Several
billion years ago, Mars may well have been a pleasant place for tiny
microbes to live, with plenty of water as well as minerals that could have
served as food, NASA scientists said Tuesday at a news conference on
the latest findings from their Mars rover. But they have yet to find signs that
actual microbes did live in that oasis. “We
have found a habitable environment that is so benign and supportive of life
that probably if this water was around and you had been on the planet, you
would have been able to drink it,” said John P. Grotzinger, the California
Institute of Technology geology professor who is the principal investigator for
the NASA mission. you
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In drilling into its first rock, a fine-grained mudstone, the
scientists said, the rover Curiosity — a self-contained science laboratory
about the size of a Mini Cooper — sent back to Earth convincing
evidence that Mars was once awash in water.
Plus, the Curiosity scientists identified elements in the rocks
— sulfur, nitrogen, hydrogen, oxygen, phosphorus and carbon — that are some of
the key ingredients of life, as well as minerals, like sulfates and sulfides,
that primitive microbes could eat for food. Dr. Grotzinger said these minerals
are “effectively like batteries” and can provide an energy source for life.
This included the presence of clays, one of the main things that
scientists were hoping that Curiosity would find on its two-year, $2.5 billion
mission. Clays form in waters that have a neutral pH.
“What we have learned in the last 20 years of modern
microbiology is that very primitive organisms, they can derive energy just by
feeding on rocks,” Dr. Grotzinger said.
Even so, the Curiosity scientists said they had not yet
definitively found the carbon building blocks needed to come together to give
rise to living organisms. Two earlier NASA rovers, Spirit and Opportunity, also
found strong evidence of liquid water on the Martian surface, but in places on
the planet that were highly acidic and salty — far harsher for any hypothetical
organisms.
About three billion years ago, the conditions on Mars changed.
With just one-tenth the mass of Earth, Mars was unable to hold on to most of
its atmosphere. The inside of the planet cooled, and the volcanoes stopped
erupting. The water froze or evaporated and escaped into space. Mars became
cold and dry.
Curiosity landed in August in a 96-mile crater named Gale,
gouged long ago by a meteor, and has been roaming in the area since then. The
rover’s ultimate destination is a three-mile-high mountain at the center of the
crater that caught the eye of scientists because they detected the presence of
clays in observations taken by orbiting spacecraft. Now, long before getting to
the mountain, scientists have already found the clays, and these rocks would be
prime candidates to look for organics.
Curiosity is not carrying any instruments that can detect
Martian life, past or present, but it can identify so-called organic molecules,
which contain carbon and hydrogen atoms. The presence of organic molecules
would not prove the presence of life, since many nonliving chemical reactions
can produce organic molecules. But organic molecules are a necessary
prerequisite for life — at least, life as we know it.
So far, the Curiosity scientists cannot say that the rock
contained organics, but neither can they rule out the possibility. Rather,
since their instruments did measure some simple organics, the researchers are
sorting out whether the organics came from the Martian rock, from contamination
brought from Earth or were formed in chemical reactions as the rock powder was
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Still, the scientists are excited by the possibilities.
“I have an image now of possibly a lake, a fresh water lake, on
Mars with a thicker atmosphere,” said John M. Grunsfeld, NASA’s associate
administrator for science.
The answers will take a while to discern. Science operations are
delayed as engineers work to diagnose and fix what went wrong with the rover’s
computer last week when Curiosity failed to send back science data and then
failed to go to sleep as scheduled.
Part of the rover’s computer memory had become corrupted, and
the engineers switched operations to an identical backup. They are also
figuring out whether the corrupted memory may clear up when the computer is
restarted or whether the errors are permanent, requiring modification of
computer programs to avoid that part of the memory.
In addition, the Sun will be in the way between Mars and Earth
for most of April, making communications impossible. Limited science work is
expected to resume in a few days, but further drilling of rocks will wait until
May.
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