[ad_1]
<div id = "firstBodyDiv" data-bind-html-content-type = "article" data-bind-html-compile = "article.body" data-first-article-body = "
L & # 39, liquid water was detected at a depth of one mile in the ice in southern Antarctica, which remains very vague.
At their last detection of March, scientists have relying on the observations of the Mars Express mission, From the European Space Agency, in a scientific achievement is the first of its kind, with a reservoir of water to 12 miles.
Astronomers have never seen a course of water in a specific place on Mars, and raises scientific questions Under the surface of Mars
To this day, the waterways excavated on the surface of the red planet are still the only one evidence that the liquid was on Mars millions of years ago.
Researchers study data collected over is years (2012-2015), with the help of advanced earnings that have been able to penetrate the ice and monitor below.
The researcher and professor of astronomy at the University of Leicester, John Bridges, did a thorough analysis of the data before confirming the existence of a water reservoir . The red planet.
Researcher at the University of Rome, Elena Batinelli, said It is impossible to tell if the observed water reservoir is a lake or part of the groundwater on Mars.
> 19459001 According to the British newspaper The Guardian, liquid water was observed at a depth of one mile under ice. In Antarctica of the planet Mars, which is still a great mystery.
Scientists in their latest detection on Mars relied on what was observed the mission of "Mars Express" of the European Space Agency, in a scientific achievement at 12 miles
Astronomers have never observed a course of water in a specific location on Mars, Scientific research has questioned the existence of a life continuous beneath the surface of Mars.
To this day, the waterways excavated on the surface of the Red Planet are still the only evidence that the liquid was on Mars millions of years ago. The latest study examined data collected over a three-year period (2012-2015), helping advanced yields that could enter the ice and monitor below.
The researcher and professor of astronomy at the University of Leicester, John Bridges, data before confirming the existence of a reservoir of water in the red planet.
The researcher at Jam Rome, Elena Batinelli, said that it was impossible to know if the observed water reservoir was a lake or part of the water table on Mars