Stunning pictures of the Martian terrain. The axial tilt theory is very interesting but likely to be a very long time before observation can support the very tenuous evidence produced so far. Good to see that Ingenuity is still making its presence felt. What an amazing achievement that team has made.
I wonder if creatures similar to tardigrades could survive in the lava tubes on Mars? Even if not, the red planet is turning out to be far more interesting than I used to think; thank you for the updates, Anton!
Thanks a lot Anton for your beautiful pictures and video here! Mars is really a kind of grab bag! I've been studying the surface of Mars for years and depending on the time of year (and sandstorms) it's more or less visible and exploreable. And that's sometimes annoying, because you've discovered something really special and mystical and when you turn it on again with google Earth PRO a few days later, the view is suddenly blurred (the program is obviously being updated to the current status)... I have discovered many "strange things" on the surface and I am absolutely convinced that there was life, nature and probably even a civilization similar to us humans, specially to the Homo Neanderthals! Take a look at the surface of Mars yourself with a good program and concentrate you at a wider area around the North Pole (Cydonia, Galaxy Chaos, Deuteronilus & Protonilus Mensae, Tanais, Debris Area etc.)! Be careful, don't scare you too much, risk of a heart attack (Mars attacks!)... 🤣
Great video Anton , as always ! Thank you 🙏 Hope you are okay ? Dental work ? You take it easy !👍 Love the photos of Mars they keep getting better and more interesting !
Yep! He's incredible for having such a high and consistent level of Work Output! The amount of effort he puts behind every single Video is HUGE, reading & reviewing many Papers & Studies and keeping up to date, every single day!
I got the impression that they aren't consistent. They move where they are on the planet. At that point, it's probably easier to use protective shielding than rely on what Mars provides
Good question... but I don't think so... These magnetic pockets are unstable and changing, but they are a good indicator of how strong the Martian magnetic field was in the past...
Seeing as even the strongest ones seems to be a lot weaker than earth magnetic field, not really, but if they tend to stay at the same place no doubt that future Mars mission will use one even if it brings 1% additional protection (on top of the vehicles/buildings... in which people will have to be).
What a great question! I think the crowd is right about the strength and consistency being unreliable factors for providing long term protection for a habitat. Still, recognizing possible in-situ resources for problems like radiation will be necessary, and outside-the-box thinkers like you will benefit Mars colonization greatly.
Amazing productivity, well paced and interesting. The Dune idea was clever, as their formation is no doubt very slow due to low kinetic energy of atmosphere.
I feel like family watching you and I thank you so much for your videos and watching them over the years I feel like a part of your life cuz I feel like I know you and I've been through things with you like with your son and I just feel like family when I watch you bless you Anton
We need probes that walk and can shake the dust off of themselves for the sandy and rough areas of Mars. Looking at my previous sentence, I think that some good names for these hypothetical probes would be the names of various 'good dogs'. Perhaps beginning with 'Laika'.
@@neverlistentome Because humans put her in a situation that she couldn't survive. The probe would, in part, be a memorial to her. Also, Laika was real, Lassie and Benjie are fictional.
There is life on Mars. Cyanobacteria at the poles. The red in these snowcaps is the same red of cyanobacteria blooms on earth. Also Viking found life on Mars as well and the findings where suppressed.
We're basically waiting for Elon to build us a rocket that can actually get us to Mars. The Starship is what's supposed to do it. But once we have a rocket which can theoretically take people there, the next step is actually figuring out a way to get them to the planet safely, given the problem of what living in microgravity does to humans.
@@jadenpark35 mining the moon and building up the technology needed for a mars mission seems helpful! The lower gravity on the moon and how close it is, makes it a great springboard for deep space missions! I know there’s an extreme fear of failure and publicly losing human life but there’s a point where we all know the risks and we do all we can to mitigate them but we need to make that leap of faith eventually if we’re to ever build an economy in space!
The strange patchy magnetic fields/field? In conjunction with the presence of Ozone is remarkable and gives me hope that we'll find some sort of extraterrestrial micro-organism when we've got the capability of sending rovers/probes to these locations
Check out the thunderbolts project. Documentary called symbol of an alien sky. Episode 2. Mars... not saying it's all true, but it's very interesting and worth considering.
