Mars Curiosity rover finds life-supporting chemicals
|
|
Curious about life on Mars? NASA's rover Curiosity has now given scientists the strongest evidence to date that the environment on the Red Planet could have supported life billions of years ago.
Since Curiosity made its rock star landing more than a year ago at Gale Crater, the focal
point of its mission, the roving laboratory has collected evidence that gives
new insights into Mars' past environment.
NASA scientists announced in
March that Mars could have once hosted life -- at least, in the distant
past, based on the chemical analysis of powder collected from Curiosity's drill.
An area of the crater known as Yellowknife Bay once hosted "slightly salty
liquid water," Michael Meyer, lead scientist for the Mars Exploration Program at
NASA headquarters in Washington, said earlier this year.
Six new studies released Monday by the journal Science add
more insights about these formerly habitable conditions and provide other new
knowledge that increase our understanding of the Red Planet. The results were
also presented at the fall meeting of the American Geophysical Union in San
Francisco.
Curiosity found evidence of clay
formations, or "mudstone," in Yellowstone Bay, scientists said Monday. Martian
mud is a big deal because this clay may have held the key ingredients for life
billions of years ago. It means a lake must have existed in this area.
"This is a game changer since
these are the kind of materials that are very 'Earth-like' and conducive for
life," said Douglas Ming, lead author of one of the new studies.
Ming and his colleagues said they
also detected nitrogen, carbon, sulfur and oxygen -- all building blocks of
life.
The new findings mean the rover's
$2.5 billion mission is "turning the corner," said John Grotzinger, a California
Institute of Technology planetary geologist and chief scientist for Curiosity,
also known as the Mars Science Laboratory.
Grotzinger and colleagues found
the habitable environment existed later in Martian history than previously
thought. By studying physical characteristics of rock layers in and near
Yellowknife Bay, they determined that Mars was habitable less than 4 billion
years ago -- about the same time as the oldest signs we have for life on
Earth.
The habitable conditions could
have remained for millions to tens of millions of years, with rivers and lakes
appearing and disappearing over time.
Curiosity also helped scientists
figure out the age of an ancient Martian rock, as described in the new research.
The rock is called Cumberland, and it now has the distinction of being the first
whose age was measured on another planet through chemical analysis.
The rover used a method for
dating Earth rocks that measures the decay of an isotope of potassium as it
slowly changes into argon. Scientists determined the rock was between 3.86
billion and 4.56 billion years old. This age range is consistent with earlier
estimates for rocks in Gale Crater.
Scientists say roughly 4 billion
years ago, the environment on Mars wasn't much different from that of modern-day
Earth. But things on Mars then took a drastic turn, and the planet was
dramatically transformed from warm and wet to bitterly cold and dry, scientists
say. In addition to the cold and dry conditions, scientists say the No. 1 reason
life probably wouldn't have thrived on Mars is its extremely high levels of
radiation.
"The radiation environment on
Mars is unlike anything we have on Earth," said Jennifer Eigenbrode, a
biogeochemist and geologist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center and an author
of one of the studies. "We don't know if life on Mars could have ever adapted to
the high levels of radiation the surface is currently experiencing."
Eigenbrode added, "This is a
wide-open book, which we have barely started writing the pages of."
New radiation measurements will
also be important to planning any human missions to Mars, scientists said.
"Our measurements also tie into
Curiosity's investigations about habitability," study co-author Don Hassler of
Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colorado, said in a statement. "The
radiation sources that are concerns for human health also affect microbial
survival as well as preservation of organic chemicals."
Organic chemicals come from a
variety of sources, including meteorites and comets, but they can also be
indicative of life. What's bad for us is bad for
signs of life -- but these organic chemicals could still be
hiding on Mars nonetheless.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.