 17, 2008
  • Contact Reestablished, Mars Rover Spirit is Alive!

    Just when we were worrying we might be losing two Mars surface missions within a week of each other, it turns out Mars Exploration Rover Spirit has survived its recent run-in with a Sun-dimming dust storm. On Tuesday, Nancy reported that Spirit had generated a record low power output from its solar panels, indicating the [...]
    Posted to Aggregated News (Weblog) by Anonymous on November 13, 2008
  • Spirit Rover in Trouble

    Martian dust storms are wreaking havoc with human spacecraft. Not only did a dust storm cut short the Phoenix lander's extended mission, but now, another dust storm around Gusev Crater has cut into the amount of sunlight reaching the solar array on Spirit, one of the Mars Exploration Rovers, leaving the rover in [...]
    Posted to Aggregated News (Weblog) by Anonymous on November 11, 2008
  • 5 Years At Mars: The Best of Mars Express

    In December, the Mars Express spacecraft will celebrate the fifth anniversary of its arrival at Mars. In observation of this milestone the German Aerospace Center DLR has put together a collection of some of the best images from the High-Resolution Stereo Camera (HRSC), the main camera on board the spacecraft. The stunning, high [...]
    Posted to Aggregated News (Weblog) by Anonymous on November 4, 2008
  • Rover Sand Traps Provide Clues on Mars Climate

    If you watched the "Five Years on Mars" documentary on the National Geographic channel about the Mars Exploration Rovers, you probably saw how both rovers have gotten stuck in some of the small sand dunes on Mars surface. These dune fields on Mars are a bit of a mystery to planetary geologists, and in [...]
    Posted to Aggregated News (Weblog) by Anonymous on November 3, 2008
1 2 3 4 5 Next > ... Last ยป
CS Build: 2.1.61129.2
Copyright 1996, The Terran Institute, All Rights Reserved
Listed on the CS Listings Powered By Community Server Themed by nb development