With Mars having a minimal atmosphere, magnetic field I wonder if it would be possible to generate substantial electric current in the same way we use large antenna's on Earth...one end is connected to the load with the wire being several kilometers long, the other terminal is driven deep into the Mars surface, solar radiation would raise the potential in the long wire, and then electrode in the ground is the other terminal, or ground, completing the circuit. Basically like a crystal set on steroids....
While i do enjoy the Mars missions i would mention that for us to get there we dont need one off missions, we need infrastructure to achieve safe and repeatable manned missions. This means Power, scouting, mining, refining, fabrication, design, building and placement of " rest stops" at L1, L3 and moon as well as 1-4 emergency stops in between L3 and Mars orbit. This plan should take 20 to 30 years of infrastructure trial and error.
It would seem that all of the rovers are equipped with wheels that are far too small to do the job. A long chat with 4 x 4 expert would make them far more reliable and productive.
Thank you for this. One geologic oddity maybe wishful thinking, but they just keep coming and all pointing toward past habitation. It would be careless to rule it out as a possiblity.
@@stargazer5784 donut rocks, faces, pyramids, riverbeds, attempts at explaining human origin,etc... No one or 2 is anything, but taking altogether they are pointing in that direction. Nothing conclusive, but Some one can come where you are in half a million years and they can say the same about earth.
@@Number6_ EXACTLY what I discovered on the Martian surface too!! Sometimes it seem, that the mystery and at least suspices signs / traces from a former life are really hidden, it´s like a complicated puzzle, BUT when you get the train the mystery opens suddenly and you get much more information (even combined with more awareness)... I saw and thats not a joke, terrains (Utopia) with clearest fractals! It´s important to observe the surface/areas free from frost, dust and other obstacles, it often changes from day to another, viewing angle and several good magnifying glasses are also important. Also, we have to consider that some remains from that very, very old time are very petrified and a bit changed now, so you really need a clear and distinct view! I'm sure NASA is hiding loads of information and discoveries, hell knows why...
@@thekingofmojacar5333 they are not the only ones in the game now. Making it more difficult to select and bend the observations to their point of view.
Could the orbit of Mars "tilt" be stabilzed by placing a large enough asteroid into geosyncronous orbit like our Luna does for Terra? I bet the math would be crazy even if it were possible?
It's cool how the peaks from various craters / volcanoes are brighter indicating that due to height they have thinner atmosphere than their bases/surroundings.
3:15 ...the Beagle rover back in 2003.." Wasent that the ESA probe(not rover) that NASA crached, due to metric/emperial conversion error ?? (or is my menory totaly messed upp here..) 🤔 Love your videos btw 👍
Here's a wild thought: Like most it's my assumption Mars' depressed Northern hemisphere is the result of a huge impact... but wouldn't such an impact destroy the planet, or at the least melt the whole crust? ie Why is there a Mars at all, or why would there be such an obvious dichotomy today? Is it possible Mars is made from two proto-planets that more-or-less pancaked in to each other, somewhat akin to Earth and 'Theia'..? Maybe it's relatively common for late-stage protoplanets to end up in each other's Lagrange points, then due to the instability of such an arrangement end up slamming in to each other? -For the presumed proto-Earth and 'Theia' the latter was much smaller and hit the proto-Earth with enough energy for the two to fully merge and fling off the future Moon. -Maybe in the case of today's Mars the protoplanets were much closer in size and collided with rather less relative velocity resulting in them pancaking in to each other? The slightly smaller ending up at the North pole with a thinner crust as such a collision would melt the smaller body more. Not an entirely outrageous notion as one theory as to why the near ad far sides of the Moon are so different is because initially 'we' had a second moon at the L2 point that 'pancaked' in to the far side of it's larger partner - as an aside I think there's a much simpler explanation: The near side of the Moon happened to be closely facing an incandescent planet (Earth) early on, so no wonder that side saw most of the Lunar volcanism and now has thinner crust!
