Felíz Año y Marte para empezar.

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Earthscapes
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Felíz Año y Marte para empezar.

Mensajepor Earthscapes » 01 Ene 2008, 07:48

¡Felíz Año y Buenos Cielos a toda la ASOCIACION HUBBLE! , y en especial al Subforo de Sistema Solar y Planetas. :wav:

Son los deseos de Earthscapes, desde Lima Norte (Perú), siendo la 1:40 am del 01 de Enero del 2008. :hello1: :D


Depósitos estratificados y casquete residual del Polo Sur Marciano.
Imagen

HiRISE escribió:A wide variety of south polar terrains are on display in this spectacular HiRISE color image. The reddish material in the upper two thirds of the image is the south polar layered deposits (SPLD). These deposits are a stack of layered, dusty water ice. Scientists believe that these layers record previous climatic conditions on Mars, much like terrestrial ice-sheets provide a record of climate change on the Earth.

This image shows the face of one of the many scarps or shallow cliffs that cut into the polar layered deposits. These scarps expose the internal layers within the SPLD. You can see these climate-recording layers in the upper two thirds of the image running from lower-left to upper-right.

The terrain in the lower third of the image is quite different in both appearance and composition. The bright, white-ish material is a thin covering of carbon dioxide ice draped over the flat areas of the SPLD. This covering of carbon dioxide is being eroded away by expanding flat-floored pits. Parts of the floors of these pits show the reddish brown coloring of the underlying polar layered deposits. These pits have eroded the carbon dioxide ice layer to such an extent that only isolated mesas remain today and even these shrink in extent by a few meters each year.

These mesas also have several layers within them, indicting that they likely contain a climatic record, albeit a much shorter one than preserved in the SPLD. Most of the isolated mesas have white-ish tops; however, some (near the foot of the SPLD scarp) have reddish tops. This may either be due to bright carbon dioxide ice thinning to reveal the older (and darker) carbon dioxide ice that makes up the main body of the mesa, or perhaps dust has settled out of the atmosphere to cover the brighter frost. There was a large Martian dust storm earlier this year which could have caused either effect.


Que tal barrido de la MRO. 8)

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kabotida
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Mensajepor kabotida » 01 Ene 2008, 09:26

Feliz Año y mejores cielos para ti tambien Earthscapes, es un placer volverte a ver por estos pagos.
Meade LB 12"; Bresser Messier 152 R; SW MAK 150/1800; SkyMaster 15x70; HEQ5 Pro; Bresser Mon-2 (Eq5); y un montón de trastos más.

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Comiqueso
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Mensajepor Comiqueso » 01 Ene 2008, 10:59

Seguro que son depositos estratificados... Pero del chocolate de la tarta :lol: :lol:

Vale, es broma. Otra magnifica toma, Earh. Y a ver si te dejan poner mas :razz:
Takahashi TOA 130 NS y FSQ85
Radian 5mm; Ethos 21,17 y 13mm
Losmandy G11+Gemini
CCD Atik 11000, Color :P
ASI 1600 MCC

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javiercapitan
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Mensajepor javiercapitan » 01 Ene 2008, 13:37

Feliz 2008 a tod@s! :D

tetemikele
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Mensajepor tetemikele » 01 Ene 2008, 19:38

Feliz año 2008 granujas

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