Dr. Skeptic wrote:
Not only would you need to prove the existence of a significant amount of H2O present in the sand
If the oceans of the world and all the lakes were removed at one stroke, it would not eliminate the underground sources that exist. Numerous springs, geysers, and volcanic vents still would be here, spouting water as they do. Mars did not lose its water entirely, it still has springs and geysers as well as some volcanic activity.
Is it unreasonable to accept that a planet with oceans would also have a hydrologic cycle? We already know of the glaciers from the frozen sea on the equator, the ice in craters, and the ice in the polar caps. Los Alamos produced a beautiful map of water distribution recently and even Viking showed the atmosphere to remain near 100% relative humidity nearly all the time.
So, as the axial tilt of the planet changes, it goes through the equivalent of ice ages, and as dust covers the glacier fields it protects a great deal of the ice from sublimation. Also, the extremely large quantities of salts in the soil act as an antifreeze, allowing the resulting brine to remain liquid at a much wider range than for fresh water. Here are some images of present day geysers on Mars from my site, and all have links back to the original NASA/JPL images on their site.
Sol 122 geyser from Opportunity:
http://xenotechresearch.com/geyop122.htm
You can see the spherules have been blown back from the slot, and there is even a second smaller slot in the background above it. Clearly mud has run from the slot and material has been moved by whatever fluid emerged.
One frame from the large geyser field above Endurance Crater, Sol 114:
http://xenotechresearch.com/o114clr5.jpg
All along the left edge, and along the top left edge, we can see where the fluid emerged from under the rock slabs. Again, this soil is damp and cohesive. Desiccated sand will not cling together like this soil does.
Two geysers showing mud flow, also from Sol 114, Endurance Crater:
http://xenotechresearch.com/o114clrc.jpg
Again, distinctive flow patterns of mud. Sand cannot hold this form without the presence of a liquid to help stick the granules together. There are many more images of geysers above Endurance Crater, brought together on this page:
http://xenotechresearch.com/imo114.htm
Can we get more solid evidence than these images? Yes.
http://xenotechresearch.com/marsmud.htm Look closely at the top image. Water flow has created the patterns you see trailing behind the spherules. The "rock" is little more than sand and gypsum and salt. And, the next two images show on Sol 123 that the instrumentation arm was pressed against the mud and it bulged. The highly reflective nature of the soil is because it is wet. The bulge is not possible with desiccated sand. What fluid do you suppose might be holding the soil together so aggressively?
What about a picture of actual liquid water on the soil? Sure, no problem. This is a false color stereo image showing exactly that.
http://xenotechresearch.com/O146stc2.jpg
You can see the trail from the end of an eruption as the geyser lost pressure and the water trailed away. The water is still present as a long, sinuous trail that breaks up into droplet trails. You must admit that
something has landed on the soil there. the absorption from the infrared images closely match the absorption for liquid water. Go ahead and look at the radiometrically corrected images and see for yourself.
Here is a picture of another geyser just above Endurance Crater complete with a mud flow. Wind cannot create the pattern of flow and terracing you can see in the left bottom of the image.
http://xenotechresearch.com/o118clr1.jpg
I can also supply the images in stereo so you can confirm for yourself the three dimensional nature of these images, and these are just a scratch on the surface. I have sorted, processed and categorized hundreds of them. A child can see the flow patterns in the soil, and the fact that this cannot be dry sand.
In fact, let me provide you with a stereo image of the geyser slot itself that produced the water that made this flow. You can look right down into it. Wind does not make this sort of feature. Something emerged from under the rock slab and made this slot.
http://xenotechresearch.com/Vent3d2.jpg
Here is a full color stereo image set of a geyser from Sol 614, Opportunity.
http://www.xenotechresearch.com/marsgey6.htm
How do I know that something is coming from under the slabs? Easy. Cover the slabs with sand and their margins end up clean. Something emerges from beneath to clean just the outlines, as seen in this image from Sol 541:
http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/gallery/ ... 07L0M1.JPG
Look left of center at the slabs. Did wind selectively blow off just the edges? No. Steam or water emerging from beneath did it.
Finally (because I really don't have the time or inclination to post hundreds of images and explanations) I will wrap this up with spray zone from a geyser just inside Endurance Crater.
http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/gallery/ ... 94L2M1.JPG
The water has sprayed up and onto the soil, creating a bowl shaped washout area. If you want full stereo and color (plus the image containing both geyser and spray area) along with full color and stereo images of the geyser itself, I will gladly supply them.
Next point.
Dr. Skeptic wrote:
you would also need to explain the uniform layering of the H20 in the sand
The water is not uniform, it is throughout the soil. The heating is episodic and occurs over the seasons. As heat diffuses into the soil, it melts ice crystals and forms the layered appearance. Note that the layers are conformal with the dunes- start from the top and go down and they match the dune tops.
http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/gallery/ ... 75L0M1.JPG
Note how as the dune height changes, the layer height matches them. If layering happened first, it would conform to the bedrock layer, but it does not. How about this one?
http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/gallery/ ... 75L0M1.JPG
You will notice two interesting things. One, the layering is preferentially on
the right sides of the dunes! Two, the layering is different on one side from the other. This means that the layers formed after the dunes. Do you know why they layer this way? This is very simple. Any experience with soil hydrology will tell you.
