Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta mars. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta mars. Mostrar todas las entradas

miércoles, 10 de septiembre de 2025

Mars Might Be Speaking to Us: Possible Traces of Life in Young Rocks

 Today, the Perseverance rover surprised us with a discovery from Mars: in a region called Bright Angel, it found mineral patterns in rocks that might be traces of ancient microbial life. These “leopard spots” contain vivianite and greigite—two minerals that, on Earth, often appear near decaying organic matter or in environments where microbes thrive.

What’s fascinating is that these minerals seem to have formed through chemical reactions between sediment and organic compounds—a process some microbes use to generate energy. While there are non-biological ways to produce these minerals, the Martian rocks don’t show signs of extreme heat or acidity, making a biological origin more plausible.

This finding challenges the idea that only the oldest rocks could hold signs of life. Younger rocks might have been habitable too, expanding our timeline for when life could have existed on Mars.

As a science communicator, I love sharing discoveries like this with learners of all ages. In class, we describe it as Mars leaving behind chemical breadcrumbs—possibly dropped by ancient microbes. And while we can’t yet confirm life existed, each clue brings us closer to answering the big question: Are we alone?




AI generated image copalit

lunes, 1 de abril de 2024

Though of day, Roman Republic reached the 21st

The other day I was talking on a podcast about time travel and parallel universes and during the conversation it occurred to me that there may be a parallel universe in which the Roman Republic reached the 21st century and has its first colonies on the planet Mars in the year 2030.

So I have asked Copilot's artificial intelligence to make me an image representing that parallel universe. Tell me what you think?


I liked it.













lunes, 27 de agosto de 2018

This is all the images that I have taken of the opposition of the planet Mars in 2018 you can see how it approaches
I hope you like them












miércoles, 1 de agosto de 2018

Photos of Mars on July 31

This time we can distinguish the south pole of Mars, but I'll try one more time.


File Data



Photo by: Francisco Silva
Scheduled by: You
Observation date: Tuesday, July 31, 2018
Observation time: 2:33am EDT / 11:33pm PDT / 06:33 UTC
Observatory: Slooh Chile
Telescope: Chile One
Instrument: Chile Ultra Wide-Field



Photo by: Francisco Silva
Scheduled by: You
Observation date: Tuesday, July 31, 2018
Observation time: 2:35am EDT / 11:35pm PDT / 06:35 UTC
Observatory: Slooh Chile
Telescope: Chile One
Instrument: Chile Wide-Field



Photo by: Francisco Silva
Scheduled by: You
Observation date: Tuesday, July 31, 2018
Observation time: 2:38am EDT / 11:38pm PDT / 06:38 UTC
Observatory: Slooh Chile
Telescope: Chile One
Instrument: Chile Wide-Field

martes, 31 de julio de 2018

Photos of Mars on July 30

This is my second attempt to Mars, which has me very tired, he decided to have a big storm on a planetary scale not allowing to see details of the surface, I will try again one of these days.

File Data



Photo by: Francisco Silva
Scheduled by: You
Observation date: Monday, July 30, 2018
Observation time: 2:08am EDT / 11:08pm PDT / 06:08 UTC
Observatory: Slooh Chile
Telescope: Chile One
Instrument: Chile Ultra Wide-Fiel



Photo by: Francisco Silva
Scheduled by: You
Observation date: Monday, July 30, 2018
Observation time: 2:09am EDT / 11:09pm PDT / 06:09 UTC
Observatory: Slooh Chile
Telescope: Chile One
Instrument: Chile Wide-Field



Photo by: Francisco Silva
Scheduled by: You
Observation date: Monday, July 30, 2018
Observation time: 2:11am EDT / 11:11pm PDT / 06:11 UTC
Observatory: Slooh Chile
Telescope: Chile One
Instrument: Chile Wide-Field

lunes, 11 de junio de 2018

Mars in June

File Data






Photo by: Francisco Silva
Observation date: Tuesday, May 29, 2018
Observation time: 11:20pm EDT / 8:20pm PDT / 03:20 UTC
Observatory: Slooh Canary Islands
Telescope: Canary Four
Instrument: Canary Solar System


