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CNN —Data from a retired NASA mission has revealed evidence of an underground reservoir of water deep beneath the surface of Mars, according to new research. A team of scientists estimates that there may be enough water, trapped in tiny cracks and pores of rock in the middle of the Martian crust, to fill oceans on the planet’s surface. NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter took an image of InSight sitting on the Martian surface on February 2, 2019. “It’s certainly true on Earth — deep, deep mines host life, the bottom of the ocean hosts life. Windows into Martian historyThe findings add a new piece to the Martian water puzzle.
Persons: , Vashan Wright, , Mars, orbiters, InSight’s seismometer, Wright, James Tuttle Keane, Aaron Rodriguez, Michael Manga, “ It’s, haven’t, Alberto Fairén, Fairén, Bruce Banerdt, we’re, Banerdt, al, ” Banerdt, , ” Wright Organizations: CNN, NASA, National Academy of Sciences, Reconnaissance Orbiter, JPL, Caltech, University of Arizona, University of California, Diego’s Scripps, of Oceanography, Mars, Interior Exploration, Transport, Scripps Institute of Oceanography, University of Maryland, Cornell University Locations: Mars, Berkeley
A NASA illustration of the InSight lander after it deployed its instruments on the Martian surface. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration said Wednesday that its InSight Mars mission had ended after recent attempts by mission controllers to contact the lander had failed. The agency said the lander had fallen silent, likely because its batteries had run out of energy as a result of the accumulation of dust on its solar panels. The robotic lander arrived on the Martian surface on Nov. 26, 2018, after a more than a six-month journey through space. Since then, InSight—short for Interior Exploration using Seismic Investigations, Geodesy and Heat Transport—had been studying the planet’s interior, weather and seismic activity.
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