iamlucky13 wrote:It's almost amusing they worked hard to design a lightweight arm that could dig half a meter through packed clay to find ice...they found it after only 5 cm. They hardly dug at all.
Two comments:
1. Overkill is a good thing. I went to the ballgame the other night, and my team won 9-1. I didn't say they should have saved some runs for another game when they need them. I enjoyed the prosperity while it was unfolding in front of me.
2. If you're impressed by what they found at 5 cm, just wait until you see what you get at 50. Or maybe you'll be disappointed, but I bet they run into some surprise or head scratcher for you.
bystander wrote:They must certainly be better at hiding than the inhabitants of previously the fifth planet. Look what happened to it, scattered everywhere.
Asteroid Belt link (Wikipedia)
Ceres link (Hubble)
Ceres link (The Planetary Society)
Ceres accounts for 1/3 of the mass of the Asteroid belt. Yet it has only 1.3% of the Moon's mass and 3% of the Earth's surface gravity. So there's not enough material in the Asteroid belt to account for a former planet large enough to support an atmosphere and aerobic life. But if we postulate anaerobic life on Former Planet 5, we can also make it bioluminescent so there need be no light bulb changing.
Ceres itself looks round and intact, and is thought to have (frozen) water.
More Ceres:
http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap060821.html
http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap070622.html
Now comes the inevitable digression. I was reading all those asteroid articles I linked, and found a forgotten favorite old word. I once wrote a reggae song around the word "
planetesimal" because I liked the musical sound of its syllables. The song was actually performed for a brief time by a band consisting primarily of employees of the Hubble Space Telescope Science Institute. (Who else will play your astronomy songs, and how else can this be about astronomy?) The neighborhood in the Asteroid belt is "Dread Rock", and our reggae miner is "Dread Flintstone" who, it seems, is the one responsible for all the destruction in the Asteroid belt as described in Verse 2:
"De sun be shinin' all de day an' all de night, mon
Find de planetesimal an' set de dynamite, on
T'ree we push de plunger an' we watch de explosi-on
Catchin' all de pieces den we bringin' all de booty on in"
[quote="iamlucky13"]It's almost amusing they worked hard to design a lightweight arm that could dig half a meter through packed clay to find ice...they found it after only 5 cm. They hardly dug at all.[/quote]
Two comments:
1. Overkill is a good thing. I went to the ballgame the other night, and my team won 9-1. I didn't say they should have saved some runs for another game when they need them. I enjoyed the prosperity while it was unfolding in front of me.
2. If you're impressed by what they found at 5 cm, just wait until you see what you get at 50. Or maybe you'll be disappointed, but I bet they run into some surprise or head scratcher for you.
[quote="bystander"]They must certainly be better at hiding than the inhabitants of previously the fifth planet. Look what happened to it, scattered everywhere.[/quote]
[url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asteroid_belt]Asteroid Belt link (Wikipedia)[/url]
[url=http://hubblesite.org/newscenter/archive/releases/2005/27/text/]Ceres link (Hubble)[/url]
[url=http://www.planetary.org/explore/topics/asteroids_and_comets/ceres.html]Ceres link (The Planetary Society)[/url]
Ceres accounts for 1/3 of the mass of the Asteroid belt. Yet it has only 1.3% of the Moon's mass and 3% of the Earth's surface gravity. So there's not enough material in the Asteroid belt to account for a former planet large enough to support an atmosphere and aerobic life. But if we postulate anaerobic life on Former Planet 5, we can also make it bioluminescent so there need be no light bulb changing. [url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Ceres_optimized.jpg]Ceres itself[/url] looks round and intact, and is thought to have (frozen) water.
More Ceres:
http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap060821.html
http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap070622.html
Now comes the inevitable digression. I was reading all those asteroid articles I linked, and found a forgotten favorite old word. I once wrote a reggae song around the word "[url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planetesimal]planetesimal[/url]" because I liked the musical sound of its syllables. The song was actually performed for a brief time by a band consisting primarily of employees of the Hubble Space Telescope Science Institute. (Who else will play your astronomy songs, and how else can this be about astronomy?) The neighborhood in the Asteroid belt is "Dread Rock", and our reggae miner is "Dread Flintstone" who, it seems, is the one responsible for all the destruction in the Asteroid belt as described in Verse 2:
"De sun be shinin' all de day an' all de night, mon
Find de planetesimal an' set de dynamite, on
T'ree we push de plunger an' we watch de explosi-on
Catchin' all de pieces den we bringin' all de booty on in"