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A recent series of images returned from Mars, showing the Earth and its Moon.

 

Earth_and_Moon_seen_by_Mars_Express_pill

 

It puts me in mind of Carl Sagan's incredibly insightful and moving poem about our Earth, inspired by photographs of Earth sent back to us by Voyager I decades ago.  I revisit it regularly and its impact on my psyche, so penetrating and expanding, never ceases to amaze.   Figured I'd share it here again for those who may appreciate.

 

The Pale Blue Dot.

 

 

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Ahhh ... the Earth ,  also full of water .... and atmosphere (air ) and , that very rare commodity  (at least in our solar system );   fire .

 

Does fire  exist anywhere else ?  ( hint ; oxygen is required )  .

 

 

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5 minutes ago, old3bob said:

smaller than a grain of sand among the countless galaxies, yet home to countless beings!

 

Apparently planets bearing life forms, such as humans, are quite rare.  Maybe we should look after this one

 

 

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16 hours ago, Nungali said:

Ahhh ... the Earth ,  also full of water .... and atmosphere (air ) and , that very rare commodity  (at least in our solar system );   fire .

 

Does fire  exist anywhere else ?  ( hint ; oxygen is required )  .

 

 

 

this could be interesting to see:  "Fires can't start in space itself because there is no oxygen – or indeed anything else – in a vacuum. Yet inside the confines of spacecraft, and freed from gravity, flames behave in strange and beautiful ways. They burn at cooler temperatures, in unfamiliar shapes and are powered by unusual chemistry.Sep 16, 2020

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Not a lot of chemists around here!

 

Meanwhile Google tells us:

 

 You can have a fire without oxygen if you have some other oxidizer. Like fluorine, for example. Fluorine is a better oxidizer than oxygen, so fluorine fires are especially nasty. Fluorine will burn things you normally think of as unburnable, like sand. And asbestos.

 

 

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6 hours ago, old3bob said:

 

this could be interesting to see:  "Fires can't start in space itself because there is no oxygen – or indeed anything else – in a vacuum. Yet inside the confines of spacecraft, and freed from gravity, flames behave in strange and beautiful ways. They burn at cooler temperatures, in unfamiliar shapes and are powered by unusual chemistry.Sep 16, 2020

 

reference please .... I want more ....  :) 

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