Friday, May 13, 2022

Cobra Snake

 Reptiles

   Cobra

   snake



  


  

   Cobras, any of the various species of highly venomous snakes, most of which spread their ribs to form hoods.  Although the hood is a characteristic of the cobra, they do not all have a deep connection.  Cobras are found from South Africa through South Asia to the islands of Southeast Asia.  Throughout their range, various species of snakes are a favorite, frightening them into managing their defensive posture.  The snake swings in response to the movement and perhaps to the music of the charmer, who knows how to avoid a relatively slow strike and who may have pulled out the snake's teeth.  In the front of the mouth, small teeth have a closed duct, which releases toxins.  Cobra venom usually contains neurotoxins that are active against the prey's nervous system - mainly small snakes and other snakes.  Biting, especially from large species, can be fatal depending on the amount of poison.  Neurotoxins affect breathing, and although antivirals are effective, they should be given immediately after a bite.  Thousands die each year in South and Southeast Asia.


   Cobra

   The largest venomous snake in the world is the King Cobra, or Hamdriad (Ophio Figus hanna).  Found in forests from India to Southeast Asia to the Philippines and Indonesia, it preys mainly on other snakes.  The maximum verified length is 5.6 meters (18 feet), but not more than 3.6 meters (12 feet) at most.  King cobras protect the nest of 20 to 40 eggs, which are housed in a mound of leaves collected by the female.  If a hunter or someone comes too close, the guardian parents will attack.  Not all cobras are egg layers.



   King Cobra, the world's largest venomous snake.

  


   King Cobra

 

   Watch the Herpes Pest Mango attack and kill its common prey, a venomous Asian cobra.

   A mangosteen (herpes) attacks an Asian cobra (Naja Naja).

  

   

   The Indian cobra (or Indian-eyed cobra, naja naja) was formerly considered to be the same species, with a distribution similar to that of the king cobra.  Recently, however, biologists have discovered that there are about a dozen species in Asia, some of which are poisonous and some not.  They vary in size (mostly between 1.25 and 1.75 meters) and their venom toxicity.  Spitters pass the venom through their teeth, squeezing the muscles of the venom ducts and forcing air out of one of the lungs.



   Indian Cobra, or Cobra with Indian Eyes (Naja Naja)

   The head and neck area of ​​the Indian cobra, or Indian cobra (Naja Naja).

  

   There are spitting and non-spitting cobras in Africa, but African cobras are not related to Asian cobras, nor are they related to each other.  The South African Ringhal, or Spitting Cobra) and Black-necked Cobra (Naja nigricollis), a small form widely distributed in Africa, are spitting.  The venom is properly applied to the victim's eyes more than two meters away and can cause temporary, or even permanent, blindness unless it is immediately washed.  Egyptian cobra (N. haje) - Probably a dark, narrow-headed species from ancient times, about two meters long, extending from Africa and east to Arabia.  Its usual prey consists of frogs and birds.  The tree cobra (genus Pseudohaje) is found in Equatorial Africa, along with mambas and the only aquatic animal in the Elapidae family.



   Black-necked Cobra (Naja Negriculus)

   Black-necked Cobra (Naja Negriculus).

Thursday, May 12, 2022

Michael Jackson

 Michael Jackson

 


  Who was Michael Jackson?

  How did Michael Jackson die?

  Where was Michael Jackson born?

  How did Michael Jackson become famous?

  What were Michael Jackson's exploits?

  Michael Jackson, formerly Michael Joseph Jackson or Michael Joe Jackson (see researcher's note), (born August 29, 1958, Gary, Indiana, USA - died June 25, 2009, Los Angeles, California), American singer, songwriter  Nigar, and dancers who were the world's most popular entertainers in the early and mid-1980's.  Growing up in Gary, Indiana, in one of the most famous musical families of the Rock era, Michael Jackson was the youngest of five brothers and the most talented to be raised by his father, Joseph, in a wonderful group of Child Stars.  Shape called Jackson 5.  In addition to Michael, Jackson 5's members were Jackie Jackson (Sigmund Jackson's name; born May 4, 1951, Gary), Tattoo Jackson (Toriano Jackson's name; born October 15, 1953, Gary), Jermaine Jackson.  (b. December 11, 1954, Gary), and Marilyn Jackson (born March 12, 1957, Gary).





  Michael Jackson



   And Roll Hall of Fame and Museum (1997) Grammy Award (1995) Grammy Award (1989) Grammy Award (1985) Grammy Award (1984) Grammy Award (1983) Grammy Award (1979) ...

 

  Barry Gordy, Jr., president of Motown Records, was impressed with the group and signed it in 1969.  With the highest fashion, the greatest talent, the fastest choreography, and a young, soulful enthusiasm, Jackson 5 became an instant success.  He scored four consecutive number one pop hits in 1970 with "I Want You Back", "ABC", "The Love You Save" and "I'll Be There".  Michael topped the pop charts as a solo performer.  Ben "and" Rakin 'reached second place with "Robin" and with Jackson 5 producing trend setting dance tracks such as "Dancing Machine", the series of family hit movies for Motown continued until 1975.  Michael matured, his voice changed, family tensions arose, and a contract broke down. The group eventually broke up with Motown, moving to Epic Records as Jackson. Jermaine as a solo performer.  He lived in Motown and was replaced by his youngest brother, Randy Jackson (fully Steven Randall Jackson; born October 29, 1961).  Sister Janet Jackson began her singing career in the early 1980's. However, Michael's solo albums took on a very different status.



  Jackson 5

  Jackson 5, 1970.

  Michael Ochs Archives / Getty Images


  Britannica Quiz

  80s Music Quiz

  The 1980s were a turning point in rock and pop music.  And with the founding of MTV in 1981, music videos became one of the most popular and creative forms of musical media.  Can you find the famous song of 80's with its artist?  Your Reward: Watch all the videos in the explanation of this quiz.

  "King of Pop"

  Jackson's first solo attempt at Epic, of the Wall (1979) exceeded all expectations and was the best-selling album of the year (it eventually sold over 20 million copies).  Produced by industry veteran Quincy Jones, Off the Wall featured the massive international hit singles "Don't Stop 'Till You Get Enough" and "Rock With You", both of which showcased Michael's passionate style.  And took advantage of the modern disco dance trend.  Three years later, he returned with another collaboration with Jones, Thriller, a Tour de Force that included a string of guest stars and took it to superstardom around the world.  Thriller has won several awards, including eight record-breaking Grammys.  Has been on the charts for over two years.  And sold over 40 million copies, making it the longest-selling album in history.  The album's first single, "The Girl from Mine", an easy pairing with Paul McCartney, peaked at number one on the rhythm and blues charts and at number two on the pop charts in the fall of 1982.  Follow-up singles, "Billy Jane", a power-generating dance track, and Jackson's trademark "Moon Walk" car for dance, topped the pop charts, as did "Beat It", featuring famous guitarist Eddie Van Helen.  An endless solo was presented.  In addition, "Beat It" helped break the artificial barrier between black and white artists on the radio and in the emerging format of music videos on television.



  Michael Jackson

  Michael Jackson in his music video for "Cat Jane", which debuted on MTV in 1983.

  Eugene Adibari / Shutterstock.com


 

 


  Michael Jackson

  Michael Jackson, 1984.

 


  Until 1984, Jackson was known worldwide as the "King of Pop".  His much-anticipated Victory Reunion Tour with his brothers was one of the most famous concert events of 1984.  In 1985, Jackson and Lionel Richie wrote "VR the World", a single signed for USA for Africa, an All-Star project aimed at famine.  Relief More Solo Albums - Bad (1987), which made five chart-topping successes (including the title song and "Man in the Mirror"), and Dangerous (1991), most of which featured New Jack swing sensation Teddy Riley.  Were prepared  Strengthened Jackson's dominance over pop music.  He was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2001.  Jackson 5 was added in 1997.



  Michael Jackson

  Michael Jackson performing with his brothers during the Victory Reunion Tour, Los Angeles, 1984.

 

  Michael Jackson

  Michael Jackson performing during the Super Bowl XXVII, 1993 Half Time Show.

 


  Michael Jackson

  Michael Jackson, 1996.

  Phil Walter - Hilton Archives / Getty Images



  Allegations of child molestation, financial hardship and death


  Jackson's whimsical, isolated lifestyle became increasingly controversial in the early 1990's.  Her reputation was severely damaged in 1993 when she was accused of child abuse by a 13-year-old boy with whom she was friends.  The civil case was decided out of court.  In 1994, Jackson secretly married Lisa Marie Presley, daughter of Elvis Presley, but their marriage lasted less than two years.  Soon after, Jackson remarried, and the marriage produced children, although it ended in divorce.  When he was an international celebrity, the United States was slow to restore his image, and he suffered even more damage in November 2003 when he was arrested and charged with child abuse.  ۔  Jackson was acquitted in 2005 after a 14-week trial that became part of the media circus.



  Michael Jackson

  Michael Jackson shakes hands with fans after being acquitted in a 2005 child abuse case.

  Win / Getty Images

  As a result of these events, Jackson suffered a financial catastrophe that resulted in the sale of many of his notable assets, including, ultimately, his magnificent Newland farm.  He was preparing for a series of high-profile concerts that he hoped would make a comeback when he died suddenly of a heart attack on June 25, 2009 - resulting in a blow to his fans.  A wave of grief swept over him, culminating in a memorial service for his life and legacy.  July 7 at the Staples Center in Los Angeles, where friends like Steve Wonder, Barry Gordy, Jr., Brooke Shields, and El Sharpton pay tribute.  In August 2009, the coroner declared Jackson's death a homicide.  The reason was a deadly combination of sedatives and propofol, an anesthetic.  In November 2011, Jackson's personal physician was found guilty of involuntary manslaughter.


  The documentary This Is It, obtained from over 100 hours of footage compiled during rehearsals for the engagement of Jackson's scheduled 50 concert returns to London, premiered in October 2009.  In 2009, Jackson's 14-minute music video "Thriller" (1983), directed by John Lands, was added to the Library of Congress's National Film Registry, the first music video to receive such an award.  Later documentaries included Leung Newland (2019), which focuses on two men who allege that Jackson sexually abused them when they were children.


