Water On Mars Is Trapped Inside The Planet!

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Is there water on Mars?
How can we explain the absence of liquid state water on its surface?
Is there any chance to extract water from the inner of Mars?
How much water was present billions of years ago on the red planet?
Scientists are trying to figure all of these things out. 
As years pass by, we start to get new answers, which lead to new important questions. 
But, why do we care about water on Mars?
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follow me on this video to get to know more about the secrets of the Red Planet. 
Are you thirsty? Good news: we got water. And maybe it is much more than you think.

The first spacecraft from Earth to visit Mars was Mariner 4 in 1965. Since then, several robotic spacecraft have flown by, orbited, or landed on Mars and sent back lots of information about this world so different from our own.
Mars is a cold, bleak wasteland, with very thin air that we Earthlings could never breathe. However, many of the pictures our telescopes, orbiters, and rovers have sent back show signs that liquid water might have been on the surface of Mars long ago. Also, we can see ice caps at the north and south poles.
All these signs of water are very exciting. Why? Because on Earth, almost everywhere there is water, there is life. Whether the water is boiling hot or frozen, some sort of creature seems to thrive in it. 
At this point, is fair to ask ourselves: is it the same on other planets? 
If water once flowed on Mars, did life once thrive there too? 
Or, maybe there is still water on Mars, only it has gone underground. Could there be tiny life forms—like bacteria—on Mars even now?
That's why we are looking for water. Is it enough for you? 
“Can Mars support life?”: this is what we are actually asking when we ask “Is there water on Mars?”.
All of these questions – together with the curiosity of human mankind – pushed us to go and see what we could say about Mars, the dream planet, which some braveheart already calls “Second Home”.
If we ever find water on Mars – or at least if we ever find a way to get water on Mars without bringing it from Earth – it would be a revolution, and we could start to drastically change our mindset in the prevision of human colonization of Mars. 
Probes were launched. Laser beams were sent on Mars and reflected right back on Earth. Telescopes were pointed on the Red Planet. Thousands of images were captured. A big quantity of cinematical, spectroscopical, chemical and biological data was collected by scientists over the years. Rovers landed on Mars, etc...
As you can see, we spent a lot of effort to understand better the secrets of this Romantic, cold, red planet. 

Here's what we already know about water on Mars. 
On Mars, meteor strikes may have generated tsunamis 10 times larger than anything seen here—behemoth waves of destruction capable of submerging the Statue of Liberty and the Capitol Building.
The mega-tsunamis would have occurred about 3.4 billion years ago when two large space rocks slammed into a chilly sea in the Martian north. The first of these impacts, according to a study published this week in Scientific Reports, spawned massive, nearly 400-foot-tall (120-meter-tall) waves that carried bus-size boulders many miles inland. The waves flooded more than 220,000 square miles (570,000 square kilometres), an area larger than the many U.S. States. How do we know that?
Today, evidence for these ancient cataclysms takes the form of channels carved by the receding waves, lobe-shaped fields strewn with boulders, and craters that appear to have been filled with now evaporated seawater.

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Credits: Ron Miller
Credits: Nasa/Shutterstock/Storyblocks/Elon Musk/SpaceX/ESA/ESO
Credits: Flickr

Video Chapters:
00:00 Introduction
00:45 Historical Context
02:32 Water in the Martian Soil
04:16 Ice Deposits
05:50 Recent Findings
07:24 Scientific Implications
09:23 Explanation

#insanecuriosity #wateronmars #marsplanet
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Hey Insane Curiosity Squad! If you liked the video, we would love for you to share it with your friends or on other social networks like Facebook, Reddit, Instagram, TikTok and Twitter, etc... (Since the algorithm is not cooperating in showing us to the public 😅). In just 30 seconds, you will greatly help our Channel to grow and improve future contents. A big thank you from all of us.

InsaneCuriosity
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What if we were the Martians and we just abandoned mars because it ran out of water. And then we inhabited earth which was already habited

malikshahavas
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I'll answer your question. They care about water in mars because if there's water there's life.

hectordeus
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There's really no doubt water was on Mars! It's just if it's still there, in what form and where?!?

MG-erdm
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There may be an oasis somewhere in this planet!....they might get a surprise when it’s found!

konstantinossergakis
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‘Say, have you considered if your water was to become sunken into the earth? Then who could bring you flowing water?’ - Al Qur’an, Surah Mulk (The Kingdom), Verse 29-30.

shorifulhaque
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I stated several years ago that I thought something catastrophic happened. Some sort of internal disaster, excessive pressure buildup, caused not only it's giant volcano but also it's great rift. As a massive expulsion of internal material occurred it's oceans drained into the void left. The poles were somewhat left because location. Everybody laughed. I still think this is probable. Add on:. This would also account for atmospheric depletion and severe loss of magnetic planetary shield.

gordonwiessner
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While the exploration of Mars is really exciting and I check updates on it weekly, there’s something that just excites me more by subsurface oceans on moons in our solar system such as Enceladus and Titan. Scientists estimate that they’re billions of years old, which is more than enough time for life to evolve. I’m really looking forward to the missions to those moons more than anything.

I created a video about this topic if anybody is interested 😄

LetsExploreSpace
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I keep telling them that looking for life on Mars is not the deal. Look for life in Mars not on Mars

asiba
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Maybe the earth and mars were one planet and whenever they spilt they formed separate planets and our moon. 🤔

MushadX
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Mars has a thin atmosphere, isn’t it also why water couldn’t stay?

Kinarp
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We have a planet on one side of us with too much atmosphere and an abundance of water, and a planet with barely an atmosphere on the other side of us. Wouldn't it be nice to even those two out and create 2 more habitable planets?

badgimp
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Ultimately we are going to end up destroying our beautiful planet and not be advanced enough to move enough people and essentials to make it elsewhere . It’s really unfortunate but when beings are more concerned with ease and greed then nurturing and preserving what does anyone expect?

mizzshortie
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Great information and I think there is water there !

amangogna
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🤔 in the new Matrix movie they used some process to pull water from the soil underground to make a bio-sky I wonder if there’s life on Mars if there’s not some type of process like this there (bio-dome) 🥚

MushadX
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I am sure we have it there. In 3 years we will proove that life on Mars is much better than on Earth. Together. ❤️ @elonmusk Wife

МАРГАРИТАГлушко-ъц
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If there are somewhat like God's creation on Mars, I think it is much different or no comparation with humans on Earth, most likely in speritual form that God the almighty know and beyond to our knowledge or some of special God creation here on Earth that can do and understand science inventions, as what we called them alliens, I wish it would be a fantasy story but it so hard if it will come true as what perseverance and inguenity latest discovered or have been observed earlier.

guillermohermosa
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The Water on Earth appears to be getting deeper so does it reproduce itself or can we reproduce it for Mars??

waynusmaximus
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What would a 2 liter bottle of water from Mars cost ?

wilber
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If those water are saltier than Earth's water. Imagine all the Deuterium that can be produce on Mars.

rattanameas