Mars Atmospheric Pressure affecting Ingenuity

Sunday, September 19, 2021

Seasonal atmospheric pressure changes on Mars
Seasonal pressure variation on Mars
A very interesting update on the Mars 2020 mission appeared recently - specifically the Ingenuity helicopter's ability to fly in relationship to Mars' atmospheric pressure. The atmospheric density of Jezero crater is dropping. 


Seasonally, the atmospheric pressure on Mars varies approximates 25-30% peak-to-peak (Smith 2008) due to the exchange of CO2 with the polar ice cap. Ingenuity was designed for flights in atmospheric densities of 1.2-1.5% of Earth's. However, the density may drop to 1.0% requiring some extra spin-up of the blades to stop any aerodynamic stalling.


This does imply some considerations on how atmospheric variability might affect habitability when deeper exoplanet data is analyzed (Linsenmeier et al. 2015 have a good overview)


You can read more about the Ingenuity issues here.

Avi Loeb Continues to Push the Science of ET

Monday, September 13, 2021

Oumuamua artist rendition
Oumuamua - Credit ESO M. Kornmesser

It's great to see a respected Harvard scientist push the envelope on extraterrestrial life. Avi Loeb was chastised for his speculation on Oumuamua but has bounced back with backing for his Galileo Project - "the search for extraterrestrial technological signatures of Extraterrestrial Technological Civilizations (ETCs) from accidental or anecdotal observations".

 

Loeb published an interesting op ed in Scientific American yesterday outlining his opinions on AI-enabled self-replicating technologies exploring the galaxy and how we might be able to detect these extraterrestrial objects. It's a short read but demonstrates the core idea of his project.

 

Loeb is no lightweight here and has published a number of scientific papers (one example Lingam & Loeb 2019) working through the problems of alien panspermia, probabilities of encounters and implications of the galactic environments on extraterrestrial life.

ExoAstronomy Next Steps

Thursday, September 9, 2021

ESA/Hubble,
M. Kornmesser
I've been thinking about where to go with this blog for quite a while now. So many new things and ideas have popped up in the last year of Covid its been difficult to focus on a particular topic - to name a few: UAPs and Government releases, James Webb Telescope, Avi Loeb's Galileo Project, Mars 2020, Cambrian evolution, new ocean exoplanets, reassessment of the Drake Equation, etc.


As I noted earlier, if anything, it is more than apparent that extraterrestrial life is more than just a scientific problem, it is a sociological problem (there's a full blog post being drafted just on that point alone). But the problem is exciting because it is becoming readily apparent that we will discover some form of alien life soon. The implications are immense and hopefully, I will be able to keep you updated here!


Extraterrestrial Music - I've Seen the Saucers

Saturday, May 22, 2021

A bit of fun on a Saturday. In 1974 was Elton John talking to the Pentagon? There aren't many songs about extraterrestrials but this one is a good one from his Caribou album...



Astronomers, UFOs and the Null Hypothesis

Thursday, May 20, 2021

UFOs and astronomy
In a recent article, Ethan Siegel a Senior Contributor on Astronomy in Forbes magazine, provides a very good overview as to why scientists seems to remain mostly mute on the topic of UFOs. Clearly, part of the problem is that UFOs as a general topic doesn't specifically apply to one scientific discipline such as astronomy - it applies to many different areas of science, sociology, biology, engineering, philosophy, etc. Astronomers tend to get the brunt of the questions - especially due to SETI and astrobiology (or, just because they keep their eyes on the sky).

Many people complain that science isn't doing enough to study the UFO evidence. But, is it really a scientific problem? If aliens revealed themselves wouldn't it fall directly into a social/political problem space? Yes, scientists and engineers would be happy to start extending our knowledge based on what we might learn at that point but currently the types of science we need falls more into statistical work and observational evidence since much of the measures are not repeatable. This is more in line with investigators, sociologists and other disciplines (like the military, of course).


Significant UFO Disclosures on the Rise

Tuesday, May 18, 2021

Barack Obama discusses UFOs
Interesting to see the amount of press interest in UFOs / UAPs recently. It's really quite unusual to see the mainstream media start to report these sightings and stories without some silly, campy quips or side stories to save face (in 'My Blog List' in the right column of the home page, the reporter Billy Cox, aka Devoid, was quite serious on the topic but was shut down recently).

I will be writing much more on this in the future, but to hear a former President of the United States admit there are unknown craft in the sky and that's reported in mainstream media might just raise the extraterrestrial problem more into the scientific realm (even though the discussion was still part of a comedy program).

Extraterrestrial Mix of Science and Speculation

Thursday, December 24, 2020

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation
CSIRO/A. Cherney
I really liked this article on some of the most important topics for extraterrestrial life - Extraterrestrial evidence: 10 incredible findings about aliens from 2020

 

This is probably one of the better overviews that keeps an open mind on what some of the possibilities are. It would have been nice to see some demarcation on what is speculation vs scientific results - but, it can be gleaned from the text. Enjoy!

24 Top Exoplanets to Live On - Is this Science?

Wednesday, October 7, 2020

Artist rendition of exoplanet
Courtesy NASA
Sometimes I really like articles that nudge the scientific envelope a bit but many times I really don't like how the mainstream media reports it. You can see here how Gizmodo't title "These 24 Planets Might Be Better Places to Live Than Earth, Astrobiologists Say" might be a bit sensational - especially considering some of the jabs in the article.


That said, it's good news that some criteria for habitability is being pushed in the scientific journals. I will post more on this in the future.