  Ricky Vincent

  Editors of the Encyclopedia Britannica

  Home

  Entertainment and pop culture

  Actors

  Beyonc

  American singer


  deeds

  Alternative titles: Beyonce Gisele Knowles

  • Edit the date by the editors of the Encyclopedia Britannica.


  List box

  Top Questions

  What are the names of Beyonc's children?

  Why is Beyonc famous?

  Which award did Beyonc win?

  Beyoncé, formerly Beyoncé Giselle Knowles (born September 4, 1981 in Houston, Texas, US), is an American singer, songwriter and actress who rose to fame as the lead singer of the R&B group Destiny's Child in the late 1990's.  And then a great start.  Successful solo career.




  Beyonc



  View all media

  Born: September 4, 1981 (age 40) in Houston, Texas

  Founder: The child of destiny

  Awards and Awards: Grammy Award (2021) Grammy Award (2019) Grammy Award (2017) Grammy Award (2010) Grammy Award (2009) Grammy Award (2006) Grammy Award (2005) Grammy Award (2004) Grammy Award (2004) Grammy  Award (2004) Award (2000) Grammy Award (2021): Best R&B Performance Grammy Award (2021): Best Rap Performance Grammy Award (2021): Best Rap Song Grammy Award (2021): Best Music Video Grammy Award (2020)  ): Best Music Film Grammy Award (2019): Best Urban Contemporary Album Grammy Award (2017): Best Urban Contemporary Album Grammy Award (2017): Best Music Video Grammy Award (2015): Best R&B Performance Grammy Award (2015)  : Best R&B Song Grammy Award (2015): Best Surround Sound Album Grammy Award (2013): Best Traditional R&B Performance Grammy Award (2010): Song Of The Year Grammy Award (2010): Best Family Pop Vocal Performance  Grammy Award (2010): Best Female R&B Vocal Performance Grammy Award (2010): Best Traditional R&B Vocal Performance Grammy Award (20)  10): Best R&B Song Grammy Award (2010): Best Contemporary R&B Album Grammy Award (2007): Best Contemporary R&B Album Grammy Award (2006): Best R&B Performance by Pair or Vocals Grammy Award (2004)  Best Female R&B Vocal Performance Grammy Award (2004): A Pair or Group with Best R&B Performance Vocals Grammy Award (2004): Best R&B Song Grammy Award (2004): Best Contemporary R&B Album Grammy Award (2004)  2004): Best Rap / Song Collaboration Grammy Award (2002): Best R&B Performance by Pair or Group with Vocal Grammy Award (2001): Pair or Group Best R&B Performance with Vocal Grammy Award (2001):  The best R&B song ...

  (Show more)

  Notable works: "Irreplaceable" "Lemonade"

  Notable family members: Tina Knolls, daughter of JAY-Z daughter Matthew Knolls, married J. Z. (2008 – present) Blue Ivy Carter's mother (born 2012) Rumi Carter's mother (born 2017) Sir Carter's mother (b.  2017) Solang Knowles' sister ...

  (Show more)

  View all relevant content

  At the age of nine, Beyonc کے formed Destiny Child (originally called Girls' Time), a group of girls singing in 1990 with childhood friends.  The group lost the Star Search television talent show in 1992, and was dropped from the recording contract three years later before the album was released.  In 1997, Destiny's Child's fortunes turned around with a Colombian recording contract and then a debut album called "No, No, No Part 2".  Their follow-up album, The Writings on the Wall (1999), won the group two Grammy Awards and sold over eight million copies in the United States.  Survivor (2001), the group's third album, topped the Billboard 200 charts.



  Child of destiny

  Destiny Child: (from left) Beyonc ،, Michelle Williams, and Kelly Rowland, 2005.

  PRNewsFoto / McDonald's / AP Images


  Britannica Quiz

  Pop culture quiz

  Are you a princess of pop?  King of culture?  Answer these questions to see if you are an entertainment expert.


  Beyonc was apparently the leader of the group and wrote hit songs for Destiny's Child, such as "Bootylicious".  Eventually, the group paved the way for individual projects to move forward.  Beyonc استعمال used her songwriting skills to record her first solo album, Dangerously In Love (2003).  The album debuted for analysis, and with its stellar single "Crazy in Love", which featured rapper JZ, topped the charts worldwide.  Beyonc جیت won five Grammy Awards in 2004, including Best Contemporary R&B Album and Best Female R&B Voice Performance.



  Beyonc

  Beyonc, 2003.

  PRNewsFoto / Ford Motor Company / AP Images

  Destiny's Child reunited in 2004 to release Destiny Fulfled.  Although not generally acclaimed as the group's previous endeavor, the album sold over seven million copies worldwide and produced several hit singles.  The trio embarked on a world tour in 2005, during which they announced that the group would formally end.  That same year, they released # 1, a collection of popular songs and the number one hit.



  In 2006, Beyonc released her second solo studio album, BD, which featured several producers, including the hit duo Neptune.  Although most of the album echoed the 1970s funk, the pop ballad "Irreplaceable" became its most successful single.  She and JZ married in 2008, and the union made them one of the highest paid couples in the entertainment industry.  Later this year, Beyonc released a double album, IM Sasha Ferris.  Where the first half (I am) found it in self-awareness mode, the second (Sasha Ferris) included songs that were more suitable for the dance floor.  The album made a number of successful films overall, including "Single Ladies (Put a Ring on It)", and was instrumental in Beyonc غ's dominance at the 2010 Grammy Awards.  Her six awards, including Best Song of the Year, Best Female Pop Vocal Performance, and Best Contemporary R&B Album, were the most Grammys collected by a single female artist overnight.


  A few days after the winning headline performance at the Glastonbury Festival in England, Beyonc 4 released 4 (2011), a twisted blend of ballads and dance tracks that ranged from Motoon-era flashlight songs to rapper M.I.A's audio collages.  Gave birth to effects.  In early 2013, Destiny's Child reunited for a half-time at the Super Bowl and released a new song, "Nuclear."  Soon after, Beyonc collected the Grammys for her single "Love On Top".  She returned at the end of the year with a confident, emotional and expressive Beyonc, who was proud of the performances of brand-name producers and Nigerian author Cheemamanda Ngozi Adichi and the singer's youngest daughter, Blue Ivy.  The record, which was initially offered exclusively on iTunes, was promoted as a "visual album", with music videos made with each track.  The single "Drink in Love", which included JZ, won several Grammys, including the best R&B song.



 

  Jason Merritt




  On the wide and musically diverse Lemonade (2016), Beyonc نے focuses on the themes of deception and perseverance.  Considered another visual album, it debuted as an HBO television special.  Lemonade received rave reviews, and Beyonc received two Grammys, including the Best Music Video Award for the song "Formation."  In 2018, Beyoncé and Jay-Z released a joint album, Everything Is Love, which was credited to Carters, and won the Grammy for Best Citizen Modern Album.


  Beyonc began her acting career in 2001 with the television film Carmen: A Hip Hopper, which aired on MTV.  The role of Foxy Cleopatra in Austin Powers in Goldmberg (2002) made her a movie star and starred in The Fighting Temptations (2003) and The Pink Panther (2006).  In 2006, she played Dina Jones in Dream Girls, a film adaptation of the 1981 Broadway musical about the 1960s singing group.  Beyonc's performance was nominated for a Golden Globe Award and her song "Snow" was nominated for an Academy Award.  She later starred in Cadillac Records (2008), in which she played singer Eta James, and thriller Obsid (2009), before the voice of the fairy-like jungle queen in the animated episode (2013).  To be given



  Still advertising for Dream Girls

  Jennifer Hudson (right), Anika Noni Rose (left), and Beyonce Knowles (center) as R&B group Dreams in Dream Girls (2006).

 

  For the 2019 remake of Disney's The Line King, Beyonc آواز voiced Nalla's character and performed several songs on the soundtrack, including "Spirit", an original song she wrote, and "Can You Fail".  The song "Low Tonight" was also included.  He also released an album based on the movie The Line King: The Gift.  The songs on this record were later shown on the visual album Black Is King (2020), which aired on the streaming service Disney +.  For the single "Black Parade", Beyonc گری won the Grammy for Best R&B Performance in 2021.  This year she received three other awards for setting the record for most Grammys (28) won by a female artist.  Beyonc بعد later starred and performed "Be Alive" in the film King Richard (2021), and won an Oscar nomination for Best Original Song.

White Hole

 

  • What is a white hole?

   

  The white hole is a fictitious feature of the universe.  It is considered the antithesis of black holes.  Just as black holes do not allow anything to come out of their surface, so white holes are an explosion of matter and energy and nothing can go inside them.


  White holes are a possible solution to the laws of general relativity.  This law means that if there are eternal black holes in the universe, then there must be a white hole.  This is a time change of a black hole.  Gravity is expected of them, so they attract objects, but anything in the way of a collision with a white hole will never reach it.


  Ideally, if you go near a white hole in a spacecraft, you will be drowned in a huge amount of energy, which will destroy your spacecraft.  Even if your spacecraft can withstand gamma rays, the light itself will begin to slow you down, just as wind resistance slows down a vehicle moving on the ground.



  And even if the spaceship is designed not to be affected by energy emissions, space-time will strangely revolve around a white hole.  Going closer to the white hole would be like going up.  When you move less, the required acceleration will be more.  There is not enough energy in the universe to take you inside.


  Of course, this is quite contradictory.  How can energy in a white hole seem to come from anything other than space-time?  This is one of the reasons why they are so rare.  However, there are some theories in which white holes are possible, but perhaps not so much as the general addition.


  As they are alleged counterparts of black holes, white holes will also be formed by the uniqueness of gravity.  A unit is a dotted feature in space-time where the field of gravity becomes infinite.  In physics, infinite values ​​are usually indicative of missing pieces in a theory, so it is not surprising that quantum mechanics and relationships strive to explain the finer details of individuality.



