Who Speaks for the Child?: The Problems of Proxy Consent (The Hastings Center Series in Ethics)
Summary
Mars, the most habitable of our sister planets, holds a special place in our imaginations and in our space exploration program. Fully half of NASA's planetary exploration effort is now devoted to Mars. Key questions Has Mars ever harbored life? Is there life on Mars now? Will humans be able to survive on the Martian surface? Answers to these questions lie in determining the present location of water on Mars and its likely inventory in the past, and in determining the present radiation environment of Mars. The 2001 Mars Odyssey Mission contributes greatly these answers by detecting near-surface water through measurements of neutron flux, from the detection of carbonates, and the quantification of its radiation environment. This book captures the objectives, the design of the mission and the details of the instruments carried to Mars. It should be of interest to every scientist interested in participating in the on-going exploration of Mars from graduate students to senior scientists as it provides the background information essential to interpret the many exciting results now appearing from the mission.
Similar Books
-
The Invisible Universe: The Story of Radio Astronomy
by Gerrit L. Verschuur
-
The Story of the Solar System
by Mark A. Garlick
-
-
Lunar and Planetary Rovers: The Wheels of Apollo and the Quest for Mars
by Anthony H. Young
-
The Planet Venus
by Mikhail Ya Marov
-
Astronautics: Book 1: Dawn of the Space Age
by Ted Spitzmiller
-
-
Doomsday Asteroid: Can We Survive?
by Donald W. Cox ED. D.
-
Spacecraft Technology: The early years
by Mark Williamson
-
Observing Comets
by Nick James
-
The Library of Satellites: Set 1
by Ann Byers
-
-
2001 Mars Odyssey (Developments in Hydrobiology)
by Christopher T. Russell
-
-
Heaven and Earth:Vol. 16, USAS:Civilian Uses of Near-Earth Space
by Dorinda Dalmeyer
-
Sawai Jai Singh and His Astronomy
by V.N. Sharma
-
Travel To The Stars
by Akbar F. Brinsmade
-