news: water on mars

didn't we sort of already know this because there is frozen water on mars (ie ice)?
 
Doaln said:
didn't we sort of already know this because there is frozen water on mars (ie ice)?

The temperature on Mars never goes above the freezing point of water. What they were looking for, and what they found, was that the landing spot was once a lake of liquid water.
 
Tribal Imperialist said:
The temperature on Mars never goes above the freezing point of water. What they were looking for, and what they found, was that the landing spot was once a lake of liquid water.

yeah it does


At the landing sites, an expected daytime high on the ground might be around 22º Celsius (71º Fahrenheit). An expected nighttime lows might be -99º Celsius (-146º Fahrenheit). Atmospheric temperatures, by contrast, can vary up to 83º Celsius (181º Fahrenheit). An atmospheric daytime high might be -3º Celsius (26º Fahrenheit), while a nighttime low might be -96º Celsius (-140º Fahrenheit).
 
addps4cat said:
yeah it does


At the landing sites, an expected daytime high on the ground might be around 22º Celsius (71º Fahrenheit). An expected nighttime lows might be -99º Celsius (-146º Fahrenheit). Atmospheric temperatures, by contrast, can vary up to 83º Celsius (181º Fahrenheit). An atmospheric daytime high might be -3º Celsius (26º Fahrenheit), while a nighttime low might be -96º Celsius (-140º Fahrenheit).

Those temperatures were given in farenheit, not celsius.

Good job converting farenheit to farenheit.
 
Risuli said:
wobbler.html

Good job putting a HTML file in an image tag.
 
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