  Many phenomena are presented as white holes.  They are usually chosen because they are mysterious things that we could not explain in detail.


  Explosions of gamma rays, rapidly rotating pulsars, and black holes reaching the end of their lives have been considered.  Even the Big Bang has been described as a white hole.  But so far, no white holes have been seen directly, and even their ideological existence raises some red flags.  White holes seem to be used as a placemark until further notice or a better idea emerges.


 

  The Big Bang as a white hole is a clear example of this trend.  Until we were uncertain about the size of the universe, there was speculation that the universe was created from a white hole that we could see.  Now we know that the universe is probably infinite, which is why the description of the white hole is almost certainly wrong.


  We know there are black holes - so are there white holes?


 

 


  A white hole is a special kind of individuality: a naked individuality.  Uniqueness like black holes cannot be observed directly, because the speed of escape (the speed at which you need to be free from gravity) is greater than the speed of light, so nothing can escape it.  Individuality is "protected" by an event horizon, the level that separates us from the black hole.  Mathematically, when we have uniformity, space-time breaks down.  To avoid this problem, Horizon Incident was introduced.


  No incident of a naked individual is on the horizon.  According to the basic principles of general relativity, the universe does not allow naked individuality.  This idea is aptly called cosmic censorship hypothesis.  Current theories of numerical simulation and quantum gravity, however, point to the possibility of bare unity.


 

  An interesting phenomenon occurs in describing the properties of black holes with a quantum mechanical approach, which does not involve gravity.  If you look at a black hole back and forth over time, it behaves exactly the same way and remains a black hole.  This is not the most important clash between quantum theories and relativity, but it is nonetheless important.


  The most important obstacle is entropy, measuring system configuration.  According to the laws of thermodynamics, the net entropy of the universe is always increasing.  Entropy may be reduced locally.  For example, a freezer reduces its entropy by converting water into ice, but freezer engines emit a lot of heat, so total entropy is still increasing.


  White holes reduce entropy, which is a major piece of evidence against them.  In this universe, we obey the laws of thermodynamics.  And so far, no confirmed violations have been reported, although we often hear claims of chronic motion machines and abnormalities.


 

  •   The future of white holes


  White holes attract a lot of people and they give us a sense of balance.  People will study them and will continue to do so.  In fact, many features of general relativity, such as black holes, were previously considered a theoretical curiosity.  There is no hard evidence that white holes exist, but perhaps in our vast complex universe, there is room for them as well.


  The world's most powerful X-ray laser is now cooler than space.

  Physics

  We may have a new definition of the second by 2030.

 


  This could be a quick way to observe a quantum effect never seen before.

  Physics


  Time travel may be possible, but only with parallel timelines

Tuesday, May 10, 2022

Quecksilber Planet

 Quecksilber


   Der kleinste und sonnennächste Planet

    Scott Dutfield Beiträge von Daisy Dobrejok von Charles Kyu Choi Veröffentlicht am 31. März 2022


    Merkur umkreist die Sonne schneller als jeder andere Planet im Sonnensystem.


 

 

 



  

  

  

  

    Merkur ist der sonnennächste Planet und der kleinste Planet in unserem Sonnensystem.  Der kleine Planet hat keinen eigenen Mond und dreht sich schneller um die Sonne als jeder andere Planet, daher benannten ihn die Römer nach ihrem sich schnell bewegenden Botengott.


  

    Auch die Sumerer wussten vor mindestens 5.000 Jahren von Merkur.  Laut einer Website, die mit der Mission Messenger (Mercury Surface, Space Environment, Geochemistry and Ranging) der NASA verbunden ist, wurde sie oft mit dem schreibenden Gott Naboo in Verbindung gebracht.  Merkur erhielt auch unterschiedliche Namen, um als Morgenstern und Abendstern zu erscheinen.  Griechische Astronomen wussten jedoch, dass sich die beiden Namen auf denselben Körper beziehen, und Heraklit glaubte etwa 500 v. Chr. Zu Recht, dass sich sowohl Merkur als auch Venus um die Sonne und nicht um die Erde drehten.


    Merkur ist nach der Erde der zweitdichteste Planet mit einem riesigen Metallkern von etwa 2.200 bis 2.400 Meilen (3.600 bis 3.800 km) Breite oder etwa 75 % des Durchmessers des Planeten.  Im Gegensatz dazu ist die äußere Hülle von Merkur nur 500 bis 600 Kilometer dick.  Seine massive Kombination aus Grund- und Strukturelementen, einschließlich einer Fülle flüchtiger Elemente, hat Wissenschaftler seit Jahren verwirrt.


    Verwandte: Woraus besteht Quecksilber?


    Quecksilber: Temperatur, Größe und Oberflächenaktivität

    Da der Planet so nah an der Sonne liegt, kann die Oberflächentemperatur von Merkur 450 Grad Celsius (840 Grad Fahrenheit) erreichen.  Da es jedoch keine echte Atmosphäre mehr auf der Welt gibt, um Wärme einzufangen, können die Nachttemperaturen auf minus 275 Grad Fahrenheit (minus 170 Grad Celsius) fallen, was 1.100 Grad Fahrenheit (600 Grad Celsius) entspricht.  , Das größte im Sonnensystem.


  


  


    - Mit Merkur verbundenes Raumschiff macht Selfie mit Venus im Vorbeiflug (Foto)


    Merkur ist der kleinste Planet - er ist etwas größer als der Erdmond.  Da es keine signifikante Umgebung gibt, um die Auswirkungen zu verhindern, gibt es auf dem Planeten eine Spur von Gruben.  Vor etwa 4 Milliarden Jahren kollidierte ein etwa 100 Kilometer breiter Asteroid mit Merkur, der 1 Billion Megatonnen Bomben wog, und verursachte einen massiven Einschlag mit einer Breite von etwa 960 Meilen (1.550 Kilometer).  Dieser als Calories Basin bekannte Krater könnte den gesamten Bundesstaat Texas verschlingen.  Laut einer Studie aus dem Jahr 2011 könnte ein weiterer wichtiger Effekt darin bestanden haben, einen bizarren Zyklus des Planeten zu erzeugen.


    So nah an der Sonne wie Merkur ist, entdeckte die NASA-Raumsonde Messenger im Jahr 2012 Wassereis in Gruben rund um seinen Nordpol im Jahr 2017, wo Bereiche dauerhaft von der Sonnenhitze beschattet werden könnten.  Der Südpol mag eisige Taschen haben, aber die Umlaufbahn von Messenger erlaubte es den Wissenschaftlern nicht, das Gebiet zu untersuchen.  Kometen oder Meteore könnten Eis in die Gegend gebracht haben, oder Wasserdampf könnte aus dem Inneren des Planeten ausgetreten sein und sich an Polen angesammelt haben.




     35.983.095 Meilen (57.909.175 km).  Zum Vergleich: 0,38 Abstand von der Sonne zur Erde


    Perry Helen (Sonne am nächsten): 28.580.000 Meilen (46.000.000 km).  Zum Vergleich: 0,313 mal die Erde


    Aphel (am weitesten von der Sonne entfernt): 43.380.000 Meilen (69.820.000 km).  Zum Vergleich: 0,459 mal die Erde


    Tageslänge: 58.646 Erdentage


    Farbe: Grau


    Als ob Merkur nicht so klein wäre, ist er laut einem Bericht aus dem Jahr 2016 nicht nur in seiner Vergangenheit geschrumpft, sondern schrumpft auch heute noch.  Dieser kleine Planet besteht aus einer einzigen Kontinentalplatte auf einem kühlenden Eisenkern.  Wenn der Kern abkühlt, verhärtet er sich, wodurch die Größe des Planeten verringert und er schrumpft.  Der Prozess zerdrückte die Oberfläche und schuf lappenförmige Flecken oder Felsen, die Hunderte von Meilen lang und bis zu einer Meile hoch wurden, sowie das „Great Valley“ von Mercury, das etwa 620 Meilen lang und 250 Meilen breit ist Meilen tief.  (1.000 x 400 x 3,2 km) Größer als Arizonas berühmter Grand Canyon und tiefer als das Great Rift Valley in Ostafrika.


    „Das geringe Alter der kleinen Flecken bedeutet, dass Merkur sich tektonisch als aktiver Planet der Erde anschließt, was heute wahrscheinlich neue Defekte verursachen wird, da das Innere von Merkur kälter wird und der Planet schrumpft.“ Tom Waters, leitender Wissenschaftler von Smithsonian am National Luft- und Raumfahrtmuseum.  Washington DC sagte in einer NASA-Erklärung.


    Tatsächlich deutete eine Studie von 2016 über Gesteine ​​auf der Oberfläche von Merkur darauf hin, dass die Erde immer noch durch Erdbeben oder „Merkur-Erdbeben“ vibrieren könnte.  Außerdem hat sich die Oberfläche von Merkur in der Vergangenheit durch vulkanische Aktivität ständig verändert.  Eine andere Studie aus dem Jahr 2016 deutete jedoch darauf hin, dass die Möglichkeit eines Vulkanausbruchs von Merkur vor etwa 3,5 Milliarden Jahren verschwunden war.


    Eine Studie aus dem Jahr 2016 legte nahe, dass die Eigenschaften der Merkuroberfläche im Allgemeinen in zwei Gruppen eingeteilt werden könnten – ein altes Material, das bei hohem Druck an der Kern-Mantel-Grenze schmilzt, und ein neues Material, das Quecksilber nahe der Oberfläche bildet.  Eine weitere Studie aus dem Jahr 2016 ergab, dass die schwarze Farbe der Merkuroberfläche auf Kohlenstoff zurückzuführen ist.  Dieser Kohlenstoff wurde nicht durch Beeinflussung von Kometen angesammelt, wie einige Forscher vermuten, sondern es könnten die Überreste der frühen Kruste des Planeten sein.


