World Science Scholars
3.1 Life at the Surface
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Samuel Opara
Thanks to the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite project and the team that carried out this project for broadening our knowledge. This is an interesting topic.
Luke Gurbin
Thank you to Prof. Sassilov and WSU for allowing peer review of material. I am thankful for knowledge gaps revealed and fathomed- Prof. Weiss for Class G stars found in supporting data for another topic. I hope Prof. Sassilov is on the JWST teams for searching for exo-planets. It is incredible the Swiss have now put up an affordable space probe not to find anything new, but to study regions already found as an affordable alternative. Prof. Sassilov, WSU Alumni, do we know of any methane lakes found in thr Earth`s polar, or circumpolar regions? In my research on triple point methane and how Saturn has the moon(planet?) Titan as a region Prof. Lorenz guided his built Huygens space probe to, we see polar regions can go into triple pojnt methane- gas, liquid, solid. Titan is triple point methane, in Prof. Lorenz book Titan Unveiled (a really good read). . I do not know methane as Prof. Koury`s superfluid, supercool state nor do I know methane as plasma. Water finalizes molecular motion at minus forty degrees Celcius. Then methane allows motion. In Calgary skies lately, we see the morning skyrings as round rainbows around Sol as the Sun photons breach the frozen air- often cooler than land temperatures. We first see the Snowdog boundaries, then the larger, breaching ring. If you find an ammonia, methane, or ethylene lake in an Earth polar region, let me know. 🙂 fwater@mail.com https://pin.it/wAePhLL Thanks!
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