ScienceIQ.com

A Continent In Deep Freeze

The continent of Antarctica is home to a uniquely beautiful and harsh environment that has changed little in the last 30 million years. The continent, approximately twice the size of Australia, lies mainly within the Antarctic circle and is surrounded by ocean. It is covered almost entirely by a sheet of ice and snow which has an average thickness ...

Continue reading...

AContinentInDeepFreeze
Astronomy

Will the Sun Shine Forever?

The Sun is a huge nuclear furnace. It operates by converting hydrogen into helium. In this process, which is called nuclear fusion, it loses mass and produces energy according to Einstein's famous ... Continue reading

SunLifetime
Physics

Single Molecule Electroluminescence

Incandescence and luminescence are two main ways of producing light. In incandescence, electric current is passed through a conductor (filament of a light bulb for example). The resistance to the ... Continue reading

Electroluminescence
Engineering

For Want Of An O-Ring

Who can forget the Challenger disaster of 1986, the culprit, a failed O-ring. But what exactly is an O-ring and how did it cause the destruction of this space shuttle? When surfaces are flat, gaskets ... Continue reading

ForWantOfAnORing
Biology

What's Blindsight?

Some people become blind after suffering an injury to their primary visual cortex at the back of their brain. Since the visual processing part of their brain is damaged, they can't see. Or can they? ... Continue reading

Blindsight

Two Face? Absolutely!

TwoFaceAbsolutelyDuring the Viking missions to Mars in the mid 1970s, the planet was imaged from orbit by the Viking 1 and 2 Orbiters. These spacecraft returned images of regions of the planet that, while similar to geological features on Earth, are vastly different. One of the areas viewed by the Viking 1 Orbiter as it searched for potential landing sites was a flat-topped elevated area known as Cydonia. This is a mid-northern latitude (40.9oN, 9.45oW) area of low-lying hills, buttes, and mesas approximately 854 km across with a few impact craters. Among the hills and rocks is a weathered formation about 1.5 km across that quickly caught the attention of NASA scientists when the only picture taken by the Viking Orbiter of that area was examined. The formation somewhat resembled a face.

Images from NASA missions are routinely made available to the public and, as the Viking Mission at Mars progressed, NASA scientists wanted to release images that not only provided an insight into the complexities of the mission but also would help to make Mars appear a little more familiar. And what could be more familiar to people than a natural rock formation that resembled a face, like the 'Old Man in the Mountain' in New Hampshire, which by the way now graces the back of one of the new quarters. What NASA did not expect was the heated debate, lasting nearly 3 decades, over the origin of the formation. To some, the Cydonia Mesa was artificial, made by someone, while others argued that it was natural, simply an effect created by the rocks and long shadows caused by the low angle of Sun over the Martian horizon. Recent images from the Mars Global Surveyor show the formation to be nothing more than a weathered rock formation.

Interestingly, there is another, much larger, rock formation that does resemble a face. Lying about 90 degrees south of the Cydonia formation is a very large impact basin (868 km diameter) named the Argyre Planitia (low plains). While the floor of the basin is relatively smooth due to flooding from lava flows, numerous smaller impact craters surround it. One of these is the large crater Galle (230 km diameter), named after the discoverer of the planet Neptune. Crater Galle is very conspicuous in its appearance, looking quite a bit like a 'happy face'.