Professor Dave did a good one on this, and I 100% agree on everything he says ruclips.net/video/KNTu_pqmq2E/видео.html&ab_channel=ProfessorDaveExplains
A long time ago when I was in grade school the class got an assignment. We were to draw a picture of Jupiter and turn it in the next day. OK so I did. When grading time came I was asked by the teacher why I didn't show the giant storm, the eye? It was as though I had done something wrong. All my classmates drew the eye. All but me. I explained that the planet rotated and when I was drawing it the eye was on the other side.
With the UAP disclosure happening in the US, I have to wonder what your opinions are on this. And what you look forward to, or what you are concerned about on this.
Thank you Anton for remaining consistent in uploading videos daily. I learn so much from watching your channel.
Thanks for sharing Anton always look forward to your videos hope you and yours are all doing well
Stunning pictures of the Martian terrain.
The axial tilt theory is very interesting but likely to be a very long time before observation can support the very tenuous evidence produced so far.
Good to see that Ingenuity is still making its presence felt. What an amazing achievement that team has made.
That's got to be one hardworking helicopter given Mars's atmosphere
Yeah, big blades for only a 4lb object and they spin like 5-10 times faster than a normal earth bound helicopter
It works almost as hard as Anton, making top tier content every day!
They really engineered the #$%^ out of that thing. Very robust.
@@sammartano22 :) I was trying to figure out a way of saying exactly this! But then you beat me to it...
You also gotta remember how long these things have been in operation...
Very interesting Anton. The uv photos are beautiful
The Factory must grow!
MANY STUNNING, DETAILED MARS PHOTOS I had not seen before!!
Thanks, Anton.
Thx for the updates, keep em coming 🤓
Oh. I was hoping for the news that we've finally been able to make Mars bars healthy.
Do they still make em? I ain't seen one in forever
That will take millions of years. Humanity will not survive that long...
The donut rock is CLEARLY a Martian dinosaur skull!
As a donut rock and Martian dinosaur expert this is correct
Dream bigger! It’s not the skull…it’s a disc with a hole in the middle…clearly just a vertebrae!!!! The skull is much bigger still! 🤣
The enlightened ones from Rick and Morty?
CLEARLY
It's clearly the orbital socket of the original octopus ancestors.
The more we learn about Mars, the weirder it gets.
Cheers Anton. Really great vid. It was so nice to catch up on lots of bits n pieces that have passed me by. Best Regards.
Thank you.
Wonderful as always Anton. Thank you. 😊
I wonder if creatures similar to tardigrades could survive in the lava tubes on Mars?
Even if not, the red planet is turning out to be far more interesting than I used to think; thank you for the updates, Anton!
Thanks a lot Anton for your beautiful pictures and video here!
Mars is really a kind of grab bag! I've been studying the surface of Mars for years and depending on the time of year (and sandstorms) it's more or less visible and exploreable. And that's sometimes annoying, because you've discovered something really special and mystical and when you turn it on again with google Earth PRO a few days later, the view is suddenly blurred (the program is obviously being updated to the current status)...
I have discovered many "strange things" on the surface and I am absolutely convinced that there was life, nature and probably even a civilization similar to us humans, specially to the Homo Neanderthals! Take a look at the surface of Mars yourself with a good program and concentrate you at a wider area around the North Pole (Cydonia, Galaxy Chaos, Deuteronilus & Protonilus Mensae, Tanais, Debris Area etc.)!
Be careful, don't scare you too much, risk of a heart attack (Mars attacks!)... 🤣
Great,beautiful video, thanks 😊
Great video Anton , as always ! Thank you 🙏
Hope you are okay ? Dental work ? You take it easy !👍
Love the photos of Mars they keep getting better and more interesting !
I always get giddy seeing updates about the Red Planet.
Anton is a legend.
Yep! He's incredible for having such a high and consistent level of Work Output! The amount of effort he puts behind every single Video is HUGE, reading & reviewing many Papers & Studies and keeping up to date, every single day!
Never miss an Anton show!
He's a wonderful man
@@christiangauthier727 Exactly, while also being funny. I’m a layman, but he always explains the studies in a way I understand.
@@Direct0rkrennic Really is
Great video, thanks for sharing!
