Skip to content
Renfrewshire Astronomical Society

We are a friendly group with a common interest in all aspects of amateur astronomy

Primary Navigation Menu
Menu
  • Home
  • Society
  • Galleries
    • Ian Martin’s Images
    • Jim Wood’s Images
    • Wullie Mitchell Images
  • Weekly Meetings

Where Does Mars’ Methane Go? New Study Provides Possible Answer, with Implications in the Search for Life.

By: RAS_WEB
On: July 4, 2019
In: News, RSSfeeds, Universe Today

Where Does Mars’ Methane Go? New Study Provides Possible Answer, with Implications in the Search for Life.

A new study from Aarhus University offers new insight into what is making Mars’ methane “disappear” – with serious implications in the search for life.

The post Where Does Mars’ Methane Go? New Study Provides Possible Answer, with Implications in the Search for Life. appeared first on Universe Today.

Universe Today
Go to Source

2019-07-04
Previous Post: Properties of magnetohydrodynamic modes in compressively driven plasma turbulence. (arXiv:1907.01853v1 [physics.plasm-ph])
Next Post: A preliminary forecast for cosmological parameter estimation with gravitational-wave standard sirens from TianQin. (arXiv:1907.01838v1 [astro-ph.CO])

Recent Posts

  • Lasers at the Lunar Poles Could Help Astronauts Navigate
  • Pulsar wind nebula inside supernova remnant explored with Chandra
  • Who You Send to the Moon Matters More Than You Think
  • Evidence of cosmic-ray acceleration from a nearby supernova remnant
  • A trip to the United Arab Emirates’ darkest spot reveals a rare view of the Milky Way

Archives

Recent Comments

    Categories

    • arXiv
    • AWESOMEASTRO
    • CNEOS
    • ESOcast
    • ESOnews
    • General News
    • News
    • Podcast
    • RSSfeeds
    • Society
    • Society News
    • Space Weather Live
    • The Sky Live
    • Uncategorized
    • Universe Today
    • Weekly Talks

    Meta

    • Log in
    • Entries feed
    • Comments feed
    • WordPress.org

    Designed using Dispatch. Powered by WordPress.

    Visit Us On FacebookVisit Us On Twitter