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Astronomers Hunt Martian Water From Earth

The dark markings resemble those seen at visible wavelengths, but the south polar cap (at the bottom of the picture) is less prominent as its ice absorbs at infrared wavelengths. The slight green colour around the polar cap is a result of ice absorption. The image was obtained with the UIST (UKIRT imager spectrometer) instrument on the 3.8-m United Kingdom Infrared Telescope (UKIRT). It is a composite of three narrowband-filter images at wavelengths of 1.57, 1.64 and 2.12 micrometres in the near infrared.
Sydney - Aug 28, 2003
As Mars makes its closest approach in almost 60,000 years, two Australian astronomers have used the United Kingdom Infrared Telescope (UKIRT) in Hawai'i to look for signs that the planet once had liquid water - and so may have hosted life.

Dr. Jeremy Bailey of the Anglo-Australian Observatory and the Australian Centre for Astrobiology (ACA) at Macquarie University in Sydney, and Sarah Chamberlain, a PhD student at the ACA, have produced what is Bailey says is "perhaps the sharpest image of Mars ever made from the ground."

But the real gold lies in the spectral data they obtained.

The scientists are applying the same remote-sensing technique that geologists use to map minerals on the Earth's surface.

Minerals absorb some wavelengths from sunshine and reflect others. Each mineral has its own 'spectral signature' - the set of wavelengths it reflects.

"We're looking particularly for the signatures of minerals, such as hydrated clay minerals, that would indicate the past presence of liquid water," said Bailey.

Similar prospecting by NASA's Mars Odyssey spacecraft has shown that there is a vast amount of hydrogen below the surface of Mars. The consensus has been that this is probably water ice.

But did Mars ever have liquid water? And if so, how much? It's still contentious.

NASA's Mars Global Surveyor has found sizeable deposits of a mineral called crystalline (grey) hematite, which forms only in the presence of liquid water.

NASA's two Mars Exploration Rovers, due to land on the Martian surface in January 2004, and the UK lander Beagle 2, due to land in December this year, will also be looking for signs that Mars has had liquid water.

"While spacecraft can get up close, ground-based observations still have a role, as they allow us to use larger and more powerful instruments," said Bailey.

Observations: Jeremy Bailey (Anglo-Australian Observatory and Australian Centre for Astrobiology, Macquarie University) and Sarah Chamberlain (Australian Centre for Astrobiology, Macquarie University). Data processing: Chris J. Davis, Joint Astronomy Centre, Hawai'i.

Related Links
Australian Centre for Astrobiology
Anglo-Australian Observatory
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New Findings Could Dash Hopes For Past Oceans On Mars
Tempe - Aug 26, 2003
After a decades-long quest, scientists analyzing data from NASA's Mars Global Surveyor spacecraft have at last found critical evidence the spacecraft's infrared spectrometer instrument was built to search for: the presence of water-related carbonate minerals on the surface of Mars.



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