Could the strongest magnetic pockets possibly help protect future astronauts from radiation?
I got the impression that they aren't consistent. They move where they are on the planet. At that point, it's probably easier to use protective shielding than rely on what Mars provides
Good question... but I don't think so...
These magnetic pockets are unstable and changing, but they are a good indicator of how strong the Martian magnetic field was in the past...
Seeing as even the strongest ones seems to be a lot weaker than earth magnetic field, not really, but if they tend to stay at the same place no doubt that future Mars mission will use one even if it brings 1% additional protection (on top of the vehicles/buildings... in which people will have to be).
What a great question! I think the crowd is right about the strength and consistency being unreliable factors for providing long term protection for a habitat. Still, recognizing possible in-situ resources for problems like radiation will be necessary, and outside-the-box thinkers like you will benefit Mars colonization greatly.
Couple metres underground in an old lava tube would sort that
After many times enjoying your videos Anton Petrov I have learned this much, you are the Superstar anchor man of astronomy news!!!
This is very cool! Thank you Anton!
Stay away from those magnetic pockets: they'll ruin your credit cards.
I never take my cards when I leave terra
What will happen with A. I
Ok MoM
Will they add money.?
And your pacemaker! 😮
Go Anton!
Can you do something on Dark Stars Anton???
Thanks for everything you show us.
Always a plesure to watch. ❤
Amazing productivity, well paced and interesting. The Dune idea was clever, as their formation is no doubt very slow due to low kinetic energy of atmosphere.
Purple Aurora maybe "Prince's" spirit is hanging around Mars. (no rain however)
Hey Anton I learn more about space from your post than anyone else...😊😊 thanlyou
Those Stonehenge builders get everywhere...
Love your pragmatic, objective, diplomatic, scientific explanations.
I feel like family watching you and I thank you so much for your videos and watching them over the years I feel like a part of your life cuz I feel like I know you and I've been through things with you like with your son and I just feel like family when I watch you bless you Anton
Magnetic fields intrigue me. Thanks for the interesting content, Anton!
We need probes that walk and can shake the dust off of themselves for the sandy and rough areas of Mars. Looking at my previous sentence, I think that some good names for these hypothetical probes would be the names of various 'good dogs'. Perhaps beginning with 'Laika'.
Lassie or Benji are better. Laika died.
@@neverlistentome Because humans put her in a situation that she couldn't survive. The probe would, in part, be a memorial to her. Also, Laika was real, Lassie and Benjie are fictional.
@@qwertyuiopgarth Poor Laika. What's worse, is they sent her up, knowing she wouldn't have enough air.😢
@@lindaseel9986 It was a betrayal of one of our species' most reliable supporters.
@@qwertyuiopgarth You've got that right.
Can't you see??!! That rock with the hole in it really is 'The Guardian of Forever' from Star Trek TOS.
So glad to hear the drone didn't die and can still fly.
Mars is always interesting. The Tharsis dome is unreal. It represents a very violent period of Martian history.
Fascinating stuff indeed.
There is life on Mars. Cyanobacteria at the poles. The red in these snowcaps is the same red of cyanobacteria blooms on earth. Also Viking found life on Mars as well and the findings where suppressed.
The rock with the hole is an Alien Toilet!
Loving the Factorio shirt 👌
As we had snowball earth during the Milankovich cycles, how did that effect Mars and the other planets?
Ah, you just mentioned it.
Thank you, Anton. So interesting!
Cool t-shirt
When is the likely time for a manned mission to mars or the moon! It feels like the updates suddenly came to a halt! I hope we go soon!
Doesn't hurt to hope, I suppose
seriously doubt we'll have any manned missions soon. it just takes way too much money and theres 0 point in going back to a desolate rock
Well we have the artemis missions as a start
We're basically waiting for Elon to build us a rocket that can actually get us to Mars. The Starship is what's supposed to do it.
But once we have a rocket which can theoretically take people there, the next step is actually figuring out a way to get them to the planet safely, given the problem of what living in microgravity does to humans.
