martians snowflakes
Imagine Yourself on mars
sunset on mars
Sunset on Mars: The normally red Martian sky turns blue as the sun goes down.

What would it feel like to be on Mars? There would be a few obvious differences from Earth: the sky is reddish-orange, it's darned cold, and there isn't much oxygen to breathe. Beyond that, though, are many more subtle differences.

For starters, time passes differently on Mars than on Earth. The red planet takes thirty-nine minutes longer to rotate on its axis than Earth's twenty-four hours. In other words, a Martian day, called a Sol, is 24:39 hours long, and a Martian year is 668.6 Sols long—much longer than an Earth year. That means you'd suddenly be many years younger.

And you'd weigh less! Mars is a much smaller planet than Earth, so the pull of gravity would register less on your bathroom scale.

Best of all, you could add a little oxygen to the atmosphere by drinking a whole lot of water and then answering Nature's call. When chemicals in human urine mix with chemicals in Martian soil, a little puff of oxygen is released. Quite a way to make a planet livable, huh?

ACTIVITY
Cold Boiling Water

One other difference you'd notice on Mars is that water would boil at a much lower temperature. This is because the pressure of the Martian atmosphere is much less than that on Earth. In this activity, you'll create a vacuum by covering the end of a syringe containing water and then pulling on the plunger. This lowers the pressure and makes the water bubble like a hot pot on the stove.

What you'll need:

• a clear plastic syringe (The type for giving measured doses of medicine will work fine, or you can remove the tip from a medical syringe so that it can’t accept a needle.)
• tap water


1) Fill a syringe 1/4 full of water. Try to fill it so that there’s as little air as possible in the syringe. To do this, point the tip of the syringe upward, flick the tip with a fingernail to dislodge bubbles, then push the air out by pushing inward on the plunger (like nurses and doctors do on medical shows on TV).

2) Cover the tip with a finger.

3) Slowly pull on the plunger. Notice that as you pull on the plunger, it pulls back in the opposite direction. When you pull, the pressure inside the syringe is reduced below atmospheric pressure (the air outside the syringe). This results in a net force being exerted by the outside air pushing the plunger back into the syringe and the gas inside the syringe pushing outward less strongly. Notice also that a space appears inside the syringe that isn’t filled by water.

pulling back on the syringe
Put your finger over the end of the syringe and pull back on the plunger. Notice that as you pull, the plunger also pulls back.

4) Allow the plunger to slide slowly back into the syringe. Notice if there are any air bubbles.

5) Slowly pull the plunger out again.

6) Release the plunger suddenly. Notice that it snaps back quickly.

7) Pull on the plunger a third time. Notice that this time bubbles form in the water. The water appears to be boiling.


water boiling in the syringe
When you pull on the plunger a third time, the water boils with air bubbles.
 

These materials address the following National Science Education Standards:

• Physical Science: Structure and Property of Matter
(grades 5–8)
(grades 912)

 
Classroom
resources

• Cold Boiling Water activity (available on this page or as a PDF or Word 98 document).

Make a Martian Calendar: Keep track of the Martian days and nights the Rover spends roving the planet.

• "Martian Snowflakes": Paul Doherty shares his discoveries mimicking Martian precipitation.

• "Your Weight on Other Worlds": Ron Hipschman does the calculations for the ultimate weight-loss program.

"Your Age on Other Worlds": While you're losing weight, shed some Martian years, too! Also by Ron Hipschman.

 

What’s going on?

When you pull on the plunger, you increase the volume inside the syringe and decrease the pressure on the water. A space appears above the water, and in this space there’s a partial vacuum. It’s not a perfect vacuum because it has some water vapor in it as well as some air.

Tap water has air dissolved in it. When you reduce the pressure in the syringe, the dissolved air comes out of solution, forming bubbles. When you slowly allow the plunger to slide back into the syringe, the air that has come out of solution stays out of solution. Water vapor changes from a gas to a liquid very quickly. Any gas bubbles that form when you pull out the plunger and then go away when you allow it to return are bubbles made of low-pressure water vapor. When these bubbles form inside the liquid, we say that the liquid boils.

It’s difficult for small bubbles to form so that boiling can start in a clean liquid. However, when you pull out the plunger and allow it to snap back, you create small "seed" bubbles throughout the water. The next time the pressure is reduced, boiling happens at these seed bubbles.

What does this have to do with Mars?

The water in the syringe is actually boiling at room temperature. If you reduce the atmospheric pressure even further using a vacuum pump, the water can boil at the freezing point. It’s therefore possible for liquid water, solid ice, and gas bubbles to coexist indefinitely. This is called the triple point of water, where all three phases exist in equilibrium. The triple point of water is 32°F (0°C) and 6 millibars (a bar is one atmosphere of pressure). The triple point of water exists on the surface of Mars: You could hold a beaker of boiling water on the Martian surface that had ice cubes floating in it, and the ice cubes wouldn’t melt because the liquid water would be at the freezing point.

Going further

• Thinking about the activity you just did, imagine you'll be making a spaghetti dinner on Mars. Would the pasta cook more quickly or more slowly than on Earth? Why?

• If you were to cook spaghetti on top of a high mountain on Earth, how would the elevation affect your boiling of the pasta water (Hint: Is the atmospheric pressure higher, lower, or the same on a mountaintop than at sea level?)

• The difficulty of starting a bubble explains why it’s dangerous to boil water in a microwave oven. If you’re heating water in a clean ceramic or glass cup, it’s possible that the water can be heated above the boiling point and yet be unable to form bubbles. In this case, the water is superheated. When you remove the cup of water from the microwave, you can jiggle it and shake loose seed bubbles, causing the water to suddenly erupt into boiling, splattering hot water around.

 

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