How do they know it's water ice instead of dry ice?Proof! YES!
$450 million to find out there's water on Mars, something they've been 95% sure of for several years.Very exciting news. For all those that said this would fail,![]()
Why am I not laughing?
I'm not looking down at, or dismissing anyone's opinion. I just can't get excited about spending millions to prove what we already know, and what doesn't make any difference anyway.Why am I not laughing?
If I had to guess, I'd say because of the weird angle while looking down your nose at CaptainDonovin.
It's an important discovery. Cut him a break.
I'm not looking down at, or dismissing anyone's opinion. I just can't get excited about spending millions to prove what we already know, and what doesn't make any difference anyway.Why am I not laughing?
If I had to guess, I'd say because of the weird angle while looking down your nose at CaptainDonovin.
It's an important discovery. Cut him a break.
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Of course, but I don't appreciate the 'need' to confirm it. Which of the World's problems is going to be resolved because we know water is on Mars?Wouldn't you want to be pretty sure before spending all that money on confirming it?
A major technical accomplishment for sure, but unless you plan on living on Mars I don't really see the significance, and I'm not optimistic about the colonization of Mars... ever.Getting a probe to the surface to prove that the white stuff up there really is water? Major, major accomplishment for mankind.
A major technical accomplishment for sure, but unless you plan on living on Mars I don't really see the significance, and I'm not optimistic about the colonization of Mars... ever.Getting a probe to the surface to prove that the white stuff up there really is water? Major, major accomplishment for mankind.
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There are many places on Earth much more hospitable to human life than Mars, and we don't live there. Why would you want to live on mars when you can just move to the Antarctic desert?Why not?I'm not optimistic about the colonization of Mars... ever.
A major technical accomplishment for sure, but unless you plan on living on Mars I don't really see the significance, and I'm not optimistic about the colonization of Mars... ever.Getting a probe to the surface to prove that the white stuff up there really is water? Major, major accomplishment for mankind.
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Why not?
There are many places on Earth much more hospitable to human life than Mars, and we don't live there. Why would you want to live on mars when you can just move to the Antarctic desert?
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He didn't use my tax money to fund his expedition.*shrug* Edmund Hillary decided to camp on Everest and climb itWhy would you want to live on mars when you can just move to the Antarctic desert?
The sarcasm is hardly necessary. You have your opinions, while others have theirs. The needs of Earth are legion, but they include the need to explore and learn and achieve. And dream.Nevertheless, I'm happy for you guys. There's ice on Mars!
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Practical interstellar travel, however unlikely or impossible it may be, will b e built upon the steps taken today. That may well include establishing an outpost on Mars or the Moon. If water can be found there, it makes such a venture more possible because less water will have to be taken in transit."We certainly expected to find ice there," said Bruce Jakosky, a geologist at the University of Colorado who has been involved with past missions to the red planet. "It was the [previous] evidence for ice that sent us to that location. But there's a difference between expecting it and finding."
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