Ilmuan Belanda Mencari Relawan Untuk Tinggal Di Mars
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hastaantasena
Ilmuan Belanda Mencari Relawan Untuk Tinggal Di Mars
Mars One salah satu perusahaan nirlaba berbasis di Belanda telah mengumumkan akan merekrut relawan untuk tinggal di Mars dan siapa pun yang berkeinginan untuk terbang ke planet Mars di persilahkan untuk mendaftar dan siapapun pasti akan mendapatkan kesempatan untuk terbang ke planet mars.
Manajemen perusahaan Mars One telah memutuskan untuk merekrut bukan hanya akademisi atau mantan pilot: setiap "orang biasa" yang telah mencapai usia mayoritas dapat melamar untuk berpartisipasi dalam kompetisi tanpa memandang status negara dan harus bisa berbahasa inggris.
Mars One, berencana untuk "mendaratkan" astronot pertama di permukaan Planet Merah pada 2023, yang diterbitkan pada Selasa, 8 Januari, 2013, persyaratan untuk calon astronot di masa depan, proses seleksi akan di siarkan langsung oleh global TV, dijadwalkan mulai akhir tahun ini.
Kriteria yang paling penting dilaporkan kepada perwakilan perusahaan adalah kecerdasan yang tinggi, kondisi psiko-fisiologis dan fisik yang baik, dan, di atas semua, tentu saja, minat yang tulus dalam proyek, untuk para astronot akan menghabiskan sekitar delapan tahun, tanpa lelah berolahraga, sebelum menuju ke Planet Merah. Dan kemudian mereka dapat menjadi pelopor dalam bidang eksplorasi Mars.
Sebelum mengirimkan pesawat berawak ke ruang angkasa Mars, perusahaan Mars One merencanakan serangkaian misi robot kargo di tahun 2016-2021 dan untuk bangunan pos mars untuk dapat di huni pada tahun 2023.
Spoiler for PICT:
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komparasi mars dan bumi
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kira kira ini apa yaa..?
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mars carter ice Water Ice
I like this this image as it shows vast quantities of frozen water ice on Mars. Yes, that’s a big patch of residual water ice in a crater that is about 35 km wide. The image was captured by ESA’s Mars Express. Click to view the 2250 x 1800 version.
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ESA’s Mars Express captured this image in February 2005. It shows an unnamed impact crater located on Vastitas Borealis, a broad plain that covers much of Mars’s far northern latitudes. The crater is 35 kilometres wide and has a maximum depth of approximately 2 kilometres beneath the crater rim. The circular patch of bright material located at the centre of the crater is residual water ice. The colours are very close to natural, but the vertical relief is exaggerated three times. Image credit: ESA/DLR/FU Berlin (G. Neukum).
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di fiLm john Carter
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dari Wordpress gan...
Space Scenery: Mars Posted by: Kash Farooq | March 2, 2012
I’m kicking off a new series of posts that lets me collect amazing/beautiful/stunning astronomical images on particular themes into blog posts. Basically – blog posts full of eye candy. With perhaps just a little bit of science occasionally thrown in too.
I’m going to start with Mars. I Tweeted an image of Mars (3976 × 2542) the other day, and this is the reply I received from a friend:
That’s amazing! With all these phenomenal images I sometimes feel like I’ve been there.
It inspired me to start this series of posts and to pick Mars as the first subject (thanks Peter! And thanks for the title of this series!).
Let’s begin.
The high quality images of Mars are arriving from a number of sources. The incredibly successful NASA rovers Opportunity and Spirit have sent back amazing images from the surface. The two rovers lasted far longer than the initial target of a 90-day mission – Opportunity is still going (2958 days and counting). Spirit sadly “died” on 2010 (it sent its last communication March 22 2010). Amazing images from orbit have been captured by spacecraft such as NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter and Mars Global Surveyor, and ESA’s Mars Express.
Victoria Crater
This is the image that always astounds me into saying “That’s Mars, that is”. The detail is incredible.
Click the image for the full, huge panoramic 12200 × 1920 pixel version. The version below is cropped and does not show the entire crater.
Notice the cliff face is layered – it is clearly sandstone; it shows layers that have formed gradually, probably via wind-blown sand deposits.
This image is a mosaic of many images captured by Opportunity Rover over 21 Martian days. It shows Victoria Crater from Cape Verde. Victoria Crater is roughly 800 metres wide. The cliff face on the left (Cape St. Mary) is 15 metres high. Click for full, huge panoramic 12200 × 1920 pixel version. Image credit: NASA
West Valley
Here is an image captured by Spirit rover. The image below doesn’t do the full vista justice. Click to view the 5628 x 1632 pixel image. The image was produced by James Canvin using freely available data. I highly recommend you visit his website for lots of Martian landscapes.
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A 180° panorama of West Valley captured by Spirit over three Martian days. Features in this image: Tsiolkovski Ridge (hill on the left), Grissom Hill (behind Tsiolkovski Ridge, on the Horizon, which is about 8 kilometers away), Husband Hill (tallest hill on the horizon, 800 metres away). Image credit: NASA/JPL/Cornell/James Canvin. Created by James Canvin from raw JPL and Exploratorium images. Visit his website Mars Vista website: http://www.nivnac.co.uk/mer
Martian Sunset
A sunset…ON MARS! Spirit rover captured this sunset in May 2005 from Gusev crater. Click to view 2486 x 1914 version.
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Spirit rover captured this Martian sunset in May 2005 from Gusev crater. Image credit: NASA/JPL/Texas A&M/Cornell
kalo sampai 8 tahun gmna kalo cadangan makanan abis? musthi nunggu gtoo kiriman dari bumi..? SUMBER
Diubah oleh hastaantasena 11-01-2013 07:40
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