Re: Water on the moon or Mars,part-2



>Stephen Horgan;
>So, you mean out to Earth or Mars Orbit? Presumably, you aren't
>disputing the presence of water ice among the outer planets and bodies
>in the Solar system?
No and No. However, you're keeping this way off track, or at least
pretending at being off track.

>So, water ice of cometary origin in a lunar crater that never sees
>sunlight is plausible?
Personally, I do not think so, unless it's been covered by a fairly
thick fluffy layer of dry-ice, plus having another thick topping of
moon dust (meaning solar/cosmic deposits in addition to a slue of local
debris elements). I believe the only hope for somewhat salty ice is
within a geode pocket or some other underground hollow that has been
sufficiently pressure scealed.

>Because space is a very loose term.
It's only lose and/or conditional if you're having to 100% support the
one and only NASA/Apollo bible.

>What do you actually mean by space? What distance from the Sun?
Earth/moon distance from the sun. I believe it's called 1 AU.

Why are you trying to make this as difficult and/or as complex as
possible, and/or by way of pretending that you're so dumb and dumber?

Just inform us village idiots how long a cubic meter of plain old naked
ice would last at 1 AU, as not situated within some polar crater or
otherwise shaded by any moon or Earth.
-
Brad Guth

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