    Das Magnetfeld des Merkur

    Die unerwartetste Entdeckung von Mariner 10 war, dass Merkur ein Magnetfeld hat.  Planeten erzeugen theoretisch nur dann Magnetfelder, wenn sie sich schnell drehen und einen geschmolzenen Kern haben.  Aber Merkur benötigt 59 Tage für eine Umlaufbahn und ist so klein – etwa ein Drittel der Größe der Erde –, dass sein Zentrum schon vor langer Zeit abgekühlt sein sollte.


    Christopher Russell, Professor an der University of California, Los Angeles, sagte: „Wir haben herausgefunden, wie die Erde funktioniert, und Merkur ist ein weiterer terrestrischer, felsiger Planet mit einem Eisenkern, also dachten wir, er könnte so aussehen. Wird funktionieren  Stellungnahme der University of California, Los Angeles.


    Ein ungewöhnlicher innerer Teil kann helfen, den Unterschied im Magnetfeld von Merkur im Vergleich zur Erde zu erklären.  Messengers Beobachtungen zeigen, dass das Magnetfeld des Planeten auf seiner Nordhalbkugel etwa dreimal stärker ist als auf der Südhalbkugel.  Russell war Co-Autor eines Modells, das zeigt, dass sich der Eisenkern von Merkur an der äußeren Grenze des Kerns von flüssig zu fest verändert, anstatt im Inneren.


    "Es ist wie ein Schneesturm mit Schnee, der sich über und in der Mitte der Wolken und unter den Wolken bildet", sagte Russell.  „Unsere Untersuchung des Magnetfelds von Merkur zeigt, dass in dieser Flüssigkeit Eis auf Eisen fällt, was das Magnetfeld von Merkur verstärkt.“


    Erdgestützte Radarbeobachtungen im Jahr 2007 entdeckten, dass das Zentrum von Merkur immer noch geschmolzen ist, was helfen könnte, seinen Magnetismus zu erklären, obwohl der Sonnenwind eine Rolle bei der Verringerung des Magnetfelds des Planeten spielen könnte.


    Obwohl das Magnetfeld von Merkur nur 1 % der Stärke der Erde beträgt, ist es sehr aktiv.  Das Magnetfeld des Sonnenwinds – geladene Teilchen, die aus der Sonne kommen – berührt gelegentlich das Feld des Merkur und erzeugt starke Magnetstürme, die das schnelle, warme Plasma des Sonnenwinds an die Oberfläche des Planeten tragen.


    Gibt es eine Merkuratmosphäre?

    Anstelle einer substanziellen Atmosphäre hat Merkur eine extrem dünne „Exposition“, die aus Atomen besteht, die durch Sonneneinstrahlung, Sonnenwind und Mikrometroideffekte von seiner Oberfläche weggeblasen wurden.  Laut NASA bilden diese Partikel einen Schweif und entweichen schnell in den Weltraum.


    Die Atmosphäre von Merkur ist eine "oberflächenverbundene äußere Sphäre, im Wesentlichen ein Raum".  Laut NASA enthält es 42 % Sauerstoff, 29 % Natrium, 22 % Wasserstoff, 6 % Helium, 0,5 % Kalium und potenzielle Mengen an Argon, Kohlendioxid, Wasser, Stickstoff, Xenon, Krypton und Neon.


    Umlaufbahn des Merkur

    Merkur umkreist die Sonne alle 88 Erdentage und bewegt sich im Weltraum mit einer Geschwindigkeit von etwa 112.000 Meilen pro Stunde (180.000 Kilometer pro Stunde) schneller als jeder andere Planet.  Seine elliptische Umlaufbahn ist extrem elliptisch und bewegt Merkur näher an 29 Millionen Meilen (47 Millionen Kilometer) und 43 Millionen Meilen (70 Millionen Kilometer) von der Sonne.  Wenn man auf Merkur stehen könnte, wenn er der Sonne am nächsten ist, würde er erscheinen, als wäre er dreimal größer als die Erde.




    Merkur ist der sonnennächste Planet und seine Atmosphäre ist dünn, es gibt keinen Luftdruck und die Temperatur ist sehr hoch.  Werfen Sie einen Blick ins Innere des Planeten.  (Bildnachweis: Carl Tate, SPACE.com)

    Seltsamerweise, aufgrund der stark elliptischen Umlaufbahn und der Rotation um die Erdachse von Merkur für etwa 59 Tage, wenn die Sonne auf einer verbrannten Oberfläche des Planeten für eine Weile aufgeht, untergeht und nach Westen wandert.  der Himmel.  Bei Sonnenuntergang scheint die Sonne unterzugehen, geht für eine Weile wieder auf und geht dann unter.


    Im Jahr 2016 hatte Merkur einen seltenen Transit, bei dem der Planet das von der Erde aus sichtbare Antlitz der Sonne überquerte.  Die Umlaufbahn von Merkur hat möglicherweise Geheimnisse über seine dünne Atmosphäre aufgedeckt, geholfen, die Welt um andere Sterne zu erforschen, und der NASA geholfen, einige ihrer Instrumente zu verbessern.


    So wie Merkur auf der Erde nur Tage braucht, um die Sonne zu umkreisen, und die Erde 365 Tage braucht, geht Merkur etwa drei- oder viermal im Jahr auf seiner Reise um die Sonne über die Erde hinaus und erzeugt eine optische Täuschung, so die New York Mal.  Merkur scheint sich etwa drei Wochen lang „rückwärts“ am Himmel zu bewegen, während dieser Zeit soll sich Merkur zurückziehen.


    Forschung und Erkundung

    Die erste Raumsonde, die Merkur besuchte, war die Mariner 10, die etwa 45 % der Oberfläche fotografierte und ihr Magnetfeld entdeckte.


    Der Messenger Arbiter der NASA war das zweite Raumschiff, das den Merkur besuchte.  Als es im März 2011 ankam, war es das erste Raumschiff, das den Planeten umkreiste.  Die Mission endete abrupt am 30. April 2015, als das Raumschiff, dem der Treibstoff ausgegangen war, absichtlich auf der Oberfläche des Planeten abstürzte, um die Ergebnisse der Wissenschaftler zu beobachten.


    Im Jahr 2012 entdeckten Wissenschaftler in Marokko eine Gruppe von Meteoren, von denen sie glauben, dass sie vom Planeten Merkur gebildet wurden.  Wenn ja, würde es den felsigen Planeten zu einem Mitglied eines sehr ausgewählten Clubs mit auf der Erde verfügbaren Mustern machen.  Nur der Mond, der Mars und der große Asteroid Vista haben die Felsen in menschlichen Labors bestätigt.


    Im Jahr 2016 veröffentlichten Wissenschaftler das erste globale digitale Höhenmodell von Mercury, das mehr als 10.000 per Messenger aufgenommene Bilder kombinierte, um die Betrachter zu offenen Räumen in der kleinen Welt zu führen.  Das Modell zeigt die höchsten und niedrigsten Punkte des Planeten – der höchste befindet sich direkt südlich des Äquators von Merkur und liegt 2,78 Meilen (4,48 Kilometer) über der durchschnittlichen Höhe des Planeten, während der niedrigste Punkt darin besteht, im Rachmaninoff-Becken zu leben, das der Verdächtige ist Heimat.  Die jüngste vulkanische Aktivität auf der Erde und 3,34 Meilen (5,38 Kilometer) unter dem Durchschnitt der Erdoberfläche.


    2018 wurde ein neuer Mercury Explorer auf den Markt gebracht.  Die Mission BP Colombo, die gemeinsam von europäischen und japanischen Raumfahrtagenturen betrieben wird, besteht aus zwei Raumfahrzeugen – dem Mercury Planetary Orbiter und dem Mercury Magnetaspheric Orbiter – die nach einer langen Reise zum Merkur helfen werden, die kleine Welt besser zu verstehen getrennt für  Ein Teil der Mission der Europäischen Weltraumorganisation wird sich auf die Untersuchung der Oberfläche von Merkur konzentrieren, während sich ein Teil der Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency auf die bizarre magnetische Sphäre des Planeten konzentrieren wird.


    Im Jahr 2021 bekam Bepi Columbo seinen ersten Blick auf Merkur während des Gravity Assist Fly By.  Bepi Columbo soll Ende 2025 am Merkur ankommen und laut ESA während seiner einjährigen nominalen Mission mit der Möglichkeit einer Verlängerung um ein Jahr Daten sammeln.

Sunday, May 8, 2022

Mercury Planet

 Mercury


  The smallest and closest planet to the sun

   Scott Dutfield Contributions by Daisy Dobrejok by Charles Kyu Choi Posted March 31, 2022


   Mercury orbits the Sun faster than any other planet in the solar system.


 Marcury



   Mercury is the closest planet to the Sun and the smallest planet in our solar system.  The small planet has no moon of its own and revolves around the sun faster than any other planet, so the Romans named it after their fast-moving messenger god.


  

   The Sumerians also knew about Mercury at least 5,000 years ago.  According to a site linked to NASA's Messenger (Mercury Surface, Space Environment, Geochemistry and Ranging) mission, it was often associated with the writing god Naboo.  Mercury was also given different names to appear as the morning star and the evening star.  However, Greek astronomers knew that the two names refer to the same body, and Heraclitus, about 500 BC, correctly thought that both Mercury and Venus revolved around the Sun, not the Earth.


   Mercury is the second densest planet after Earth, with a huge metal core about 2,200 to 2,400 miles (3,600 to 3,800 km) wide, or about 75% of the planet's diameter.  In contrast, Mercury's outer shell is only 300 to 400 miles (500 to 600 kilometers) thick.  Its massive combination of basic and structural elements, including a plethora of volatile elements, has puzzled scientists for years.


   Related: What is Mercury Made of?


   Mercury: Temperature, size and surface activity

   Because the planet is so close to the Sun, Mercury's surface temperature can reach 840 degrees Fahrenheit (450 degrees Celsius).  However, since there is no more real atmosphere in the world to trap any heat, nighttime temperatures can drop to minus 275 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 170 degrees Celsius), which is 1,100 degrees Fahrenheit (600).  Degrees Celsius).  , The largest in the solar system.


