Torna indietro   Hardware Upgrade Forum > Off Topic > Discussioni Off Topic > Scienza e tecnica

Cineca inaugura Pitagora, il supercomputer Lenovo per la ricerca sulla fusione nucleare
Cineca inaugura Pitagora, il supercomputer Lenovo per la ricerca sulla fusione nucleare
Realizzato da Lenovo e installato presso il Cineca di Casalecchio di Reno, Pitagora offre circa 44 PFlop/s di potenza di calcolo ed è dedicato alla simulazione della fisica del plasma e allo studio dei materiali avanzati per la fusione, integrandosi nell’ecosistema del Tecnopolo di Bologna come infrastruttura strategica finanziata da EUROfusion e gestita in collaborazione con ENEA
Mova Z60 Ultra Roller Complete: pulisce bene grazie anche all'IA
Mova Z60 Ultra Roller Complete: pulisce bene grazie anche all'IA
Rullo di lavaggio dei pavimenti abbinato a un potente motore da 28.000 Pa e a bracci esterni che si estendono: queste, e molte altre, le caratteristiche tecniche di Z60 Ultra Roller Complete, l'ultimo robot di Mova che pulisce secondo le nostre preferenze oppure lasciando far tutto alla ricca logica di intelligenza artificiale integrata
Renault Twingo E-Tech Electric: che prezzo!
Renault Twingo E-Tech Electric: che prezzo!
Renault annuncia la nuova vettura compatta del segmento A, che strizza l'occhio alla tradizione del modello abbinandovi una motorizzazione completamente elettrica e caratteristiche ideali per i tragitti urbani. Renault Twingo E-Tech Electric punta su abitabilità, per una lunghezza di meno di 3,8 metri, abbinata a un prezzo di lancio senza incentivi di 20.000€
Tutti gli articoli Tutte le news

Vai al Forum
Rispondi
 
Strumenti
Old 20-03-2008, 23:02   #1
dantes76
Senior Member
 
L'Avatar di dantes76
 
Iscritto dal: Dec 2002
Città: AnTuDo ---------- Messaggi Totali: 10196
Messaggi: 1521
Scientists discover signs of ancient life on Mars

Quote:
Scientists discover signs of ancient life on Mars
Satellite imagery reveals thick salt deposits scattered across planet
By Dave Mosher
Space.com
updated 2:47 p.m. ET March 20, 2008

For the first time, satellite imagery reveals thick Martian salt deposits scattered across the planet's southern surface, which one planetary scientist claims could be sites of ancient life.

The mats of sodium chloride — the same taste-enhancing mineral found on your kitchen table — serve as more evidence of Mars' watery past, and researchers think the briney pools that made them could have been hospitable to life.

"If you're trying to find life on Mars, the more and different places that exist, the better the chances are that one of them is going to have the right conditions," said Phil Christensen, a planetary geologist at Arizona State University. "It takes a lot of water to form salt, so this is another place to look."

Christensen, who co-authored a March 21st study in the journal Science detailing the findings, said the salt deposits are a clear sign of water's past presence, adding that they could be the most welcoming environment for life on Mars yet discovered.

Take a chance
Christensen said the salt deposits probably formed from dried-up brine pools, which would not have been as acidic as other places on Mars where water is thought to have existed, such as clay and hydrated mineral deposits.

Sites such as those found by the Mars Exploration Rovers show sulfur in high levels, which means any water there may have been too harsh to support life.

"That's not the case with salt deposits, because they tend to not be acidic," Christensen said.

He added that some of the oldest organisms ever discovered on Earth have been found locked away in salt crystals, and that there may be Martian life forms entombed in the new crumbly flats that are about 3 to 10 feet (1 to 3 meters) thick.

"Salt is a fantastically good preserver, so maybe there's not only life but also organic compounds preserved there," Christensen told Space.com. "We need to send a rover to these places. I hope some day we will explore these salt sites on the ground."

Transparent treasure
Christensen said the route to identifying the salt deposits, thought to be more than 3.5 billion Earth years old, wasn't easy.

