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Possible remnants of a frozen mud lake in southern Elysium, Mars
In this work we estimate the minimum persistence time of subsurface ice in water rich sediment layers remaining after sublimation of a martian lake. We simulate sublimation of ice from layers of different granulations and thicknesses. Presented results assume insolation and atmospheric conditions characteristic for the present day southern Elysium, where data from Mars Express have identified surface features possibly indicating the very recent presence of a frozen body of water [Murray et al., 2005. Nature 434, 352–356]. The age of these features is estimated to be several million years. On this time scale, we find that most of the water ice must have sublimated away, however remnant ice at a few percent level cannot be excluded. This amount of water ice is sufficient for chemical cementation of the observed features and explains their relatively pristine appearance, without significant signs of erosion
Possible physical and thermodynamical evidence for liquid water at the Phoenix landing site
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/95444/1/jgre2665.pd
Cardiopoietic cell therapy for advanced ischemic heart failure: results at 39 weeks of the prospective, randomized, double blind, sham-controlled CHART-1 clinical trial
Cardiopoietic cells, produced through cardiogenic conditioning of patients' mesenchymal stem cells, have shown preliminary efficacy. The Congestive Heart Failure Cardiopoietic Regenerative Therapy (CHART-1) trial aimed to validate cardiopoiesis-based biotherapy in a larger heart failure cohort
Interfacial liquid water on Mars and its potential role in formation of hill and dune gullies
International audienceGullies are among the most intriguing structures identified on the surface of Mars. Most common are gullies located on the slopes of craters which are probably formed by liquid water transported by shallow aquifers (Heldmann et al., 2007). Two particular types of gullies are found on slope of isolated hills and dunes. The hill-slope gullies are located mostly at 50° S, which is at the high end of latitudes of bulk of the gullies found so far. The dune gullies are found in several locations up to 65° S (Reiss et al., 2007), but the best known are those in Russel crater at 54° S. The hill- and dune gullies are longer than others making the aquifers explanation for their formation unlikely (Balme et al., 2006). Recently it has been noted that thin liquid films of interfacial water can play a role in rheological processes on the surface of Mars Moehlmann, 2008; Kereszturi et al., 2009). Here we try to answer the question whether interfacial liquid water may occur on Mars in quantities large enough to play a role in formation of gullies. To verify this hypothesis we have calculated thermal models for hills and dunes of various steepness, orientation and physical properties. We find that within a range of average expected values of parameters it is not possible to have more than a few monolayers of liquid water at depths greater than a centimeter. To create subsurface interfacial water film significantly thicker and hence to produce conditions for the slope instability, parameters have to be chosen to have their extreme realistic values or an additional source of surface heating is needed. One possibility for additional heating is a change of atmospheric conditions due to a local dust storm. We conclude that if interfacial water is responsible for the formation of the hill-slope gullies, our results may explain why the hill gullies are rare
Small-scale trench in the north polar region of Mars: Evolution of surface frost and ground ice concentration
International audienc
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