  


  


   - Mercury-linked spacecraft takes selfie with Venus on fly-by (photo)


   Mercury is the smallest planet - it is slightly larger than the Earth's moon.  Since there is no significant environment to prevent the effects, there is a mark of pits on the planet.  About 4 billion years ago, an asteroid about 60 miles (100 kilometers) wide collided with Mercury, which weighed 1 trillion megatons of bombs, producing a massive impact about 960 miles (1,550 kilometers) wide.  Known as the Calories Basin, this crater could engulf the entire state of Texas.  According to a 2011 study, another major effect may have been to create a bizarre cycle of the planet.


   As close to the sun as Mercury is, in 2012, NASA's Messenger spacecraft discovered water ice in pits around its North Pole in 2017, where areas could be permanently shaded by the sun's heat.  The South Pole may have icy pockets, but Messenger's orbit did not allow scientists to investigate the area.  Comets or meteors may have brought ice to the area, or water vapor may have come out of the interior of the planet and accumulated on poles.




    35,983,095 miles (57,909,175 km).  By comparison: 0.38 Distance from the sun to the earth


   Perry Helen (closest view to the sun): 28,580,000 miles (46,000,000 km).  By comparison: 0.313 times the Earth


   Aphelion (farthest distance from the sun): 43,380,000 miles (69,820,000 km).  By comparison: 0.459 times the Earth


   Length of day: 58.646 Earth days


   Color: Gray


   As if Mercury is not so small, it has not only shrunk in its past but is shrinking even today, according to a 2016 report.  This small planet is made up of a single continental plate on a cooling iron core.  As the core cools, it hardens, reducing the size of the planet and shrinking it.  The process crushed the surface, creating lob-shaped spots or rocks that grew hundreds of miles long and up to a mile high, as well as the "Great Valley" of Mercury, which is about 620 miles long and 250 miles wide.  And two miles deep.  (1,000 x 400 x 3.2 km) Larger than Arizona's famous Grand Canyon and deeper than the Great Rift Valley in East Africa.


   "The small age of the small spots means that Mercury joins the Earth tectonically as an active planet, which is likely to cause new defects today as Mercury's interior is getting colder and the planet is shrinking.  "Tom Waters, Smithsonian's senior scientist at the National Air and Space Museum.  Washington DC said in a NASA statement.


   In fact, a 2016 study of rocks on the surface of Mercury suggested that the Earth could still vibrate with earthquakes, or "Mercury Earthquakes."  Also, in the past, Mercury's surface has been constantly changing from volcanic activity.  However, another 2016 study suggested that the possibility of Mercury's volcanic eruption had disappeared about 3.5 billion years ago.


   A 2016 study suggested that the properties of Mercury's surface could generally be divided into two groups - an old material that melts at high pressure on the core mantle boundary, and a new material that mercury  Forms close to the surface.  Another 2016 study found that the black color of Mercury's surface is due to carbon.  This carbon was not accumulated by influencing comets, as some researchers suspect - instead, it could be the remnants of the planet's early crust.


   Mercury's magnetic field

   The most unexpected discovery by Mariner 10 was that Mercury has a magnetic field.  Planets theoretically create magnetic fields only when they rotate rapidly and have a molten core.  But Mercury takes 59 days to orbit and is so small - about one-third the size of Earth - that its center should have cooled long ago.


   Christopher Russell, a professor at the University of California, Los Angeles, said: "We figured out how the Earth works, and Mercury is another terrestrial, rocky planet with an iron core, so we thought it might look like this.  Will work  Statement from the University of California, Los Angeles.


   An unusual inner part can help explain the difference in Mercury's magnetic field compared to Earth.  Messenger's observations show that the planet's magnetic field is about three times stronger in its northern hemisphere than in the south.  Russell co-authored a model that shows that Mercury's iron core is changing from liquid to solid at the outer boundary of the core, rather than internally.


   "It's like a blizzard with snow forming above and in the middle of the clouds, and below the clouds," Russell said.  "Our study of Mercury's magnetic field shows that ice is falling on iron in this fluid, which is strengthening Mercury's magnetic field."


   Earth-based radar observations in 2007 discovered that Mercury's center is still molten, which could help explain its magnetism, although solar wind could play a role in reducing the planet's magnetic field.


   Although Mercury's magnetic field is only 1% of the Earth's strength, it is very active.  The magnetic field in the solar wind - charged particles coming out of the sun - occasionally touches the field of Mercury, creating powerful magnetic storms that carry the fast, warm plasma of the solar wind to the planet's surface.


   Is there an atmosphere of Mercury?

   Instead of a substantial atmosphere, Mercury has an extremely thin "exposure" made up of atoms that have been blown from its surface by solar radiation, solar wind and micrometroid effects.  According to NASA, these particles form a tail and quickly escape into space.


   Mercury's atmosphere is a "surface-connected outer sphere, essentially a space."  According to NASA, it contains 42% oxygen, 29% sodium, 22% hydrogen, 6% helium, 0.5% potassium, and contains potential amounts of argon, carbon dioxide, water, nitrogen, xenon, krypton and neon.


   Mercury's orbit

   Mercury orbits the Sun every 88 Earth days, traveling in space at a speed of about 112,000 miles per hour (180,000 kilometers per hour), faster than any other planet.  Its elliptical orbit is extremely elliptical, moving Mercury closer to 29 million miles (47 million kilometers) and 43 million miles (70 million kilometers) from the Sun.  If one could stand on Mercury when it is closest to the sun, it would appear to be three times larger than the Earth.




   Mercury is the closest planet to the Sun and its atmosphere is thin, there is no air pressure and the temperature is very high.  Take a look inside the planet.  (Image credit: Carl Tate, SPACE.com)

   Oddly enough, due to Mercury's highly elliptical orbit and rotation on Earth's axis for 59 days or so, when on a scorched surface of the planet, the sun rises for a while, sets and travels west.  Appears to rise again before.  the sky.  At sunset, the sun appears to set, rises again for a while, and then sets.


   In 2016, Mercury had a rare transit, where the planet crossed the face of the sun visible from Earth.  Mercury's orbit may have uncovered secrets about its thin atmosphere, helped explore the world around other stars, and helped NASA improve some of its instruments.


   Just as it takes Mercury only days on Earth to orbit the Sun and Earth takes 365 days, about three or four times a year Mercury goes beyond the Earth during its journey around the Sun and creates an optical illusion.  Happens, according to the New York Times.  Mercury appears to move "backwards" in the sky for about three weeks, during which time Mercury is said to retreat.


   Research and exploration

   The first spacecraft to visit Mercury was the Mariner 10, which photographed about 45% of the surface and detected its magnetic field.


   NASA's Messenger Arbiter was the second spacecraft to visit Mercury.  When it arrived in March 2011, it became the first spacecraft to orbit the planet.  The mission ended abruptly on April 30, 2015, when the spacecraft, which had run out of fuel, deliberately crashed on the surface of the planet to observe the results of scientists.


   In 2012, scientists discovered a cluster of meteors in Morocco that they believe may have been formed from the planet Mercury.  If so, it would make the rocky planet a member of a very select club with patterns available on Earth.  Only the moon, Mars and the large asteroid Vista have confirmed the rocks in human laboratories.


   In 2016, scientists released Mercury's first global digital elevation model, combining more than 10,000 images captured via messenger to take viewers to open spaces in the small world.  The model reveals the planet's highest and lowest points - the highest is found just south of Mercury's equator, sitting 2.78 miles (4.48 kilometers) above the planet's average altitude, while the lowest  The point is to live in the Rachmaninoff Basin, which is the suspect's home.  The most recent volcanic activity on Earth, and 3.34 miles (5.38 kilometers) below average of the Earth's surface.


   In 2018, a new Mercury Explorer was launched.  The BP Colombo mission, which is jointly operated by European and Japanese space agencies, consists of two spacecraft - the Mercury Planetary Orbiter and the Mercury Magnetaspheric Orbiter - which, after a long journey to Mercury, help to better understand the small world.  Will be separated for  Part of the European Space Agency's mission will focus on studying the surface of Mercury, while part of the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency will focus on the planet's bizarre magnetic sphere.


   In 2021, Bepi Columbo got his first glimpse of Mercury during the Gravity Assist Fly By.  Bepi Columbo is due to arrive at Mercury at the end of 2025, and will collect data during its one-year nominal mission with the possibility of a one-year extension, according to ESA.

Venus Planet

 Venus facts


  Rotating in the opposite direction of most of the planets, Venus is the hottest planet, and one of the brightest objects in the sky.

   Menu

  Home »Planets» Earth Planets »Venus

  September 26, 2019

  Venus is the second and sixth largest planet in the Sun.  Together with Mercury, they are the only planets that do not have a satellite. Although Mercury is close to the Sun, Venus is the hottest planet.


  Key facts and summary


  Due to its proximity to Earth, Venus has been observed many times by ancient astronomers of different cultures, however, the first accurate observation was made by Galileo Galilei in 1610.

  Galileo looked at Venus through a telescope and determined that its phases were like those of the moon.  This helped to support Copernican's theory that planets revolve around the sun and not, as previously thought.

  Because Venus is the brightest object in the sky after the moon and sun, she was named the Roman goddess of beauty and love, the ancient Greeks named her Aphrodite.

  In ancient times, Venus was taught in the sky as two different objects: the mourning star and the evening star.  In the case of Mercury, this too was mistaken for two different things.

  It is the only planet named after a female deity and is the brightest planet in the solar system.

  Although it can be easily seen, its surface is covered with thick clouds, so it has long been thought to be like the earth.

  When its surface was observed, it was discovered that its clouds were in fact made up of sulfuric acid and water vapor, but more importantly, its temperature was measured at an average of 465 degrees Celsius.  Is 900 degrees Fahrenheit, which is hot enough to melt lead.  .

  The nearest planet to the Sun is about 62 degrees warmer than Mercury.  It was then concluded that the surface of Venus is the hottest of all the planets and its hopes of resemblance to Earth were dashed.  Its thick atmosphere traps heat in a falling greenhouse effect, which contributes greatly to the planet's high temperatures.

