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Of particular interest is a bright pit on the floor of crater Occator that exhibits probable sublimation of water ice, producing haze clouds inside the crater that appear and disappear with a diurnal rhythm. Slow-moving condensed-ice or dust particles may explain this haze. We conclude that Ceres must have accreted material from beyond the ‘snow line’, which is the distance from the Sun at which water molecules condense.
originally posted by: Sheesh
a reply to: billygentry
No news, then. This is what they have been saying from day 1. If only someone had brought a spectrometer, it would have been proven without a doubt.
originally posted by: chr0naut
a reply to: billygentry
To achieve faceted crystals of sufficient size to reflect optical wavelengths without a color bias, implies that crystallization time was long (allowing atoms to arrange physically according to their ionic attractions).
At the temperature of this object (a maximum of -35 decrees C), and with the particular hydrated salts mentioned, and with the the way the accretion of molecular water/salts occurred, I cannot see that as a possibility.
Not solved.
originally posted by: slapjacks
originally posted by: Sheesh
a reply to: billygentry
No news, then. This is what they have been saying from day 1. If only someone had brought a spectrometer, it would have been proven without a doubt.
I don't think a spectrometer would have done them much good...
originally posted by: yorkshirelad
originally posted by: chr0naut
a reply to: billygentry
To achieve faceted crystals of sufficient size to reflect optical wavelengths without a color bias, implies that crystallization time was long (allowing atoms to arrange physically according to their ionic attractions).
At the temperature of this object (a maximum of -35 decrees C), and with the particular hydrated salts mentioned, and with the the way the accretion of molecular water/salts occurred, I cannot see that as a possibility.
Not solved.
So water at -35 in the Antarctic cannot be white ?
Dawn is now entering a low-altitude mapping orbit around Ceres, and will soon quadruple the resolution of its best images of the surface. “When the data’s spatial resolution increases by a factor of four, the one thing I have complete confidence in is surprises…. God knows there will be many more questions to scratch our heads about!” he adds.