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One example, which may be partially buried by airfall, leading to an estimated thickness for the airfall of 1 to 5 m using standard scaling laws, has been identified (fig. S2).We expect that any ice chunks or particles larger than a few millimeters that are emitted from the source will not sublimate before falling back and could therefore form visually bright, highly localized ice deposits and sources of gas on these surfaces.
originally posted by: olaru12
My question is about the sand....
Isn't sand created by water or wind abrading larger rocks; a by product of abrasion. What made the sand on that comet?
Thus the reason for my thinking that the comet might be a chip off the old planet block.
originally posted by: Phage
a reply to: olaru12
Did someone say it was sand? Did someone say it was rocky? More like snow than sand. But not exactly, because it doesn't come from the sky.
One example, which may be partially buried by airfall, leading to an estimated thickness for the airfall of 1 to 5 m using standard scaling laws, has been identified (fig. S2).We expect that any ice chunks or particles larger than a few millimeters that are emitted from the source will not sublimate before falling back and could therefore form visually bright, highly localized ice deposits and sources of gas on these surfaces.
www.sciencemag.org...
High-resolution data show evidence of dunelike structures (fig. S3) that may be the result of aeolian-driven surface transport of the dust (13). Images acquired in the Hapi region of aeolian ripple structures, rocks with wind tails (fig. S4), and rocks with moats provide further support for localized gas-driven transport.
↵Although the morphology of many surfaces on 67P suggests a rock-like texture, we have avoided using that term here because of the expected very low density of the surfaces when compared to terrestrial rocks. We have adopted the term “consolidated cometary material” instead (CCM).
originally posted by: olaru12
originally posted by: Phage
a reply to: olaru12
Uh huh. That's what it says. The rocks mentioned aren't stones.
Read the whole thing. Like I said, it's really interesting.
Rocks aren't stones! What are they? Also snow? lol
originally posted by: olaru12
originally posted by: Phage
a reply to: olaru12
Uh huh. That's what it says. The rocks mentioned aren't stones.
Read the whole thing. Like I said, it's really interesting.
Rocks aren't stones! What are they? Also snow? lol
originally posted by: GaryN
a reply to: teamcommander
Would you think these features could be caused my vibrations?
Yes, by way of ion acoustic waves, which have been found to be very strong on and around some comets.
originally posted by: wildespace
originally posted by: olaru12
originally posted by: Phage
a reply to: olaru12
Uh huh. That's what it says. The rocks mentioned aren't stones.
Read the whole thing. Like I said, it's really interesting.
Rocks aren't stones! What are they? Also snow? lol
Take Saturn's moon Titan for example. Rocks, sand, and even mountains there are made of ice rather than rock.
That said, the surface of this comet hardly has any ice. More likely, its surface is a combination of rocky rubble mantle and carbon-rich irradiation mantle.
originally posted by: eriktheawful
originally posted by: olaru12
originally posted by: Phage
a reply to: olaru12
Uh huh. That's what it says. The rocks mentioned aren't stones.
Read the whole thing. Like I said, it's really interesting.
Rocks aren't stones! What are they? Also snow? lol
Rocks here on Earth are normally made up of various minerals.
Metal Frost? Is that really possible? Whoa! head-spin!
A "rock" on a comet may be made up of water ice, solid gasses and/or various organic compounds.
Because of the very low temps, it can just as solid as any rock here on Earth.
Take a look at the image of Titan's surface sent back by the Huygens probe. Looks like pebbles laying around there.
Only those pebbles? They're not minerals. They're ice.
There was a recent article about Venus, taking about a frost layer on the upper elevations of mountains on Venus.
The frost? It's not water. It's metal.
originally posted by: Phage
a reply to: lostbook
I tend to think that if life is "helped" to begin by extraterrestrial materials, it will tend to be more similar to that on Earth than different. We've found some of the most basic building blocks in space, building blocks that could conceivably lead to DNA. While DNA can yield an enormous level of variety, it's fascinating to think that extraterrestrial life may also be based upon that same molecule.
originally posted by: lostbook
originally posted by: wildespace
originally posted by: olaru12
originally posted by: Phage
a reply to: olaru12
Uh huh. That's what it says. The rocks mentioned aren't stones.
Read the whole thing. Like I said, it's really interesting.
Rocks aren't stones! What are they? Also snow? lol
Take Saturn's moon Titan for example. Rocks, sand, and even mountains there are made of ice rather than rock.
That said, the surface of this comet hardly has any ice. More likely, its surface is a combination of rocky rubble mantle and carbon-rich irradiation mantle.
Mountains of ice??? but not water ice, correct...?
What about sound?
Can sound create movement on a comet?