  Nevertheless, it is still considered to be the sister of the earth, and there are other similarities that support it: they have the same size and density, similar internal structure and similar mass, volume and  Environmental components of carbon dioxide and nitrogen.

  Venus reflects 70% of all the sunlight it receives, which is why it is so bright.

  Venus has a radius of 6.051 km or 3.760 miles and a diameter of 12.104 km or 7.521 miles, which is slightly smaller than the Earth.

  Venus weighs 4.87 × 1024 kg, or 85% of the Earth.  The aforementioned similarities give rise to a similar density. Venus has a density of 5.24 grams per cubic centimeter, while Earth has a density of 5.52.

  Venus is the second closest planet to the Sun, at a distance of 108.2 million km / 67.24 miles or 0.7 AU that receives sunlight in 6 minutes.  Its closest approach to Earth occurs once every 584 days, when the planets catch up with each other.  On average, it can reach 25 million miles or about 40 million kilometers from Earth.

  It takes Venus 225 days to complete one revolution around the Sun, or in other words, one year of Venus has 225 Earth days.  One day or rotation of Venus is longer than one year of Venus: One day of Venus is approximately 243 Earth days.

  This is the slowest rotation of any planet, making it the most spherical object after the sun.

  At the equator the planet is moving at a speed of about 6.5 kilometers per hour or 4 miles per hour.

  It has a minimal eccentric orbit, rotating in almost a perfect circle.

  Because of its radiance, Venus has been the most intricate thing in the sky.  Many people have misreported it as a UFO, and many still mistakenly report it as a UFO.

  Venus has a backward rotation, moving in the opposite direction to most of the planets, only Uranus does.  They both move clockwise from east to west.

  Venus has mountains, valleys and tens of thousands of volcanoes.  The highest mountain on Venus, Maxwell Montes, is 20,000 feet high / 8.8 km, which is similar to Mount Everest, the highest mountain on earth.

  Venus has no moon or color system and its magnetic field is weak due to its slow rotation.

  It is the most "seen" planet in the solar system, with more than 40 spacecraft.

  Venus

  It is not possible to determine the exact date of the discovery of Venus.  Because of its brilliance, it can be easily seen with the naked eye, meaning that any ancient civilization can be credited with the first observation.  However, Copernicus, and later Galileo Galilei are credited with classifying Venus as a planet, while Mikhail Lomonosov is credited with discovering the planet's gaseous atmosphere initially in 1761.  This claim was later confirmed by the astronomer Johann Schroeter in 1790.



  Although it has been visually observable for as long as mankind remembers, the name Venus is once again a mystery.  Venus gained its most famous manicure through the selection of Roman gods and goddesses.  Venus was named after the Roman goddess of love and beauty, a counterpart of the Greek Aphrodite.  It was not always known that way.  The people of ancient Babylon who identified Venus as an example, named her Sitara Ashtar, their goddess of fertility, love and war.


  The female symbol has even been adopted as a symbol of love and strong women on this planet, the first and only one with a feminine name.  Before Venus was officially dubbed, the Greeks and Romans inadvertently turned Venus into two different stars.


  To the Greeks Venus was both phosphorus and Hesperus, and to the Romans it was known as Lucifer and Vesper.  The two countries did not know that the two alleged stars they were referring to were actually one body until further observations were made and its orbit was understood.


  Configuration

  The theory is that Venus was formed about 4.5 billion years ago when gravity pulled the rotating gas and dust together to form another planet and later settled in its present order.


  Distance, size and quantity

  Venus is the second closest planet to the Sun, at a distance of 108.2 million km / 67.24 miles or 0.7 AU that receives sunlight in 6 minutes.  Venus has a radius of 6.051 km or 3.760 miles and a diameter of 12.104 km or 7.521 miles, which is slightly smaller than the Earth.


  It weighs 4.87 × 1024 kg, or 85% of the earth's surface.  The aforementioned similarities give rise to a similar density. Venus has a density of 5.24 grams per cubic centimeter, while Earth has a density of 5.52.  It is about the same size as the Earth - 928.45 billion cubic kilometers compared to the Earth's 1083.21 billion.



  Its closest approach to Earth occurs once every 584 days, when the planets catch up with each other.  On average, it can reach 25 million miles or 40 million kilometers from Earth, which is approximately 0.28 AU.


  Orbit

  One of the reasons why ancient civilizations inadvertently turned Venus into two separate stars - The Morning Star and The Evening Star - was that they did not understand its orbit.  Venus is visible only after sunset and only before sunrise when its orbit around the Sun goes beyond the Earth's orbit.


  Venus orbits the Sun at an average distance of about 0.72 AU and completes one orbit every 224.7 days.  Although the orbits of most planets are elliptical, the orbit of Venus is closest to the circle with eccentricity less than 0.01.  When Venus is in the inferior connection between the Earth and the Sun, it forms the closest view of any planet to Earth at a distance of 41 million kilometers or 25 million miles.  Venus spends most of her time away from Earth.  This, by contrast, makes Mercury the closest planet to Earth, the most abundant of all time.



  The orbit is slightly inclined towards the Earth's orbit.  When Venus passes between the Earth and the Sun, it does not normally cross the face of the Sun.


  Venus's transit occurs when the planet's inferior connection coincides with its presence in the Earth's orbital spacecraft.


  Venus travels in cycles of 243 years, in which the current pattern of transit is about 105.5 years or 121.5 intervals of transit pairs separated by eight years.


  The pentagram of Venice

  When plotted geographically - from the point of view of the center of the earth, Venus has a very noticeable rhythm in motion.  After 8 years, it returns to the same place in the sky on the same date.


  This was known to many ancient civilizations like Maya, it is called the pentagram of Venus.


  In eight years, each phenomenon - each relative position of the Earth, Venus and the Sun - occurs five times, and then over the next eight years they repeat almost the same five times.  References and Credits - Guy Outwell - Earthsky.



  circulation

  Venus has a backward rotation, moving in the opposite direction to most of the planets, only Uranus does.  They both move clockwise from east to west.  Venus orbits once every 243 Earth days, with the slowest rotation of all the planets in the solar system.


  This slow rotation also affects its shape, which makes Venus very spherical.  One day of Venus is longer than one year of Venus - 225 Earth days.  For comparison, the equator of Venus rotates at a speed of 6.52 km per hour while the earth rotates at a speed of 1,674.4 km per hour.


  It has been observed that it is slowing down even more.  In the 16 years between the Magellan spacecraft and the Venus Express, Venus's rotation has slowed to 6.5 minutes.



  Theories suggest that this slow and retrograde rotation is due to the fact that Venus has encountered collisions in the past, while some see it as a state of equilibrium between the Sun's gravitational ocean pools.  , Which slows down the circulation, and creates an ecological wave.  From the solar heat of the atmosphere of thick Venus.


  Axial tilt

  Venus has tilted 2.7 degrees from the eclipse plane, meaning it is almost completely inverted.  Because of this, Venus does not experience any weather that rotates almost straight.


  Structure and geology

  Venus is very similar to Earth in its structure.  The base is about 2,000 miles or 3,200 kilometers in radius.  Above this cover is a veil of hot rock, which is slowly melting due to the internal heat of the planet.  As a result, the surface is a thin layer of rock that rises and moves with the change of Venus's veil, creating a volcano.



  Its center is at least partially liquid, as both Venus and Earth begin to cool at the same rate.  Due to its small size, it is estimated that Venus's pressure in its deep interior is about 24% lower.


  About 80% of Venus's surface is covered by flat, volcanic plains, with 70% plain strip and 10% flat or lobbied plains.  Venus has two elevated "continents" that make up the rest of its surface.  One planet is located in the northern hemisphere and is called Ashtar Terra after the Babylonian goddess Ashtar of love and is about the size of Australia.



  The highest mountain on Venus is called Maxwell Montes and it is located here, its peak is about 11 kilometers or 7 miles above the average elevation of Venus.


  The second "continent" is located in the southern hemisphere south of the equator, and is named after the Greek goddess Aphrodite Terra.  It is one of the two largest South American highlands.  There is a network of fractures and faults that cover most of the area.  The flow of lava and the absence of evidence of calderas is a mystery.



  With a few more small impact pits, it is suggested that the dense atmosphere of Venus burns the small meteorite, and at the same time indicates that its surface is young.  As far as we know, Venus does not have tectonic activity like Earth.


  Water is thought to help it run, and Venus lost its water long ago due to the greenhouse effect.  Although the surface appears young, it has pits that appear to be eroding evenly, pointing to a catastrophic event that re-emerged on Earth about half a billion years ago.  All the traits that were old were erased, and over time the big impacts created these new youth pits.


  It is believed that a volcano on the surface of Venus recreated the planet.  There is ample indirect evidence that volcanic activity continues to this day.  Sulfur dioxide levels fell in 1980, which may indicate that a major volcanic eruption occurred in 1870, which released large amounts of gas, which then receded.


  The theory is that without tectonics, the gradual emission of lava from the interior of the planet could continue for a long time in one place called "pancake domes".



  the environment

  The atmosphere is mainly composed of carbon dioxide 96.5% and nitrogen 3.5% which are traces of other gases, especially sulfur dioxide.  Venus has dense clouds consisting mainly of droplets of sulfuric acid, about 75-96%.


  This thick atmosphere traps the sun's heat, which reflects up to 75% of the sunlight that falls on them.  As a result of this atmosphere, the surface temperature is 465 degrees Celsius, more than 900 degrees Fahrenheit, which is hot enough to melt lead.  The atmosphere is 93 times larger than the Earth's, which is equivalent to about 1 km or 0.62 miles below sea level.


  The surface density is 65 kg / m3, 6.5% of the water, or at 293 K (20 ° C; 68 ° F) above sea level, 50 times denser than the Earth's atmosphere.



  Despite its slow rotation, strong winds of 300 kilometers per hour (185 miles per hour) on cloud tops revolve around Venus every four to five Earth days.  The winds on Venus move 60 times faster than their rotation speed, while the fastest winds on Earth move at only 10-20% rotation speed.


