They found a large cloud of
hydrogen and oxygen extending from the moon's south pole.
Not exact matches
By looking at the chemistry of rocks deposited during that time period, specifically coupled carbon
and sulfur isotope data, a research team led by University of California, Riverside biogeochemists reports that
oxygen - free
and hydrogen sulfide - rich waters
extended across roughly five percent of the global ocean during this major climatic perturbation — far more than the modern ocean's 0.1 percent but much less than previous estimates for this event.
Now images taken by the Hubble Space Telescope have revealed a large cloud of
hydrogen and oxygen — most likely in the form of water vapour —
extending from the moon's south pole.
Mangrove rivulus, which can live out of the water for
extended periods of time (days or weeks, as long as the conditions are moist), uses its specialised jumping technique when water has low
oxygen concentrations or high levels of
hydrogen sulphide, or to escape predators
and search for terrestrial prey such as crickets.