News on Mars
- Discovery of significant changes in Martian sand-dunes
- Signs of ancient flowing water on Mars
- ESAs Mars Express gravity results plot volcanic history
- Impact sites hint at life on Mars
- Pit chains may hold caverns ideal for life
- New explanation for layered deposits in Mars Grand-Canyon
- A mounting - INSIDE a crater on Mars
- Wake-up on to a dusty season on Mars
- Discovery of new kind of surface on mars
- Lakes and shorelines on mars
- Tornado on Mars
- Recent geological activity on Mars
- ESA's Mars-express find evidence of past ocean
- Surface on Mars unlikely place for life
- Mars: A thin but windy atmosphere
- Observing campain of Mars's north pole
- Landslides on Mars occur spontaniously
- Martian avalanches caused by meteor impacts
- Water on Mars: maybe martian microbes
- Mars rover finds mineral vein deposited by water
- Martian polar gullies created by CO2 fluidation
- Sand-dunes move on Mars
- Most Martian-clay is subsurface originated
- Direct measurement of Mars's past temperature
- Clusters of newly formed craters on Mars
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Mars facts

Mars: 4th planet from the Sun
Distance from Sun: 228mio km.
Diameter: 6.794km.
Surface-pressure: 0,001atm.
Atm composition: 99% CO
Temp: -100ºC to +20ºC
Moons: Phobos & Deimos
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Landslides on Mars occur spontaniously
Sunday, 25 December 2011 16:30
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| Solar system - Mars |
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Landslides on Mars has several times been argued as a sign of fluid subsurface water. But new zero-gravity geophysical tests, show that landslides can occur spontaniously whithout the contribution of water
A pile of sand, gravel, or other granular material takes on a familiar conical shape, with the slope of the pile's walls coming to rest at the static angle of repose. If the material exceeds this angle, it will trigger an avalanche, tumbling down until it comes to rest at the dynamic angle of repose. Static angles of repose for coarse, angular materials tend to be around 40° from the horizontal, while smooth grains are stable up to 20°. As largely a matter of geometry, grain properties, and internal friction, scientists have assumed these two angles of repose are fixed for a given substance. Observations of the angles of gully walls on Mars, found to be too shallow for the materials involved, have been used to argue that surface water must have played a part, either lubricating landslides or depositing the material directly. But research by Kleinhans et al., using the parabolic flight of an airplane to test the effect of gravity on angles of repose, demonstrates that water need not have been present. As the plane followed its roller coaster style path, slowly rotating cylinders containing different materials experienced 1/10 of Earth's gravity (0,1G), Martian gravity (0,38G) and the Earth's normal pull (1G). The authors find that at 0,1G, the static angle of repose for all materials increases by 5°, while the dynamic angle of repose decreases by 10°. They suggest weaker gravity would reduce internal friction for avalanching material and could explain the shallow gully walls on the Martian surface. Further, as angles of repose are commonly used as measures of material properties, this challenge to their presumed gravity independence will require a reassessment of many other surface processes at lower slopes. Source: Journal of Geophysical Research-Planets |




