logo
Is Mars really red? A physicist explains the truth.

Is Mars really red? A physicist explains the truth.

Yahoo19-06-2025
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission.
Is Mars really as red as people say it is? – Jasmine, age 14, Everson, Washington
People from cultures across the world have been looking at Mars since ancient times. Because it appears reddish, it has often been called the red planet.
The English name for the planet comes from the Romans, who named it after their god of war because its color reminded them of blood. In reality, the reddish color of Mars comes from iron oxide in the rocks and dust covering its surface.
Your blood is also red because of a mixture of iron and oxygen in a molecule called hemoglobin. So in a way, the ancient connection between the planet Mars and blood wasn't completely wrong. Rust, which is a common form of iron oxide found here on Earth, also often has a reddish color.
In my current research on exoplanets, I observe different types of signals from planets beyond Earth. Lots of interesting physics goes into how researchers perceive the colors of planets and stars through different types of telescopes.
If you look closely at pictures of Mars taken by rovers on its surface, you can see that most of the planet isn't purely red, but more of a rusty brown or tan color.
Probes sent from Earth have taken pictures showing rocks with a rusty color. A 1976 picture from the Viking lander, the very first spacecraft to land on Mars, shows the Martian ground covered with a layer of rusty orange dust.
Not all of Mars' surface has the same color. At the poles, its ice caps appear white. These ice caps contain frozen water, like the ice we usually find on Earth, but these ice caps are also covered by a layer of frozen carbon dioxide — dry ice.
This layer of dry ice can evaporate very quickly when sunlight shines on it and grows back again when it becomes dark. This process causes the white ice caps to grow and shrink in size depending on the Martian seasons.
Related: Long, dark 'streaks' spotted on Mars aren't what scientists thought
Mars also gives off light in colors that you can't see with your eyes but that scientists can measure with special cameras on telescopes.
Light itself can be thought of not only as a wave but also as a stream of particles called photons. The amount of energy carried by each photon is related to its color. For example, blue and violet photons have more energy than orange and red photons.
Ultraviolet photons have even more energy than the photons you can see with your eyes. These photons are found in direct sunlight, and because they have so much energy, they can damage the cells in your body. You can use sunscreen to protect yourself from them.
Infrared photons have less energy than the photons you can see with your eyes, and you don't need any special protection from them. This is how some types of night-vision goggles work: They can see light in the infrared spectrum as well as the visible color spectrum. Scientists can take pictures of Mars in the infrared spectrum using special cameras that work almost like night-vision goggles for telescopes.
The colors on the infrared picture aren't really what the infrared light looks like, because you can't see those colors with your eyes. They are called "false colors," and researchers add them to look at the picture more easily.
When you compare the visible color picture and the infrared picture, you can see some of the same features — and the ice caps are visible in both sets of colors.
NASA's MAVEN spacecraft, launched in 2013, has even taken pictures with ultraviolet light, giving scientists a different view of both the surface of Mars and its atmosphere.
Each new type of picture tells scientists more about the Martian landscape. They hope to use these details to answer questions about how Mars formed, how long it had active volcanoes, where its atmosphere came from and whether it had liquid water on its surface.
RELATED STORIES
—NASA spots Martian volcano twice the height of Mount Everest bursting through the morning clouds: Space photo of the week
—Why does NASA's Perseverance rover keep taking pictures of this maze on Mars?
—Turning the Red Planet green? It's time to take terraforming Mars seriously, scientists say
Astronomers are always looking for new ways to take telescope pictures outside of the regular visible spectrum. They can even make images using radio waves, microwaves, X-rays and gamma rays. Each part of the spectrum they can use to look at an object in space represents new information they can learn from.
Even though people have been looking at Mars since ancient times, we still have much to learn about this fascinating neighbor.
This edited article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

NASA has sparked a race to develop the data pipeline to Mars
NASA has sparked a race to develop the data pipeline to Mars