"Salt, it turns out, is pretty hard to detect," Christensen said, explaining that light analysis, or spectroscopy, of the mineral doesn't often show clear-cut signatures in satellite data. "They're actually very transparent, so there's generally a lot of difficulty in identifying them."

Using the Mars Odyssey orbiter's Thermal Emmission Imaging System, the research team found dozens of strange sites in a belt just south of Mars' equator. Christensen said it took them a couple of years to figure out what, exactly, they were.

"Once we realized we were looking at a transparent mineral, the light bulbs in our heads went off," he said. "When you look at the sites with visual satellite images, they look all the world like dried-up salt flats."

Salty skepticism?
Christensen said a handful of planetary scientists are likely to be skeptical of his team's conclusion, but noted that a large majority should be on board.

"The spectroscopy of these salt sites is complicated, so I don't expect everyone will agree with us," he said. "Salts do this bizarre thing to spectrographs, so we have to do more singing and dancing to make the case."

In any event, Christensen said the sites he and his team have pinpointed are worthy of future investigation, especially if other ancient Martian water sites don't pan out to support life.

"I always worry that someone will say that's the end of the story for life on Mars if that happens," Christensen said. "I think these salt sites are really exciting. They may give us the best chance yet of finding something."

NASA funded the work by Christensen and his team.
© 2007 Space.com. All rights reserved. More from Space.com.
URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/23728597/
__________________
“ Fiat iustitia, et pereat mundus”-המעז מנצח -
dantes76 è offline   Rispondi citando il messaggio o parte di esso
 Rispondi


Cineca inaugura Pitagora, il supercomputer Lenovo per la ricerca sulla fusione nucleare Cineca inaugura Pitagora, il supercomputer Lenov...
Mova Z60 Ultra Roller Complete: pulisce bene grazie anche all'IA Mova Z60 Ultra Roller Complete: pulisce bene gra...
Renault Twingo E-Tech Electric: che prezzo! Renault Twingo E-Tech Electric: che prezzo!
Il cuore digitale di F1 a Biggin Hill: l'infrastruttura Lenovo dietro la produzione media Il cuore digitale di F1 a Biggin Hill: l'infrast...
DJI Osmo Mobile 8: lo stabilizzatore per smartphone con tracking multiplo e asta telescopica DJI Osmo Mobile 8: lo stabilizzatore per smartph...
Apple si ispirerà a Nothing? Back...
Da Intel ad AMD, il grande salto di Kulk...
Velocità 12 volte superiore a que...
Una piccola Morte Nera è gi&agrav...
Sei frodi che minacciano gli utenti nel ...
BioShock 4: Take-Two rassicura sullo svi...
Tesla, Musk promette FSD 'quasi pronto' ...
BioWare conferma: il nuovo Mass Effect &...
5 robot aspirapolvere di fascia alta in ...
Xiaomi Redmi Note 14 5G a 179€ è ...
Veri affari con gli sconti de 15% Amazon...
Tutti gli iPhone 16 128GB a 699€, 16e a ...
Take-Two ammette: vendite di Borderlands...
Tutti i Macbook Air e Pro con chip M4 ch...
GeForce RTX 50 SUPER: non cancellate, ma...
Chromium
GPU-Z
OCCT
LibreOffice Portable
Opera One Portable
Opera One 106
CCleaner Portable
CCleaner Standard
Cpu-Z
Driver NVIDIA GeForce 546.65 WHQL
SmartFTP
Trillian
Google Chrome Portable
Google Chrome 120
VirtualBox
Tutti gli articoli Tutte le news Tutti i download

Strumenti

Regole
Non Puoi aprire nuove discussioni
Non Puoi rispondere ai messaggi
Non Puoi allegare file
Non Puoi modificare i tuoi messaggi

Il codice vB è On
Le Faccine sono On
Il codice [IMG] è On
Il codice HTML è Off
Vai al Forum


Tutti gli orari sono GMT +1. Ora sono le: 16:39.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Served by www3v