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Originally posted by Rockpuck
The color of the sky has to do with the amount of atmosphere the planet has.. which Mars does infact have an atmosphere with limited oxygen.. maybe not completely gone .. but very small amount.. and that does not prove life exist AND in relation to the thread as you admit the planets ground is a rust colored red hence Mars is STILL red.
So..
Your point?
Originally posted by ArMaP
No, I used the 673nm version for the Red, the 535nm for the Green and the 432nm for the Blue (the closest I could get from NASA's photos) to make that "photo", the closest to a RGB photo I could make using only Photoshop and the photos provided by NASA.
Unfortunately, ESA has published just some photos, I would love to see all their photos.
If we do no not trust NASA, can we trust ESA? And can we trust any other organisation? And if we can do something else than wait, what can we do?
Red sky?
Originally posted by StellarX
Then why is it that others can actually manage to put together blue skies with the same data? Why are both you and NASA finding it so hard to get anything other than red skies?
Originally posted by ArMaP
The sky in the picture I made using the other pictures is almost white, with very little blue on the left, but no red.
Originally posted by morgansolutions
www.msss.com...
From what I've read, only one person mentioned these pics, everyone else carried on chatting about the colour of the sky.
Now anyone looking at this pic will instantly notice some specs (trees) which appear to become more densely packed the further down you scroll - until you hit what I'd call a "forest" of them. Further down again are what I can only describe as "lakes" - and packed around these "lakes" are more tightly packed "trees".
This pattern takes on an uncanny resemblance to the natural growth patterns of vegetation here on earth and so I was wandering if this had been discussed elsewhere in the forum already.
I have e-mailed this image to everyone here in my office (under the heading "Excellent Satellite Photo" - with no references to Mars) and I asked them what they thought it was...the reply....Earth.
I work in an office with 3 geologists.
Originally posted by StellarX
"Men occasionally stumble over the truth, but most of them pick themselves up and hurry off as if nothing had happened."
Winston Churchill
Originally posted by prestige8
yeah i heard that mars may hav elife below its surface where there are said to be frozen water sources and a big ice cap atits northpole, but i heard the athmosphere on mars was is thinner than on earth which makes it more vulnerable to meteor impacts and devoid of oxygen
Originally posted by prestige8
yeah i heard that mars may hav elife below its surface where there are said to be frozen water sources and a big ice cap atits northpole, but i heard the athmosphere on mars was is thinner than on earth which makes it more vulnerable to meteor impacts and devoid of oxygen