TechCrunch

time14 minutes ago

  • TechCrunch

NASA has sparked a race to develop the data pipeline to Mars

For decades, NASA built and flew its own relay orbiters and spacecraft to ferry valuable data back to Earth. Now, the agency is shifting to buying connectivity as a service, much like it does for launch and astronaut transport. That pivot has sparked a race, with major contenders pitching ways to keep Mars missions online. What's at stake isn't a single contract: it's the data pipe to Mars. This new approach, which will mix NASA assets and commercial infrastructure, would gradually replace the patchwork relay network the agency relies on today. Generally, that works by orbiters like Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter and MAVEN that pickup data from rovers and landers, and transmit it to the Deep Space Network's (DSN) giant antennas on Earth. NASA's relay spacecraft are still healthy, but they were never meant to be a permanent backbone. The agency's latest senior review on planetary missions calls out MAVEN's critical role as a relay and provides steps to keep it available into the early 2030s. But eventually, this hardware will decay. At the same time, NASA's Space Communications and Navigation (SCaN) program, which manages the DSN, is looking for solutions to augment these aging assets. The aim, according to an RFP released in July and due today, is to create an interoperable marketplace where NASA can be one of many customers instead of the owner-operator. The current request is specifically for capability studies, not immediate hardware buys. The ask is two-fold: a 'lunar trunkline' between the Moon and Earth, and end-to-end Mars communications that move data from assets on the surface, through Mars orbit, and to operations centers on Earth. It's a formidable challenge. Any architecture must contend with the vast distance between Earth and the Moon and Mars, long latency, periodic solar interference and Earth visibility windows, and high requirements for fault-tolerant systems. That's why NASA is asking for plans, to gauge how industry might solve these puzzles, rather than immediately jumping to procurement. Techcrunch event Tech and VC heavyweights join the Disrupt 2025 agenda Netflix, ElevenLabs, Wayve, Sequoia Capital, Elad Gil — just a few of the heavy hitters joining the Disrupt 2025 agenda. They're here to deliver the insights that fuel startup growth and sharpen your edge. Don't miss the 20th anniversary of TechCrunch Disrupt, and a chance to learn from the top voices in tech — grab your ticket now and save up to $600+ before prices rise. Tech and VC heavyweights join the Disrupt 2025 agenda Netflix, ElevenLabs, Wayve, Sequoia Capital — just a few of the heavy hitters joining the Disrupt 2025 agenda. They're here to deliver the insights that fuel startup growth and sharpen your edge. Don't miss the 20th anniversary of TechCrunch Disrupt, and a chance to learn from the top voices in tech — grab your ticket now and save up to $675 before prices rise. San Francisco | REGISTER NOW While TechCrunch can't confirm which companies are submitting concept proposals, a handful have already staked their place in the race. Blue Origin just unveiled a Mars Telecommunications Orbiter built on its Blue Ring platform, pitched as maneuverable, high-performance spacecraft to support NASA missions to Mars as soon as 2028. Rocket Lab has touted its own Mars telecom orbiter concept, which the company says is a core element of its proposed architecture for the Mars Sample Return campaign. In 2024, NASA's Mars Exploration Program separately funded 12 short commercial services studies, including a trio of studies for next-gen relay services, to SpaceX, Lockheed Martin, and Blue Origin. SpaceX's proposal to 'adapt Earth-orbit communication satellites for Mars' will likely be derived from its Starlink internet satellite constellation. The long-term goal is to transform the agency's planetary exploration agenda from pure-science missions to a permanent human presence on the moon and, eventually, Mars.

Fei-Fei Li Challenges Silicon Valley's Obsession With AGI
Fei-Fei Li Challenges Silicon Valley's Obsession With AGI

Forbes

time14 minutes ago

  • Forbes

Fei-Fei Li Challenges Silicon Valley's Obsession With AGI

Dr. Fei‑Fei Li sees AI not as a runaway superintelligent force but as a partner in human potential. Speaking with CNN's Matt Egan at the Ai4 conference in Las Vegas, she sketched a future where learning, spatial reasoning, and immersive digital worlds grow together. Empathy, curiosity, and responsibility, she said, should be the drivers. That's a very different tone from Geoffrey Hinton, who told the same audience just a day prior that our survival might one day depend on giving AI something like a mother's protective instinct. Li's focus stays on human decision-making, not on machines 'caring' for us. Reframing the Discussion of Superintelligence For Dr. Li, the quest for the superintelligent machine, or AGI, is not really separate from the concept of AI. She explained, 'I don't know the difference between the word AGI and AI. Because when Alan Turing and John McCarthy and Marvin Minsky, the founding fathers and thinkers of AI, when they dared humanity with this possibilities of machines that they can do, in my opinion, they didn't say that machines that think narrowly and non-generally. They literally just had the biggest imagination." To Li, AI isn't a race or a looming contest of strength. It's another step in building systems that work alongside people and protect the things we value. Hinton, in contrast, warns that machines could surpass human intelligence within a couple of decades and that keeping control will be nearly impossible. His proposal is to design them with an ingrained sense of care, modeled on a parent's concern for a child. However, Li doesn't think safety comes from simulating affection. For her, the safer path is to build strong oversight, good design, and values that put people first. Hinton often frames the challenge in terms of survival: keeping a powerful AI from harming or leaving us behind. Li puts her energy into making sure it improves the spaces we live and work in. Her concern is less about keeping pace with an adversary, more about shaping a collaborator. Hinton is less certain that human control will be possible at all if AI reaches superintelligence. That's why he argues for programming in care instincts from the start. Li's answer is to shape an AI's goals early, through design, oversight, and a clear sense of its role in serving people. Education as a Living Conversation Li reframed AI's role in education as an extension of the Socratic method, urging educators and parents to champion curiosity over shortcuts. Li talks about AI in classrooms the way some teachers talk about Socrates: a tool for asking questions that make you think harder. She wants students encouraged to probe and explore, not to lean on AI for quick answers. 'Prompting' in her view should be the start of an investigation, not the end of it. She pushes back against the reflexive link between AI and academic dishonesty. Too much energy, she says, goes into banning and blocking, and not enough into asking how the technology could make people better learners. Clear-Eyed About the Risks Li's optimism doesn't mean blind faith. She worries about AI being used to spread false information, the disruption of jobs, the huge amounts of energy needed to train the biggest models, and the risk that only a few benefit from gains in productivity. She doesn't think those outcomes are inevitable. They're problems to be solved starting with how we set goals, who gets to decide them, and how they're carried out. In her view, it's not enough to 'teach' AI to care. What matters is aligning its purpose with strong governance, fair access, and uses that make life better for people. That means designing from the ground up with those aims in mind. Through her startup World Labs, Li is working on what she calls 'spatial intelligence', which is AI that understands and creates three-dimensional spaces. The uses range from surgical teams working with greater precision to far-flung families celebrating together in virtual rooms. These aren't just fantasy backdrops. They're designed to improve real-world life by blending the physical and the digital in ways that feel natural. For Li, the point of technology is to give people more control over their own choices. AI, she says, should make decisions more transparent, not less. She believes everyone should keep their dignity and their right to question what they're told. Li talks about AI as a piece of global infrastructure, something that could change how we learn, create, and connect. She wants the story of this century to include the ways AI helped expand creativity, rethink education, and keep people at the center of the story, not just the ways we avoided catastrophe. Her vision casts AI as a partner in curiosity and progress, not as a ruler. It's aimed at building immersive worlds, richer conversations in classrooms, and tools that fit into human lives with respect for our choices. Dr. Li and Hinton have known each other for decades. She would agree with him on one point: intelligence, human and machine, will grow. Where they part ways is in the plan for that future. He would give AI the instincts of a caregiver. She would anchor it in the creativity, care, and shared purpose that humans bring. And she keeps coming back to the same idea: we decide how to live in the world we're building.