Wind moves through the soil and drives moisture to the lee side. Wind pressure forces the water that is liquid to migrate away from the wind. This is a known factor and here we see proof of it on Mars. Sand is porous and wind can in fact exert a large differential pressure on a sand dune. Here it is in spades.
Next point.
Dr. Skeptic wrote:
explain why the H2O is not evaporating
No, that has already been explained by others far more qualified and many times. It does not evaporate because the relative humidity is nearly 100%. The air is already loaded with as much moisture as it can carry, and even with advection there cannot be any more evaporation. Just as you can only dissolve so much sugar in water, you can also only carry so much moisture in a mass of air. Afterwards, no more sugar will dissolve, and no more water will evaporate.
http://dailyheadlines.uark.edu/5717.htm
Dr. Gil Levin has also done the experiments and shown the same results. The rate of evaporation is between 0.8 and 1.1 millimeters per hour under Mars temperatures and pressures. In the soil, where the surface of the granules prevents evaporation and there is a large quantity of salts, the rates are far, far lower. If you continue to insist that liquid water cannot exist on Mars, then you are just plain wrong. Sorry.
Dr. Skeptic wrote:
why the capillary effect isn't making the H2O layers bleed into other layers
It does. Note the different layering in the above NASA/JPL image showing the differences from front to back of the dune. Broad stripes of melted water diffusing into other zones, limited by freezing temperatures and heating, produces the stripes.
Dr. Skeptic wrote:
why the different layers seen to erode at the same rate
How can you tell what the rate of erosion is? The layers form in the dunes, sometimes the dunes blow around and new layers form. This is a dynamic system, not a static snapshot.
Dr. Skeptic wrote:
why the layers are uniform independent of solar angle
Look at how heat flows through a triangular cross section. Heat takes time to travel through materials, and when the ice does melt, the latent heat is still present in the water as it is blown through the soil or as it seeps into the dune. Sun angle can change significantly while the heat remains soaking into the sand.
Dr. Skeptic wrote:
and I can come up with more problems with your theory if you'd like
...and I can answer them. Gladly.
Dr. Skeptic wrote:
[quote]Not only would you need to prove the existence of a significant amount of H2O present in the sand[/quote]
If the oceans of the world and all the lakes were removed at one stroke, it would not eliminate the underground sources that exist. Numerous springs, geysers, and volcanic vents still would be here, spouting water as they do. Mars did not lose its water entirely, it still has springs and geysers as well as some volcanic activity.
Is it unreasonable to accept that a planet with oceans would also have a hydrologic cycle? We already know of the glaciers from the frozen sea on the equator, the ice in craters, and the ice in the polar caps. Los Alamos produced a beautiful map of water distribution recently and even Viking showed the atmosphere to remain near 100% relative humidity nearly all the time.
So, as the axial tilt of the planet changes, it goes through the equivalent of ice ages, and as dust covers the glacier fields it protects a great deal of the ice from sublimation. Also, the extremely large quantities of salts in the soil act as an antifreeze, allowing the resulting brine to remain liquid at a much wider range than for fresh water. Here are some images of present day geysers on Mars from my site, and all have links back to the original NASA/JPL images on their site.
Sol 122 geyser from Opportunity: [url]http://xenotechresearch.com/geyop122.htm[/url]
You can see the spherules have been blown back from the slot, and there is even a second smaller slot in the background above it. Clearly mud has run from the slot and material has been moved by whatever fluid emerged.
One frame from the large geyser field above Endurance Crater, Sol 114:
[url]http://xenotechresearch.com/o114clr5.jpg[/url]
All along the left edge, and along the top left edge, we can see where the fluid emerged from under the rock slabs. Again, this soil is damp and cohesive. Desiccated sand will not cling together like this soil does.
Two geysers showing mud flow, also from Sol 114, Endurance Crater: [url]http://xenotechresearch.com/o114clrc.jpg[/url]
Again, distinctive flow patterns of mud. Sand cannot hold this form without the presence of a liquid to help stick the granules together. There are many more images of geysers above Endurance Crater, brought together on this page: [url]http://xenotechresearch.com/imo114.htm[/url]
Can we get more solid evidence than these images? Yes.
[url]http://xenotechresearch.com/marsmud.htm[/url] Look closely at the top image. Water flow has created the patterns you see trailing behind the spherules. The "rock" is little more than sand and gypsum and salt. And, the next two images show on Sol 123 that the instrumentation arm was pressed against the mud and it bulged. The highly reflective nature of the soil is because it is wet. The bulge is not possible with desiccated sand. What fluid do you suppose might be holding the soil together so aggressively?
What about a picture of actual liquid water on the soil? Sure, no problem. This is a false color stereo image showing exactly that. [url]http://xenotechresearch.com/O146stc2.jpg[/url]
You can see the trail from the end of an eruption as the geyser lost pressure and the water trailed away. The water is still present as a long, sinuous trail that breaks up into droplet trails. You must admit that [i]something[/i] has landed on the soil there. the absorption from the infrared images closely match the absorption for liquid water. Go ahead and look at the radiometrically corrected images and see for yourself.
