Avalanche Season on Mars

Whoosh!

Avalanche clouds on Mars

It’s springtime on Mars and with it comes avalanches near the north polar cap!

The Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter HiRiSE camera team released this spectacular image of an avalanche on Mars.  The dust-like particles are hanging a few tens of meters above the surface in a rugged region near the north pole of the Red Planet.

These are likely caused when a avalanche of carbon dioxide frost slide down the steep cliff wall you see here.  The cliff itself is about 700 meters (2,000 feet) high and is a melange of layered water ice and dust. It’s very similar to what we see on Earth  near our poles (and in fact, reminds me of some snow “dunes” we have near our house that have been piled up since early in the year).  The bright stuff on the top surface is ice and frost made of carbon dioxide ice.

The cool thing about this view is that it’s helping the Mars scientists understand the processes that affect the Martian surface throughout the seasons, but especially during the freeze-and-thaw cycle that the planet experiences during late winter into spring.  The HiRiSE teams have been spotting avalanches pretty regularly, which gives them a lot to study. They now know that these things come thundering down in the middle of spring — say during the Mars equivalent of April to early May.   All together, it seems this is a regular spring process at Mars’s north pole that may be expected every year.  Now, all they have to do is figure out the sequence of events that lead to these spectacular events.  Stay tuned!

Paparazzi and the Stars

Why Does Anybody Care?

So, every few weeks I find  myself in a waiting room for some reason — a doc’s appointment, hair appointment, what have you — and I rummage through the magazines that are usually left out for us “waiters” to read.  I never find a copy of Sky & Telescope or Astronomy Magazine. It’s always something like a gossip rag with the latest breathless reportage about the sex lives of the movie stars/political establishment/megachurch pastor/you name it.

Do I read this stuff? Sure.  I call it “catching up on the literature”.  Mostly I do because I don’t otherwise get much chance to read this stuff.  I figure, if I”m going to talk about astronomy to the public, it helps to know what the public is reading about in other areas of the “information sphere” that we call “news”.  Not that everybody reads gossipy rags (or admits to it).  And, I’m not putting anyb0dy down for reading the stuff. It’s not like you can ignore the screaming headlines as you’re waiting in line at the grocery or drug store, is it?  And, there is this element of watching a disaster unfold that just sucks people in.  But, after a while, it gets kind of old. And, I don’t know about you, but I get uncomfortable having that much insight into somebody else’s marriage/family life/politics/dating partners/etc.

So, the latest “literature” is focused on a movie star and her philandering husband.  Hardly news, is it?  But, people passionately care about this stuff.  I mean, they care to the point of practically salivating over it. The comments about such stories on the news sites like CNN, etc. are a testament to people having WAY too much interest in other people’s private lives. Why?  I can’t think of anything more sad than to read breathless, titillating reporting about someone else’s misfortune, accompanied by pictures of said person snapped by a photographer who you know has been hanging out in his/her trees just waiting for the chance to invade his/her privacy.

As I see these headlines float by on the news sites, magazines, gossip rags, etc., I wonder why people don’t get as passionate about the truly interesting stuff in the universe — like the wonder of star birth?  Or the the discovery of new planets. Or the latest images from Mars or Saturn?  The cosmos has its own paparazzi taking images of it, in methodical ways that don’t invade privacy or raise a stink about whether or not so-and-so is going to sleep with so-and-so and when.  And, to my way of thinking, that stuff is way more interesting than whether or not Britney/Sandra/Jerry/Jim/whoever are getting divorced/overfed/sued/whatever.

Or am I just a hopeless geek?

Exploring Science and the Cosmos

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