@@jadenpark35 mining the moon and building up the technology needed for a mars mission seems helpful! The lower gravity on the moon and how close it is, makes it a great springboard for deep space missions! I know there’s an extreme fear of failure and publicly losing human life but there’s a point where we all know the risks and we do all we can to mitigate them but we need to make that leap of faith eventually if we’re to ever build an economy in space!
Nice Tshirt. The factory must grow
Hello, wonderful person :)
I love the Factorio tshirt!
Just started a new round a couple of days ago 😅
Can't wait to see the episode on Genie!
It's not just a donut stone, it's THE GUARDIAN OF FOREVER !
Someone's been watching Star Trek. 🖖
The strange patchy magnetic fields/field? In conjunction with the presence of Ozone is remarkable and gives me hope that we'll find some sort of extraterrestrial micro-organism when we've got the capability of sending rovers/probes to these locations
The doughnut rock is an alien doorway leading to a MacDonald’s restaurant they’ve had up there for 1.3 billion years. Marjorie Taylor Green said so!
Awesome update video thx 🙏
Check out the thunderbolts project. Documentary called symbol of an alien sky. Episode 2. Mars... not saying it's all true, but it's very interesting and worth considering.
With Mars having a minimal atmosphere, magnetic field I wonder if it would be possible to generate substantial electric current in the same way we use large antenna's on Earth...one end is connected to the load with the wire being several kilometers long, the other terminal is driven deep into the Mars surface, solar radiation would raise the potential in the long wire, and then electrode in the ground is the other terminal, or ground, completing the circuit. Basically like a crystal set on steroids....
While i do enjoy the Mars missions i would mention that for us to get there we dont need one off missions, we need infrastructure to achieve safe and repeatable manned missions. This means
Power, scouting, mining, refining, fabrication, design, building and placement of " rest stops" at L1, L3 and moon as well as 1-4 emergency stops in between L3 and Mars orbit. This plan should take 20 to 30 years of infrastructure trial and error.
I wonder if the donut rock originally formed as a geode and erosion just took a while to break down that side.🤔
I wish we coulda got like a circle around it to see more
That donut rock might be an alien toilet bowl
Ozone up in the atmosphere is a good thing.
It would seem that all of the rovers are equipped with wheels that are far too small to do the job. A long chat with 4 x 4 expert would make them far more reliable and productive.
Would be interesting if there was oil on Mars.
I love geology. Guess thats why I love Mars.
@Anton Can you do a video like say If Mars had Earth's Water?
THE FACTORY MUST GROW!
Fascinating !
The asteroid looks a bit like the Time Stone of the old TOS series.
If yall enjoy this and dont like it, i swear there is something wrong with you. Support this man!!! Hover ur thumb to the like button.
Thank you for this. One geologic oddity maybe wishful thinking, but they just keep coming and all pointing toward past habitation. It would be careless to rule it out as a possiblity.
What have you seen that suggests past habitation?
@@stargazer5784 donut rocks, faces, pyramids, riverbeds, attempts at explaining human origin,etc... No one or 2 is anything, but taking altogether they are pointing in that direction. Nothing conclusive, but Some one can come where you are in half a million years and they can say the same about earth.
@@Number6_
EXACTLY what I discovered on the Martian surface too!! Sometimes it seem, that the mystery and at least suspices signs / traces from a former life are really hidden, it´s like a complicated puzzle, BUT when you get the train the mystery opens suddenly and you get much more information (even combined with more awareness)... I saw and thats not a joke, terrains (Utopia) with clearest fractals!
It´s important to observe the surface/areas free from frost, dust and other obstacles, it often changes from day to another, viewing angle and several good magnifying glasses are also important.
Also, we have to consider that some remains from that very, very old time are very petrified and a bit changed now, so you really need a clear and distinct view!
I'm sure NASA is hiding loads of information and discoveries, hell knows why...
@@thekingofmojacar5333 they are not the only ones in the game now. Making it more difficult to select and bend the observations to their point of view.
Could the orbit of Mars "tilt" be stabilzed by placing a large enough asteroid into geosyncronous orbit like our Luna does for Terra? I bet the math would be crazy even if it were possible?
