This @MESSENGER2011 image shows a portion of the peak ring within the Raditladi impact basin; the field of view is ~23 km across. The enhanced color in the scene shows the morphologically fresh hollows as bluer than the surrounding rock.
Read more at: https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA14856 …
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Prikaži ovu nitHvala. Twitter će to iskoristiti za poboljšanje vaše vremenske crte. PoništiPoništi
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It is astonishing (and humbling) how modern image processing has, to a large extent taken worlds that were thought to be known (read: boring) and made them the forefront of the most intense scientific inquiry.
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Absolutely. Although I also have a length soapbox rant about how the planetary community has long regarded some words as boring (often with that very word!) when they're anything but. Fads and dogmatic narratives are present in this community as much as anywhere else.
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“Hollows”? Obviously ghosts. Mercury’s haunted
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I have long since argued that! But have so far failed to convince
@NASA to give me the money to go check/exorcise Mercury. - Još 3 druga odgovora
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What temperature would these be at?
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About 480°C in the day, –180°C at night. Although a lot of the slopes where hollows are observed as Sun-facing.
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looks something like molten solder under a magnifying glass.
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Looks like
#ProtoMolecule from the@ExpanseOnPrime except it's on#Mercury instead of#Venus@ThePlanetaryGuy.
https://twitter.com/ThePlanetaryGuy/status/1223784760163602432 …pic.twitter.com/LyngIspewy -
That’s exactly what I was thinking!!!




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