by henk21cm » Sun Jun 22, 2008 2:17 pm
starnut wrote:How many thousands of feet above Earth's sea level would Mars' surface atmospheric pressure be equivalent to?
35 km. The average temperature at 35 km height baove the earth is about 230 K. (Page F168 handbook of chemistry and physics)
At Phoenix' landing site the daytime temperature is about 200K, nighttime 175K. (
Nasa site?)
Split up the two images of the
Vanishing act. Determined the horizontal and vertical shift between both and shifted one of them back. Then stored both images to disk. When you load these into a viewer and switch back and forward, a few things are visible.
- In the shade, left bottom of the trench, some items disappear.
- At the top of the trench the white area is getting darker.
- Between the shade and the white area, along the right edge of the left trench (i can see three overlapping trenches) in the sunlit part something disappeared.
- Along the right edge of the middle trench in the center of the pit something, a pebble sized item, has changed as well.
- The slope of the trench at the bottom of the picture is stable. Minute changes in light intensity can be contributed to a different heigth of the sun.
- The images are rotated slightly with respect to each other.
- (Controversial)The dark region in the shade, bottom left, seems to have grown, after 4 days, like a stain on the ceiling, when your roof is leaking.
Item 1 is most intriguing. Like item 2, it might be a case of changing colour, getting darker. When i compare item 1 with item 2, what i see is only a slight darkening of the white area (item 2), whereas item 1 seems to be disappeared completely. By no means item 7 implies that water is leaking out of the soil, although the analogy is striking, an error due to the limitations of the human mind.
Question. How can i share these shifted images with you? I do not have an URL, since i do not have access to a website.
[quote="starnut"]How many thousands of feet above Earth's sea level would Mars' surface atmospheric pressure be equivalent to? [/quote]
35 km. The average temperature at 35 km height baove the earth is about 230 K. (Page F168 handbook of chemistry and physics)
At Phoenix' landing site the daytime temperature is about 200K, nighttime 175K. ([url=http://phoenix.lpl.arizona.edu/mars101.php]Nasa site?[/url])
Split up the two images of the [url=http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap080621.html]Vanishing act[/url]. Determined the horizontal and vertical shift between both and shifted one of them back. Then stored both images to disk. When you load these into a viewer and switch back and forward, a few things are visible.
[list=1][*]In the shade, left bottom of the trench, some items disappear.
[*]At the top of the trench the white area is getting darker.
[*]Between the shade and the white area, along the right edge of the left trench (i can see three overlapping trenches) in the sunlit part something disappeared.
[*]Along the right edge of the middle trench in the center of the pit something, a pebble sized item, has changed as well.
[*]The slope of the trench at the bottom of the picture is stable. Minute changes in light intensity can be contributed to a different heigth of the sun.
[*]The images are rotated slightly with respect to each other.
[*](Controversial)The dark region in the shade, bottom left, seems to have grown, after 4 days, like a stain on the ceiling, when your roof is leaking. [/list]
Item 1 is most intriguing. Like item 2, it might be a case of changing colour, getting darker. When i compare item 1 with item 2, what i see is only a slight darkening of the white area (item 2), whereas item 1 seems to be disappeared completely. By no means item 7 implies that water is leaking out of the soil, although the analogy is striking, an error due to the limitations of the human mind.
[u]Question[/u]. How can i share these shifted images with you? I do not have an URL, since i do not have access to a website.