Photo by: Francisco Silva
Observation date: Tuesday, May 29, 2018
Observation time: 11:20pm EDT / 8:20pm PDT / 03:20 UTC
Observatory: Slooh Canary Islands
Telescope: Canary Four
Instrument: Canary Solar System


Photo by: Francisco Silva
Observation date: Tuesday, May 29, 2018
Observation time: 11:19pm EDT / 8:19pm PDT / 03:19 UTC
Observatory: Slooh Canary Islands
Telescope: Canary Four
Instrument: Canary Solar System


Photo by: Francisco Silva
Observation date: Tuesday, May 29, 2018
Observation time: 11:19pm EDT / 8:19pm PDT / 03:19 UTC
Observatory: Slooh Canary Islands
Telescope: Canary Four
Instrument: Canary Solar System



Photo by: Francisco Silva
Observation date: Tuesday, May 29, 2018
Observation time: 11:19pm EDT / 8:19pm PDT / 03:19 UTC
Observatory: Slooh Canary Islands
Telescope: Canary Four
Instrument: Canary Solar System

miércoles, 6 de octubre de 2010

Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea- Julio Verne

Título original: Vingt mille lieues sous les mars.

Attention, the book has a sequel and is called The Mysterious Island

In the year 1866, I was marked by a special event, something unexplained and inexplicable that no one has forgotten. Put aside the rumors which agitated people overexcite ports and public opinion of the continents, boats, foremen and patterns in Europe and Asia, the Navy officers from all countries and governments of the various states the two continents were delivered to the event.

But this increased when the boat Scotland on 13 April 1867, being quietly at sea felt like something he stumbled so mild that notice not only in the engine room, install a des because they informed the captain the boat capsized.

Logically this news was the straw that broke the camel because the phenomenon was becoming hostile, which led to the US Navy for a boat will give chase, this is where comes in three characters that does not leave the scene until the end of the book being Professor Aronnax, his assistant Conseil and the harpooner Ned Land, the professor and his assistant invite you to take part in this expedition while I was harpooner crew. After walking to several leagues across the ocean, they encountered the monster or the artifact but when he was attacked by throwing on the deck with water pipes and power such that in just a second half cuvette do deserted of staff. This boat shot Ned Land and Conseil Aronnx, after a long night was rescued by him showed.

What did they discover? He showed that he is a machine driven by electricity, built by human hands be defying all physical and chemical law. A machine that can soak up to 19 000 leagues withstand pressures impressive variants as well as ocean temperatures and deep seas that could be hot or cold, can be without renewing your indoor air up to 72 hours, and have a capacity for a crew of 600 men, who need to take food, clothing, paper, ink, snuff, and a large etc. Of the land and the sea that provides all you need for it to be rare or unique.

But who had built, where and in charge of this machine who was? Soon discover… The first is that the monster is called Nautilus and Captain Nemo who built them. And this moment des begin a travel through the imagination of this cold man running along the Pacific, the Indian Ocean, the Red Sea, the Mediterranean, the Atlantic, the Southern and northern seas. And visiting the submarine hunt, the Torres Strait, the savages of Papua, the grounding, the coral cemetery, the passage of Suez, imprisonment in the ice, Santoril Island, Vigo Bay, Atlantis, pack ice, the South Pole, the struggle of the Octopus, the tempest of the Gulf Stream, the Avenger ... And that horrible wreck scene with his crew ...! All these events were held in ten months and around the globe with a total of 20 000 Leagues.

Nemo being my favorite character, deserves more description carved. A disciple of Gratioler or Engen had read in his face like an open book. I certainly recognize its key qualities: confidence, as their head stood nobly in the arc formed by the line of the shoulders, and his dark eyes were cold security; calm, as their skin, pale rather than colored, announcing the tranquility of the blood; the value, finally, for his wide breath denoted a vital expansion.

I would add that this man was proud, his gaze reviewed seemed to reflect lofty thoughts, and that of cough this set, the homogeneity of expression in the actions of body and face, following the observation of physiognomy, was an undeniable frankness.