Texarkana Gazette

THREE GREAT MYSTERIES ABOUT LIFE ON MARS

New exploratio­ns will provide food for thought

- By Becky Ferreira

Mars is the most explored planet in the solar system other than Earth. With all of our robotic visitors there, we’ve discovered that it is a world far too dry, cold and irradiated to support the scheming humanoids or tentacled invaders once imagined by science fiction.

But our trips to Mars have opened a window into the deep past of the red planet, when conditions were far more conducive to life.

This summer, NASA will launch its latest rover, Perseveran­ce, on a seventh-month journey to Mars. Like its predecesso­r, Curiosity, Perseveran­ce will touch down in the remains of an ancient Martian lake bed. What it finds there — along with missions launched by China and the United Arab Emirates — could help us Earthlings understand what Mars was like as a young planet some 4 billion years ago and whether life ever blossomed on its surface.

How habitable was early Mars?

It’s a serene image: A river flowing into an expansive lake that fills a crater basin. Waves lapping at the shoreline; sediment piling into a delta. A lake bed caked with clay.

This is the type of aquatic environmen­t that might support life, and it was once a familiar sight on Mars.

“The evidence for the lakes and rivers is incontrove­rtible,” said Ken Farley, project scientist on Perseveran­ce and a geochemist at the California Institute of Technology.

Although Mars was once a wet planet, there is substantia­l debate about the origins, extent and life span of its long-lost bodies of water.

For instance, early Mars might have been warmed by the gassy belches of active volcanoes, which thickened its atmosphere and caused Martian permafrost to melt. Cataclysmi­c asteroid impacts might have also unleashed 900-foot mega-tsunamis that flooded the planet’s terrain. There’s even disputed evidence that an ocean once covered its northern lowlands.

“Was it weird, short, transient events, or was there an ocean?” Farley said. “I would say there’s no consensus. There’s a lot of ideas out there, and we really need a lot more data to sort it out.”

One major question concerns the longevity of Mars’ liquid water. Nobody knows how much time is required for life to emerge on a planet, including on Earth. But the odds of life forming get better the longer that stable bodies of water persist.

During Curiosity’s eight-year journey across Gale Crater, an ancient lake bed, the rover discovered sediments that suggest water was present for at least a few million years. Curiosity also detected organic compounds, key ingredient­s for life as we know it.

“What we’ve learned from Curiosity suggests that Mars was habitable,” said Dawn Sumner, a planetary geologist at the University of California, Davis, and a member of the Curiosity science team.

Of course, “habitable” does not necessaril­y mean “inhabited.” The surface of Mars is exposed to damaging solar and cosmic radiation, which could have reduced the odds of complex, multicellu­lar life ever forming.

“If life did exist on Mars, there would be a strong evolutiona­ry force toward being resistant to radiation,” Sumner said.

Why did Mars become less habitable?

The bygone oases of Mars are now mirages of a distant past, and modern Mars is a dried-up husk. Earth, in contrast, has been habitable to microbes for most of its life span and has positively burst at the seams with biodiversi­ty for eons. Why did these sibling worlds experience such different outcomes?

As baby planets, Mars and Earth were each swaddled in two protective blankets: a relatively thick atmosphere and a strong magnetic field. Earth has held on to both comforts. Mars has neither.

Mars mysterious­ly lost its magnetic mojo billions of years ago. With no magnetic sheath to protect it from solar wind, the Martian atmosphere was stripped away over time, though it still maintains a thin shell of its past skies.

These changes have left Mars relatively inert for billions of years, while Earth rein

“Was it weird, short, transient events, or was there an ocean? I would say there’s no consensus. There’s a lot of ideas out there, and we really need a lot more data to sort it out.”

—Ken Farley

vents itself through tectonic activity, atmospheri­c shifts and the ingenuity of life.

Could Mars host life now?

Robot explorers on Mars have turned up countless insights about the red planet, but they have never found clear-cut signs of creatures currently residing there. Life, at least as we know it on Earth, simply does not seem probable on the Martian surface.

“If there’s any life on Mars now, it needs at least some liquid water,” Sumner said. “The surface of Mars now is very dry. Just incredibly dry. If there’s life on Mars now, it would be in the deep subsurface.”

There’s some evidence that liquid water is locked away in subterrane­an reservoirs, so perhaps there are sunless ecosystems lurking there. If these habitats exist, they are beyond the direct reach of our rovers and landers.

Recent detections of methane and other gases in what’s left of Mars’ atmosphere are “a tantalizin­g potential signature,” Farley said, bolstering speculatio­n about subterrane­an Martians. Many microbes on Earth produce methane, so it is possible that whiffs of the gas on Mars could be traced to alien life forms deep undergroun­d.

The discovery of life on Mars, either in the form of ancient fossils or subterrane­an reservoirs, would be one of the most momentous breakthrou­ghs in human history. At last, we would have another example of a living planet, even if it only flourished in the past, implying that, at the very least, life can strike twice in the universe.

But even if we never find Martians, “Mars is a place we can go to answer some of the questions about life on Earth,” Sumner said. The red planet remains an eerie time capsule of the era when life first sprouted on our own world and the direction it could have gone had all the factors that made our world possible not turned out just the right way.

 ?? NASA/JPL-Caltech via AP ?? ABOVE:
■ In this May 20 photo, engineers and technician­s insert sample tubes into the belly of the Perseveran­ce Mars rover at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida. NASA is upping the ante with its newest rover headed to Mars.
NASA/JPL-Caltech via AP ABOVE: ■ In this May 20 photo, engineers and technician­s insert sample tubes into the belly of the Perseveran­ce Mars rover at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida. NASA is upping the ante with its newest rover headed to Mars.

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