You'd need Ceres, at least and that is the biggest asteroid.
You'd be better off using one of the trans Neptunian objects such as Eris as a moon.
The answer is yes, but you'd need a large enough object.
The little copter which didn't want to die
more bodies creates LESS stability
Ah yes, some Anton and some morning coffee before getting the day started.
The angles on the dunes are nuts! Does it have to do with a thinner atmosphere?
The crescent shaped dunes are barchans I think, can be found in the Sahara too
Thanks!
Thank you so much
It's cool how the peaks from various craters / volcanoes are brighter indicating that due to height they have thinner atmosphere than their bases/surroundings.
Love your shirt!
thanks doc
3:15 ...the Beagle rover back in 2003.." Wasent that the ESA probe(not rover) that NASA crached, due to metric/emperial conversion error ??
(or is my menory totaly messed upp here..) 🤔
Love your videos btw 👍
Love the shirt Anton. I’d love to see you stream Factorio at some point ;P
Awesome shirt Anton
Mars is the remnant of a collision with the Earth. Its really as simple as that.
We need a telescope on the far side of the sun to watch for asteroids that would otherwise be invisible until they pretty much hit us. 0.0
Victoria Crater looks more like a sinkhole than an impact crater. The edges are not raised, but collapsed. It's a giant pothole.
Hi Anton
The “Donut” rock is Star Trek’s Guardian of Forever.
It's not a doughnut! It's the solar system's biggest geode! (Probably not, but that would be impressive)
I love what you do, Anton! Thanks for all of it.
❤❤
Thank you Anton 🎉😊
It's the Guardian of Forever. There should be a guy with a bowler hat nearby somewhere.
"unusual rocks are very very common..."😊
i knew this guy would be a factorio nerd
Here's a wild thought:
Like most it's my assumption Mars' depressed Northern hemisphere is the result of a huge impact... but wouldn't such an impact destroy the planet, or at the least melt the whole crust? ie Why is there a Mars at all, or why would there be such an obvious dichotomy today?
Is it possible Mars is made from two proto-planets that more-or-less pancaked in to each other, somewhat akin to Earth and 'Theia'..?
Maybe it's relatively common for late-stage protoplanets to end up in each other's Lagrange points, then due to the instability of such an arrangement end up slamming in to each other?
-For the presumed proto-Earth and 'Theia' the latter was much smaller and hit the proto-Earth with enough energy for the two to fully merge and fling off the future Moon.
-Maybe in the case of today's Mars the protoplanets were much closer in size and collided with rather less relative velocity resulting in them pancaking in to each other? The slightly smaller ending up at the North pole with a thinner crust as such a collision would melt the smaller body more.
Not an entirely outrageous notion as one theory as to why the near ad far sides of the Moon are so different is because initially 'we' had a second moon at the L2 point that 'pancaked' in to the far side of it's larger partner - as an aside I think there's a much simpler explanation: The near side of the Moon happened to be closely facing an incandescent planet (Earth) early on, so no wonder that side saw most of the Lunar volcanism and now has thinner crust!
Anton, I would like to know what you think of the Thunderbolts project which gives an alternative explanation of how our solar system was formed.
Professor Dave did a good one on this, and I 100% agree on everything he says ruclips.net/video/KNTu_pqmq2E/видео.html&ab_channel=ProfessorDaveExplains
You need a hessafras catcher for a jubuu husher, here here gone by.
Good job guy
A long time ago when I was in grade school the class got an assignment. We were to draw a picture of Jupiter and turn it in the next day. OK so I did. When grading time came I was asked by the teacher why I didn't show the giant storm, the eye? It was as though I had done something wrong. All my classmates drew the eye. All but me. I explained that the planet rotated and when I was drawing it the eye was on the other side.
do hydrocarbons always form around liquid water...? thank you
Why can´t we save these videos into our subscriptions anymore?
Any news from the large hadron collider or cern
This one is Rocky, and that one is Rocky too...😊
With the UAP disclosure happening in the US, I have to wonder what your opinions are on this. And what you look forward to, or what you are concerned about on this.
Just say UFO if you want people to understand you
The Doughnut rock might be a geode.