  The speed inside the clouds decreases with the height of the clouds, and the surface is estimated to be only a few miles per hour.



  The highest point on Venus is Maxwell Montes, so it is the coldest point on Venus, with a temperature of about 655 K (380 ° C ؛ 715 ° F) and an atmospheric pressure of about 4.5 MPa (45 bar).


  Magnetic sphere

  The size of Venus is similar to Earth's, and regardless of its corresponding iron core, the magnetic field is much weaker than Earth's due to slow rotation and thus is generally considered to be non-magnetic.  Goes


  However, it has an excited magnetic field created by the solar wind from the sun's magnetic field.



  Due to the lack of an internal magnetic field on Venus, the solar wind penetrates relatively deep into the planet's outer sphere and causes considerable damage to the atmosphere.  Damage occurs mainly through the tail of the magnetosphere.  The ratio of hydrogen to oxygen losses is approximately 2 or approximately stoichiometric, indicating continued loss of water.


  Quality of life

  It is widely believed that Venus was once a habitable planet with vast oceans, with some even thinking that life would have evolved there and then somehow moved to Earth.  Others believe that Venus had oceans, but due to the high concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, it is thought that the planet was covered in a liquid of carbon dioxide which eventually evaporated.


  It has recently been discovered that there is a large vortex on both the poles of Venus.  The altitude is approximately 59 km, which is just above the cloud deck and the air pressure and temperature are tolerable to the earth's standards.  Some scientists have speculated.  At lower temperatures, acids may be present in the upper layers of the Venus atmosphere.


  In August 2019, astronomers reported that the newly discovered long-term pattern of absorption and albedo changes in the planet Venus's atmosphere is due to "unknown absorbers"  There may be colonies.  It remains to be seen.


  Satellites

  Theories suggest that Venus once had a moon, which was formed after the collision.  This was followed by another collision which shattered the moon.  It is believed that the moon actually collided with Venus, thus having an unusual rotation.


  Future plans for Venus

  Venus has seen more than 40 spacecraft land on it because of its proximity to us.  Because of its proximity, it will always be the target of future studies and even of possible colonies.  Scientists have also talked about "floating cities" in Venus.  There are still missions going on, until recently in November 2019, NASA received some designs of a dunk-like spacecraft that could better observe and analyze Venus through a team at the University of Buffalo.


  do you know?

  - The temperature on Venus remains the same regardless of day and night.


  - Venus may appear in the sky as a white dot of light, its apparent intensity is -4.14 and standard deviation is 0.31.  It can also be seen in the clear afternoon sky, and is more easily seen when the sun is low or setting on the horizon.


  - Venus is always located at 47 degrees of the sun.


  - The Earth revolves around the Sun 8 times in every 13 orbits of Venus.


  - Venus has many times more volcanoes than Earth, and it has 167 large volcanoes that are more than 100 kilometers (62 miles) long.


  - The Venus tablet of Amesdoka, believed to have been formed in the middle of the seventeenth century BC, shows that the Babylonians believed that the evening star and the morning star were one and the same thing.  The tablet is called "the bright queen of the sky".  , And can support this view with detailed observations.



  - Although the first Americans to land on the moon, in 1967 they were the first Russians to send unmanned spacecraft to Venice.  The spacecraft's name was Venera 4, many other spacecraft had the same name but different numbers were sent after that.


  - The spacecraft sent to Venus could not run for more than an hour due to crushing environment and harsh conditions.


  - Venus is the second of the four terrestrial planets.


  - Venus is the first planet in the solar system whose orbit has been formed in the sky by ancient civilizations.


  -

  - Mercury and Venus revolve around the Sun in Earth's orbit, making them inferior planets.


   Astronomy

  First record: 14th century BC

  Surface temperature: 462 C

  Orbit duration: 224.70 Earth days

  Distance to orbit: 108,209,475 km (0.73 AU)

  Notable Moon: None.

  Famous Moon: None.

  Equator: 38,025 km

  Polar diameter: 12,104 km

  Equatorial diameter: 12,104 km

  Quantity: 4,867,320,000,000,000 billion kilograms (0.815 x Earth)

Saturday, May 7, 2022

Mars Planet

 Astronomy

   Mars

   Planet

  

   How far is Mars from Earth?

   What is the size of Mars?

   What do Mars and Earth have in common?

   What is the temperature on Mars?

   When did Viking 1 and Viking 2 land on Mars?

   Should humans inhabit space on Mars?

   Mars, the fourth planet in the solar system in terms of distance from the Sun, and the seventh planet in size and mass.  This is the most noticeable reddish thing in the night sky from time to time.




   Mars

   A particularly quiet view of Mars (Thrace Side), a collection of images taken in April 1999 by the Mars Global Surveyor spacecraft.  The dark mound surrounding the Arctic cap and the Vestatus borealis is visible in the upper part of the world.  Clouds of white water ice surround the most prominent volcanic peaks, including Olympus Mons near the western limbs, Alba Petra to its northeast, and the Thracian volcanic line to the southeast.  Near the equator east of the height of Thrace can be seen a huge gash marking the valley system Wallace Mariners.



   Sometimes called the Red Planet, Mars has long been associated with war and slaughter.  It is named after the Roman god of war.  Until 3,000 years ago, Babylonian astronomers called the planet Nergal their god of death and plague.  The two moons of the planet, Phobos (Greek: "fear") and Demos ("terror") were named after the two sons of Iris and Aphrodite (in Greek mythology the counterparts of Mars and Venus, respectively).



   Britannica Quiz

   Space Odyssey

   "far off".  "Specially".  "Out of this world".  You may have heard abusive gossip, but how much do you really know about space ... cadets?  Join this quiz and start your journey of planets and universe.

   Planetary data for Mars

   * The planet needs more time to return to the same position in the sky than the sun, as seen from Earth.

   Average distance from the sun 227,943,824 km (1.5 AU)

   The eccentricity of the orbit is 0.093

   The tilt of the orbit is 1.85 طرف towards the lunar eclipse

   Year of Mars (Revolutionary Period) 686.98 Earth Days

   Visual Intensity Average Opposition at .02.01

   Mean synodic period * 779.94 Earth days

   The average orbital speed is 24.1 kilometers per second

   The radius of the equator is 3,396.2 km

   North Pole radius 3,376.2 km

   South Pole radius 3,382.6 km

   Surface area 1.44 × 108 km2

   Mass 6.417 x 1023 kg

   Average density 3.93 g / cm3

   Average surface gravity 371 cm / sec2

   Escape speed 5.03 km / s

   Duration of rotation (cidral day of Mars) 24 hours 37 minutes 22.663 seconds

   Mars means solar day (civil) 24 hours 39 minutes 36 seconds.

   Tilt the equator toward 25.2

   Average surface temperature 210 K (82 ° F, −63 ° C)

   Normal surface pressure 0.006 bar

   Number of known moons 2


   In recent times, Mars has attracted people for more important reasons than its blasphemous appearance.  This planet is the second closest to Earth after Venus and is usually easier to observe in the night sky because its orbit is outside the Earth.  It is also the only planet whose solid surface and atmospheric reflections can be seen through telescopes from Earth.  A centuries-long study by ground observers spread through spacecraft observations since the 1960s has revealed that Mars resembles Earth in many ways.  Like Earth, Mars has clouds, winds, about 24 hours a day, weather patterns, polar ice caps, volcanoes, valleys and other familiar features.  Interesting indications are that billions of years ago, Mars was much more like Earth than it is today, with dense, warm climates and abundant water - rivers, lakes, floodplains and perhaps oceans.  By all accounts, Mars is now a sterile, frozen desert.  However, close photographs of the black lines on the slopes of some of the crater during the spring and summer of Mars suggest that at least a small amount of water may flow seasonally over the planet's surface, and below the South Pole cap.  This is indicated by the radar reflection from a possible lake.  Water may still be present as a liquid in safe areas below the surface.  The presence of water on Mars is considered a major problem because life, as it is now understood, cannot exist without water.  If microscopic life forms ever appeared on Mars, there is still a long way to go before they can survive in these hidden waters.  In 1996, a team of scientists reported what they concluded as evidence of ancient microbial life in a piece of meteorite coming from Mars, but most scientists disagreed with their interpretation.  ۔


   Since at least the end of the 19th century, Mars has been considered the most hospitable place for both local life and human exploration and habitat in the extraterrestrial solar system.  At the time, speculation was rife that the so-called canals of Mars - the complex system of long, straight-line lines that very few astronomers claimed to have seen in telescopic observations - were the creation of intelligent creatures.  Climate change in the planet's appearance, which is attributed to vegetation spreading and retreating, has added to the evidence required for biological activity.  However, these canals later turned out to be deceptive, and climate change did not dampen public interest in the possibility of geographical, scientific, and the possibility of life on Mars and the planet, rather than biological.


   During the last century, Mars has gained a special place in popular culture.  From H. G. Wells and Edgar Rice Burroughs to Ray Bradbury in the 1950's and Kim Stanley Robinson in the 90's, Martin Canal's rise to prominence has been a movement for generations of fiction writers.  Mars has also been a central theme in radio, television, and film, perhaps the most infamous case being the radio play production of Orson Wales' HG Wales novel War of the World, which drew thousands of immature listeners on the evening of October 30, 1938.  Persuaded  Creatures from Mars were invading the earth.  The mysticism of the planet and many real mysteries continue to be the impetus for both scientific research and the human imagination.


  

   Learn about the Martian Revolution on Earth.

   Find out how long a year is on Mars.

  

   Watch all the videos for this article

   Mars is the fourth planet to emerge from the sun.  It revolves around the sun at an average distance of 228 million kilometers (140 million miles), or about 1.5 times the distance of the earth from the sun.  Due to the relatively long orbit of Mars, the distance between Mars and the Sun ranges from 206.6 million to 249.2 million kilometers (128.4 million to 154.8 million miles).  Mars orbits the Sun once every 687 Earth days, which means its year is almost twice as long as Earth's.  At its closest point, Mars is less than 56 million kilometers (35 million miles) from Earth, but when the two planets are in opposite directions to the solar system, it is reduced to about 400 million kilometers (250 million miles).  Is.