Popular weight-loss drugs linked to sudden vision loss, research suggests
Popular weight-loss drugs linked to sudden vision loss, research suggests

Fox News

time22 minutes ago

  • Fox News

Popular weight-loss drugs linked to sudden vision loss, research suggests

New research has discovered certain weight-loss medications could be associated with an increased risk of serious eye conditions, and even vision loss. Two studies, published in JAMA, analyzed how semaglutide and tirzepatide — which include popular drugs like Ozempic, Wegovy, Mounjaro and Zepbound — impacted eye health in Americans with type 2 diabetes over a two-year period. One study found a modest risk of developing non-arteritic anterior ischaemic optic neuropathy (NAOIN) – a rare eye condition that can lead to sudden vision loss due to lack of blood flow – in association with semaglutide and tirzepatide. Out of more than 159,000 study participants with type 2 diabetes, 35 developed NAION, compared to 19 people in the comparison group. The Ohio-based researchers also noted an increased risk of developing "other optic nerve disorders," identified in 93 patients. Although the second study did not observe a "statistically significant difference" in NAION in GLP-1 drug users, there was a small increase in diabetic retinopathy, an eye disease that can damage the retina. While individuals with type 2 diabetes on GLP-1s showed a modestly increased risk of diabetic retinopathy, the researchers concluded that fewer patients experienced sight-threatening complications from the disease. "These findings suggest that all patients with type 2 diabetes treated with GLP-1 RAs, regardless of preexisting diabetic retinopathy, should be regularly screened and monitored for potential complications," the study authors concluded. Sue Decotiis, M.D., a medical weight loss doctor in New York City, said she believes more studies are required to confirm the association between these drugs and vision loss, as these studies report some conflicting results. "NAION is a rare condition of the optic nerve that, although serious, has not really been shown to be increased by these studies," Decotiis, who was not involved in the research, told Fox News Digital. "We need more studies for certain." Diabetic patients already face a high incidence of eye disease related to blood flow and nerve damage, the expert noted. "Eye complications are often directly related to the degree or lack thereof of diabetes control." In most cases, GLP-1 drugs reduce the severity of type 2 diabetes, therefore reducing the incidence of eye diseases, Decotiis noted. These drugs have also been shown to reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease, like hypertension, and to improve circulation, which can improve eye health. For diabetics who are starting a GLP-1, Decotiis recommends having an exam done by an ophthalmologist and scheduling follow-up exams throughout treatment. "We should take precaution with methodical ophthalmic care for diabetics on these drugs," Decotiis said. "However, let's not throw the baby out with the bath water." For more Health articles, visit Novo Nordisk, maker of Ozempic and Wegovy, provided the following statement when contacted by Fox News Digital. "Patient safety is a top priority for Novo Nordisk, and we take all reports about adverse events from the use of our medicines very seriously. NAION is a very rare eye disease, and it is not an adverse drug reaction for the marketed formulations of semaglutide (Ozempic, Rybelsus and Wegovy) as per the approved labels in the U.S." "Novo Nordisk, on its part, has conducted an analysis across randomized controlled clinical trials with GLP-1 receptor agonists, including a blinded ophthalmologist evaluation to confirm NAION diagnoses. Our current assessment is that these data do not suggest a causal relationship between GLP-1 RA use and NAION events."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store