Sunday, November 8, 2009

Mars during the Noachian Epoch

Mars_TodaySC260105_defversion2_1024Mars today

mars_noachianDEF2_8defVersion1_1024Mars during the Noachian Period

The view is centered around the area called the Ares Vallis (below right, the water filled basin). This area shows variety of water related features, e.g. sediments, river canyons, and flat-bottomed crater (characteristic of an ancient water-filled craters). Some water overflowed from the crater that contains them, creating flood across the plain.

Also shown are some meteors impacting the Martian surface. 

I am not very sure what is that volcano on the left. Volcanism is important in forming water in Mars. Volcano produces material for a thicker atmosphere, in this visualization, you can even see there’s a plume of gas coming out from the volcano. This process makes the planet warmer and makes it possible for water to form. That volcano is probably part of the Alba Mons volcanic system, although I think Alba Mons should be a little bit to the north. 

The color of Mars is not red during that time, because the oxidation of the soil happens when the volcanism stops.

image_preview Floods in Kasei Vallis, caused by volcanism in the Tharsis Bulge

Source:

http://www.marssociety.org/portal/c/society-tools/mars_art

Sunday, November 1, 2009

One of the Oldest Globe from the Islamic World

 

image_53084_v2_m56577569830559168 "this globe comprises all of the constellations mentioned in the Almagest, after modification according to the time elapsed between the calculations of Ptolemy and year 540 [of the Hejira] (...), the work of Yûnus Ibn al-Husayn al-Asturlabî." © R.M.N./H. Lewandowski

No functional celestial globe has come down to us that predates the coming of Islam. This celestial globe is a three-dimensional model of the universe, and is the third-oldest globe from the Islamic world. Only two others, created by an Andalusian astronomer, are older, and this is the oldest known globe from the eastern part of the Islamic world.

The globe differs from its Andalusian predecessors by the use of an alphanumeric system of notation (abjad) for numbering the stars within each of the 120 Ptolemaic constellations. Each of the 1,025 stars depicted is represented by a dot of inlaid silver, a technique that was unknown in the West. The diameter of the point varies depending on the magnitude of the star. The two hemispheres that make up the globe are joined along the Milky Way. The globe represents the final celestial sphere, that of fixed stars - a very precise version of Ptolemy's Almagest, a catalogue of stars written in Alexandria in the 2nd century AD. The difference between Islamic globes and what we know about ancient globes lies in the fact that Islamic globes represented the constellation from the front, instead of from the back.

Scientifically, this globe is exceptionally precise. It was created by a master astronomer who was capable, as the inscription engraved in the vicinity of the South Pole indicates, of recalculating astronomical calculations: "This globe comprises all of the constellations mentioned in the Almagest, after modification according to the time elapsed between the calculations of Ptolemy and year 540 of the Hejira: that is, fifteen degrees and eighteen minutes. Created by Yûnus Ibn al-Husayn al-Asturlabî in the year 539." The iconography of the constellations faithfully follows the model presented in the Book on the Constellations of Fixed Stars (kitab suwar al-kawakib) by 'Abd al-Rahman al-Sufi. The original of this work was lost, but we have been able to reconstitute it through a copy made by al-Sufi's son in 1099 and a manuscript from 1125 that explicitly refers to it. In addition to its remarkable scientific precision, the work is equally captivating due the quality of the engraving. Many of the clothed figures, including Cassiopeia, feature drapery comparable to figures in manuscripts. Their sinuous and stylized folds are characteristic of the art of the book that continued to develop into the mid-13th century, and even beyond, in the Arab part of the Islamic world.

image_53085_v2_m56577569830559172Full figure Gemini, Cancer, Canis Major.

 image_53086_v2_m56577569830559176Centaurus and Lupus. In above left is part of Hydra’s coil.

image_53087_v2_m56577569830559180 Scorpio and Libra, legs of Virgo and the head of Lupus is also seen here.

Source:

http://www.louvre.fr