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Piggott, Arkansas ~ Friday, November 21, 2008
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A Piece of the Moon and Mars come to Piggott
Posted Tuesday, July 1, 2008, at 4:50 PM<< Previous | Read comments | Respond | Email link | Next >>
Hi, everyone, and welcome to a new blog at the Piggott Times website. I am Kenneth Renshaw, a NASA Solar System Ambassador/Saturn Observation Campaign member from Piggott. I have been asked to start a blog about astronomy and our nation's (and the world's) space program by our fine editor, Tim Blair. Anytime you have a question about space, let me know here, and I will try my best to give or refer you to an answer. I will try to update this blog each week or so with the latest news.
First, in a few days, the Matilda Pfeiffer Museum, here in town, will have on display an actual piece of the Moon and Mars! I have in my collection, and will be on display, 3 tiny meteorites. One is a piece of the historic 820 pound meteorite that hit Paragould on Feb. 17, 1930. Most of it is in the U. of A. Library in Fayetteville, but some small fragments are in just a few private hands around the world. This is a 2/10 gram sample.
Meteorites can also hit other planets, kicking up rocks from those worlds into space. These rocks can float around the solar system until some pieces can occasionally hit our planet. From chemical analysis, some meteorites have actually been proven to have come from the Moon or Mars. I have 2 very small fragments of those-1 from the Moon, and 1 from Mars. If you visit the Matilda Pfeiffer Museum (behind the Hemingway-Pfeiffer Museum), you can see those rocks, as well as a piece of aerogel (an insulation made from the lightest solid on earth-1,000 times lighter than glass) that was originally installed on the Spirit Rover (now on Mars) before a replacement was made before launch. I also have a piece of aerogel on display from the batch made for the Stardust mission. This silica aerogel was used to collect particles from the tail of a comet (Comet Wild 2) and return them to the earth.
Happy 4th of July to everyone. Comments Showing most recent comments first [Show in chronological order instead] |
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Hi, mccombr,
Yes, that will help human survival on Mars, and we won't have to carry so much fuel, water, etc. when we visit there. We are also trying to find ice in permanently shadowed craters near the poles of the Moon, for when we try to return there in around 2020 for a permanent base there. Thanks. Ken.
Hi, tsumpire,
I took the items there on Tuesday morning. It may be on display by Wednesday-I'm not sure. They are working on printing up some info on it and I am not sure of their schedule. The museum number is 598-3228. If I hear any more, I will also post it here. Thanks. Ken
Kenneth,
I would love to see the display at the museum over the holiday weekend. Do you know the exact dates the pieces of the meteroite will be ready for us to view?
Kenneth with the recent confirmation of ice on Mars we now can carry out future plans for fuel production on the red planet. The ability to make hydrogen fuel and liquid oxygen on Mars seems to be closer to becoming a reality.