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Дата изменения: Tue Oct 2 12:13:07 2012 Дата индексирования: Sun Feb 3 15:58:33 2013 Кодировка: Поисковые слова: m 81 |
Have your students make sketches of the full Moon while they are at home. Ask them to draw something like a first impression, a quick sketch that focuses mainly on the outlines of the dark maria, or lava plains on the lunar surface. Compare the sketches with a photograph of the Moon. Discuss what the sketches look like. How many look like a rabbit? How many like the Man in the Moon? How many like something else? Finally discuss whether there really is a rabbit or a giant face on the Moon.
When
people look at the full Moon, they often see either a Man in the Moon
(left) or a rabbit in the Moon (right). (Courtesy American Museum of Natural
History) |
Initially there was speculation that a problem with the pressurization may have caused the fuel to leak, making the spacecraft tumble out of control, or even explode. After a few days of silence, a second theory emerged: a pair of electronic transistors in Mars Observer's master clock, the timekeeper for most of the craft's computers, may have failed, disabling the spacecraft. Researchers found a similar problem in the master clock of the NOAA-3 weather satellite before its launch last June. The faulty transistors were from the same manufacturing batch as those aboard Mars Observer. The transistors on the weather satellite were replaced before launch, but Mars Observer was already on its way to Mars when the problem was discovered. A NASA task force investigating the cause of the loss of Mars Observer should release its findings around Thanksgiving of this year.
What about other missions to Mars? The Mars Environmental Survey (MESUR) will include a network of a dozen or more landers. Each lander will have a small mobile robot to explore the Martian surface. The first lander in the network, MESUR Pathfinder, is scheduled for launch by NASA in 1996 (to arrive at Mars in 1997). The MESURmissions are not dependent on results from Mars Observer, and thus should not be effected by its loss.
On the other hand, two planned Russian missions to Mars, Mars 94 and Mars 96, had hoped to use the Mars Observer orbiter to relay data from a Russian lander (in the case of Mars 94) and atmospheric balloon (for Mars 96) to their orbiters farther away from the planet. At this time it is unclear what effect the loss of Mars Observer will have on these missions. NASA scientists are also looking into the possibility of creating a new spacecraft to replace Mars Observer, using parts scavenged from other missions. But this replacement won't be ready until November 1996, at the earliest.
The landers also carried miniature biological laboratories designed to perform three different tests for microorganisms in the Martian soil. The three tests were all based on the idea that living things alter their environment -- they eat, breathe, and give off waste products. In each test, the lander's long robotic arm scooped up some soil and put it in a closed container, with or without certain nutrients. The containers were then analyzed for changes in their contents, changes that could be attributed to biological processes. The three experiments were as follows:
In almost every case, rapid and extensive changes took place within the experimental containers. But later analyses showed that the activity could have been caused by ordinary chemical, not biological, reactions. It appears that Martian soil is much more chemically active than soil on Earth, perhaps because of its exposure to the Sun's ultraviolet radiation (due to the lack of a protective ozone layer in the Martian atmosphere). The organic experiment found no trace whatsoever of organic material, which was apparently killed by this same ultraviolet light.
The Viking experiments were sensitive enough that they would have easily detected signs of life anywhere on Earth, with the possible exception of Antarctica. While the possibility of life on present-day Mars has not been conclusively eliminated, it does not appear likely.
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