   The easiest way to observe Mars is when it and the Sun are in opposite directions in the sky - that is, in the opposite direction - because it then rises high in the sky and shows a completely bright face.  Conflicts occur almost every 26 months.  Conflicts can occur in different places in the orbit of Mars.  The best things to see are when the planet is closest to the sun, and similarly to the earth, because Mars is then the brightest and largest.  Close opposition occurs almost every 15 years.


   Mars rotates on its axis once every 24 hours and 37 minutes, making a day on Mars a little longer than a day on Earth.  Its axis of rotation is about 25 ° inclined towards its orbital plane, and as far as the Earth is concerned, tilt gives rise to the seasons on Mars.  The year of Mars consists of 668.6 solar days of Mars called Souls.  Due to the elliptical orbit, southern temperatures are lower (154 on Mars) and warmer than northern (178 on Mars).  The situation is slowly changing, however, as 25,000 years from now, northern summers will be shorter and warmer.  In addition, the tilt of the axis, or tilt, is slowly changing over a time scale of about one million years.  Oblivion can occur near zero during the current period, when Mars has no weather, up to 45, when the climatic differences are extreme.  In 100 million years, obliqueness can reach up to 80%.



   Seasons of Mars

   Mars weather, the result of a 24.9 جھ tilt of the planet towards its orbital plane.  At this time, southern summer occurs when the long orbit of Mars brings it closer to the sun.  As the seasons change, the polar caps alternate and shrink.  At its maximum size, the southern cap extends approximately 5 times toward the equator than the northern cap.

  

   Mars is a small planet, only larger than Mercury and slightly larger than Earth.  It has an equatorial radius of 3,396 km (2,110 mi) and an average polar radius of 3,379 km (2,100 mi).  The mass of Mars is only one-tenth of the Earth's value, and its gravitational speed of 3.72 meters (12.2 feet) per second on the surface means that the objects on Mars weigh about one-third of their weight on Earth's surface.  There is more.  Mars has only 28% of the Earth's surface area, but because more than two-thirds of the Earth is covered by water, the Earth's surface area can be compared.  For additional orbital and physical data, see Table.


   Early telescopic observations


   Mars was a mystery to the ancient astronomers, who were amazed by its seemingly fascinating motion in the sky; sometimes in the direction of the sun and other celestial objects (direct, or progress, motion), sometimes in the opposite direction (  Opposite movement).  In 1609, the German astronomer Johannes Kepler, through his Danish colleague Tycho Bray, used the observations of the planet's high naked eye to experimentally estimate its laws of motion, and thus the modern gravitational theory of the solar system.  Paved the way for  Kepler found that the orbit of Mars is an ellipse with which the planet moves in unequal but predictable motion.  Earlier, astronomers based their views on the old Ptolemaic idea of ​​circular orbits and uniform motion classification.


   The earliest telescopic observations on Mars that showed the planet's disk were made in 1610 by the Italian astronomer Galileo.  In 1659, Huygens made a drawing of Mars showing a large black mark on the planet, now called Syrtis Major.  The polar caps of Mars were first noted in 1666 by the Italian-born French astronomer Gian Dominico Cassini.


   Visual observers later made many important discoveries.  The period of the planet's rotation was discovered by Haggins in 1659, and Cassini measured it in 24 hours and 40 minutes in 1666 - just 3 minutes by mistake.  The weak atmosphere of Mars was first noted by William Herschel, a British astronomer of German descent in the 1780s, who also measured the tilt of the planet's rotation axis and was the first to discuss the seasons on Mars.  In 1877, Asaf Hall of the US Naval Observatory discovered that Mars had two natural satellites.  Telescopic observations have also documented many meteorological and meteorological phenomena occurring on Mars, such as different types of clouds, increasing and contraction of polar caps, and seasonal changes in the color and extent of dark regions.


   The first known map of Mars was made in 1830 by Wilhelm Beer and Johann Heinrich von Mلdler of Germany.  Italian astronomer Giovanni Virginio Schiaparelli created the first modern astronomical map of Mars in 1877, which contained the basis of the name system that is still in use today.  The names on the map are in Latin and are based primarily on the ancient geography of the Mediterranean region.  For the first time, the map also showed signs of a straight line interconnected system over bright areas, which he described as canals (Italian: "channels").  Schiaparelli is usually credited with his first description, but his compatriot Petro Angelo Sichi developed the Canali theory in 1869.  In the late 19th century, American astronomer Percival Lowell set up an observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona, specifically to observe Mars, and produced it.  Extensive maps of the canals of Mars until his death in 1916.


   Mars as seen from Earth.

   For the Earth-based telescope observer, the surface of Mars outside the polar caps is characterized by bright red ocher-colored areas with visible black markings.  In the past, bright areas were called deserts, and the vast majority of dark areas were actually called Maria (Latin: "ocean" or "ocean"; single horse) in the idea that they were covered by water.  ۔  No topography can be seen with ground-based binoculars.  What is observed are changes in the brightness of the surface or changes in the opacity of the atmosphere.



   Mars: The last day of spring

   Mars (Certus Major Side) An image taken by the Hubble Space Telescope orbiting the Earth on March 10, 1997, the last day of the Martian spring in the Northern Hemisphere.  Long acquainted with telescopic observers.  The Arctic cap at the top has lost most of its annual frozen carbon dioxide layer, revealing a small permanent water cap and black collar sand dunes.  Syrtis Major is a large black mark just below the center and east.  Beneath it, on the southern limbs, is the gigantic Impact Basin Heels, which is covered by an elliptical portion of water ice clouds.  Clouds of water ice are also visible on the eastern limbs above the volcanic peaks in the Elysium area.

  

   Surface features

   Dark marks cover about one-third of the surface of Mars, mostly in a band between latitudes 10 ° and 40 ° S around the planet.  Their distribution is irregular, and their overall pattern has been seen to change from tens to hundreds of times.  The Northern Hemisphere has only three major features of this year; Oxedilia planetia, Certus Major, and a deep collar around the pole - which were once considered shallow seas or vegetation areas.  It is now known that many dark regions of Mars form and change when winds move black sand around the surface or shake dusty areas.  Many bright areas are dusty areas.  The canals that are so prominent on telescopic observations around the early 20th century are not visible in close-up images of the spacecraft.  They were almost certainly imaginary features that observers thought pushed their telescopes to create objects close to the resolution limit.  Other features, such as "wave of darkness" and "blue haze" described by early observers on the telescope, are now known to result from a combination of changes in viewing conditions and surface reflective properties.



   Britannica Quiz

   The moon of the planet and the earth

   What is the relationship between distant planets and perceived extraterrestrial life?  Which is the hottest planet in our solar system?  Put on your thinking hats - and seat belts - and test your astronomy knowledge in this quiz.

   Polar region

   For telescopic observers, the most amazing regular changes on Mars are at the poles.  With the onset of fall in a particular hemisphere, clouds form over the corresponding polar region, and a cap made of frozen carbon dioxide begins to grow.  In the north, the small cap eventually extends to 55 ° latitude, and in the south to the large 50 ° latitude.  Hats off in the spring.  During the summer, the North Carbon Dioxide cap disappears completely, leaving only a small cap of water ice.  In the south a small residual cap composed of carbon dioxide ice and water ice stays in the summer.



   Mars Polar Water Ice Cap

   Mars permanent polar water ice cap, in two views obtained by the Global Surveyor of Mars in addition to one Mars summer in the northern summer (March 1999, left and January 2001, right).  The ringing of the bell, measuring about 1,100 kilometers (680 miles), is the dark sand dunes that mark the northern part of the Vestitus Borealis.  The distinctive appearance of the hat reflects the spiral patterns of scorpions and valleys in the underground regions.  The difference in the coverage of summer frosts can be seen by comparing the images.  Although they may appear small, they indicate large annual changes in the summer budget for the polar cap.

  


   The design of seasonal polar hats has been the subject of debate for almost 200 years.  An early hypothesis - that the hats were made of water ice - can be traced back to the English astronomer William Herschel, who assumed that they existed on Earth.  In 1898, George J. Stony, an Irish scientist, questioned this theory and suggested that caps may contain frozen carbon dioxide, but Dutch American astronomer Gerard Kuiper's 1947 discovery of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.  Until then, there was no evidence to support this view.


   In 1966, American scientists Robert Layton and Bruce Murray published the results of a numerical model of the thermal atmosphere on Mars, which raised a lot of doubts about the hypothesis of water ice.  Their calculations indicated that, under the conditions of Mars, carbon dioxide would accumulate at poles in the atmosphere, and their model of carbon dioxide caps evolved and shrunk, mimicking the observed behavior of the original caps.  The model predicted that seasonal hats were relatively thin, only a few meters deep near the poles and thinner towards the equator.  Although based on the ease of real conditions on Mars, their results were later confirmed by thermal and spectral measurements taken by the twin Mariner 6 and 7 spacecraft when they flew from Mars in 1969.


   Manifestations of a temporary environment

   Early telescopic observers noted instances in which the surface features of Mars were temporarily unclear.  They observed both white and yellow opacity, which were correctly explained by the thick gas and dust, respectively.  Binocular observers also noted the intermittent disappearance of all black markings, usually around southern summer.  Once again, they were interpreted correctly as a result of global dust storms.  Observations of the spacecraft have confirmed that haze, clouds and fog usually cover the surface.



   Mars: Storm

   Large hurricane system at altitude above the Arctic region of Mars, photographed by the Mars Global Surveyor on June 30, 1999.  The "curl" consists mainly of water ice clouds that meet the orange-brown dust rising from the surface with strong winds.  The North Pole cap is seen on the upper left as a spiral pattern of light and deep bands.

BENIGN TUMOR

Benign Tumor A benign tumor is an abnormal but noncancerous collection of cells. It can form anywhere on or in your body when cells multiply...