Here is a picture of another geyser just above Endurance Crater complete with a mud flow. Wind cannot create the pattern of flow and terracing you can see in the left bottom of the image.
[url]http://xenotechresearch.com/o118clr1.jpg[/url]
I can also supply the images in stereo so you can confirm for yourself the three dimensional nature of these images, and these are just a scratch on the surface. I have sorted, processed and categorized hundreds of them. A child can see the flow patterns in the soil, and the fact that this cannot be dry sand.
In fact, let me provide you with a stereo image of the geyser slot itself that produced the water that made this flow. You can look right down into it. Wind does not make this sort of feature. Something emerged from under the rock slab and made this slot.
[url]http://xenotechresearch.com/Vent3d2.jpg[/url]
Here is a full color stereo image set of a geyser from Sol 614, Opportunity.
[url]http://www.xenotechresearch.com/marsgey6.htm[/url]
How do I know that something is coming from under the slabs? Easy. Cover the slabs with sand and their margins end up clean. Something emerges from beneath to clean just the outlines, as seen in this image from Sol 541:
[url]http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/gallery/all/1/n/541/1N176215431EFF57PYP1607L0M1.JPG[/url]
Look left of center at the slabs. Did wind selectively blow off just the edges? No. Steam or water emerging from beneath did it.
Finally (because I really don't have the time or inclination to post hundreds of images and explanations) I will wrap this up with spray zone from a geyser just inside Endurance Crater.
[url]http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/gallery/all/1/p/097/1P136806450EFF2002P2294L2M1.JPG[/url]
The water has sprayed up and onto the soil, creating a bowl shaped washout area. If you want full stereo and color (plus the image containing both geyser and spray area) along with full color and stereo images of the geyser itself, I will gladly supply them.
Next point.
Dr. Skeptic wrote:
[quote]you would also need to explain the uniform layering of the H20 in the sand[/quote]
The water is not uniform, it is throughout the soil. The heating is episodic and occurs over the seasons. As heat diffuses into the soil, it melts ice crystals and forms the layered appearance. Note that the layers are conformal with the dunes- start from the top and go down and they match the dune tops.
[url]http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/gallery/all/1/n/562/1N178076621EFF5900P1875L0M1.JPG[/url]
Note how as the dune height changes, the layer height matches them. If layering happened first, it would conform to the bedrock layer, but it does not. How about this one?
[url]http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/gallery/all/1/n/576/1N179322831EFF59BJP1775L0M1.JPG[/url]
You will notice two interesting things. One, the layering is preferentially on [i]the right sides of the dunes![/i] Two, the layering is different on one side from the other. This means that the layers formed after the dunes. Do you know why they layer this way? This is very simple. Any experience with soil hydrology will tell you.
Wind moves through the soil and drives moisture to the lee side. Wind pressure forces the water that is liquid to migrate away from the wind. This is a known factor and here we see proof of it on Mars. Sand is porous and wind can in fact exert a large differential pressure on a sand dune. Here it is in spades.
Next point.
Dr. Skeptic wrote:
[quote]explain why the H2O is not evaporating[/quote]
No, that has already been explained by others far more qualified and many times. It does not evaporate because the relative humidity is nearly 100%. The air is already loaded with as much moisture as it can carry, and even with advection there cannot be any more evaporation. Just as you can only dissolve so much sugar in water, you can also only carry so much moisture in a mass of air. Afterwards, no more sugar will dissolve, and no more water will evaporate.
[url]http://dailyheadlines.uark.edu/5717.htm[/url]
Dr. Gil Levin has also done the experiments and shown the same results. The rate of evaporation is between 0.8 and 1.1 millimeters per hour under Mars temperatures and pressures. In the soil, where the surface of the granules prevents evaporation and there is a large quantity of salts, the rates are far, far lower. If you continue to insist that liquid water cannot exist on Mars, then you are just plain wrong. Sorry.
Dr. Skeptic wrote:
[quote]why the capillary effect isn't making the H2O layers bleed into other layers[/quote]
It does. Note the different layering in the above NASA/JPL image showing the differences from front to back of the dune. Broad stripes of melted water diffusing into other zones, limited by freezing temperatures and heating, produces the stripes.
Dr. Skeptic wrote:
[quote]why the different layers seen to erode at the same rate [/quote]
How can you tell what the rate of erosion is? The layers form in the dunes, sometimes the dunes blow around and new layers form. This is a dynamic system, not a static snapshot.
Dr. Skeptic wrote:
[quote]why the layers are uniform independent of solar angle[/quote]
Look at how heat flows through a triangular cross section. Heat takes time to travel through materials, and when the ice does melt, the latent heat is still present in the water as it is blown through the soil or as it seeps into the dune. Sun angle can change significantly while the heat remains soaking into the sand.
Dr. Skeptic wrote:
[quote]and I can come up with more problems with your theory if you'd like[/quote]
...and I can answer them. Gladly.