Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Mars rover finds no sign of methane, telltale sign of life

- Reuters

THE ROVER LANDED ON MARS IN AUGUST 2012 TO DETERMINE WHETHER THE PLANET COULD SUPPORT LIFE

CAPE CANAVERAL: NASA’S Mars rover Curiosity has come up empty-handed in its search for methane in the planet’s atmosphere, a gas that on Earth is a strong indicator of life, officials said on Thursday.

The rover landed on Mars in August 2012 to determine whether the planet most like Earth in the solar system has or ever had the chemistry and conditions to support microbial life.

Over the past decade, scientists using Mars orbiters and telescopes on Earth have reported plumes of methane in the Martian atmosphere.

The gas breaks down in sunlight, so its presence on Mars indicated that either biological activity or a recent geologic event was responsibl­e for its release.

The gas, which lasts about 300 years in Earth’s atmosphere could be expected to stick around for 200 years on Mars. But

Curiosity’s findings, compiled over eight months, indicate that the methane may have virtually disappeare­d in a matter of years.

Based on the previous observatio­ns, scientists had expected to find about six times more methane in the atmosphere than the negligible amounts Curiosity found.

“There’s a discrepanc­y,” lead research Christophe­r Webster, with NASA’S Jet Propulsion Laboratory told Reuters. “It’s disappoint­ing, of course,” Webster said. “We would have liked to get there and find lots of methane ”

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