Chattanooga Times Free Press

Puff of gas hints at possibilit­y of life

- BY KENNETH CHANG NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE

Mars, it appears, is belching a large amount of a gas that could be a sign of microbes living on the planet today.

In a measuremen­t taken Wednesday, NASA’s Curiosity rover discovered startlingl­y high amounts of methane in the Martian air, a gas that on Earth is usually produced by living things. The data arrived back on Earth on Thursday, and by Friday, scientists working on the mission were excitedly discussing the news.

“Given this surprising result, we’ve reorganize­d the weekend to run a follow-up experiment,” Ashwin Vasavada, the project scientist for the mission, wrote to the science team in an email that was obtained by The New York Times.

The mission’s controller­s on Earth sent new instructio­ns to the rover Friday to follow up on the readings, bumping previously planned science work. The results of these observatio­ns were expected back on the ground Monday.

People have long been fascinated by the possibilit­y of aliens on Mars. But NASA’s Viking landers in the 1970s photograph­ed a desolate landscape. Two decades later, planetary scientists thought Mars might have been warmer, wetter and more habitable in its

youth some 4 billion years ago. Now, they are entertaini­ng the notion that if life ever did arise on Mars, its microbial descendant­s could have migrated undergroun­d and persisted.

Methane, if it is there in the thin Martian air, is significan­t, because sunlight and chemical reactions would break up the molecules within a few centuries. Thus any methane detected now must have been released recently.

On Earth, microbes known as methanogen­s thrive in places lacking oxygen, such as rocks deep undergroun­d and the digestive tracts of animals, and they release methane as a waste product. However, geothermal reactions devoid of biology can also generate methane.

It is also possible that the methane is ancient, trapped inside Mars for millions of years but escaping intermitte­ntly through cracks.

NASA acknowledg­ed the methane detection in a statement Saturday but called it an “early science result.”

The agency’s spokespers­on added, “To maintain scientific integrity, the project science team will continue to analyze the data before confirming results.”

Scientists first reported detections of methane on Mars a decade and a half ago using measuremen­ts from Mars Express, an orbiting spacecraft built by the European Space Agency and still in operation, as well as from telescopes on Earth. However, those findings were at the edge of the detection power of those tools, and many researcher­s thought the methane might just be a mirage of mistaken data.

When Curiosity arrived on Mars in 2012, it looked for methane and found nothing, or at least less than 1 part per billion in the atmosphere. Then, in 2013 it detected a sudden spike, up to 7 parts per billion that lasted at least a couple of months.

The methane ebbed away.

The measuremen­t this past week found 21 parts per billion of methane, or three times the 2013 spike.

Even before that discovery, the mystery of methane had been deepening.

Curiosity scientists developed a technique that enabled the rover to detect even tinier amounts of methane with its existing tools. The gas seems to rise and fall with the red planet’s seasons. A new analysis of old Mars Express readings confirmed Curiosity’s 2013 findings. One day after Curiosity reported a spike of methane, the orbiter, passing over Curiosity’s location, also measured a spike.

But the Trace Gas Orbiter, a newer European spacecraft launched in 2016 with more sensitive instrument­s, did not detect any methane at all in its first batch of scientific observatio­ns last year.

Marco Giuranna, a scientist at the National Institute for Astrophysi­cs in Italy, who leads the Mars Express orbiter’s methane measuremen­ts, said scientists on the Curiosity, Mars Express and Trace Gas Orbiter missions had been discussing the latest findings. He confirmed he had been told of the reading of 21 parts per billion but added that the finding was preliminar­y.

He said Mars Express passed over Gale Crater, the 96-mile-wide depression Curiosity has been studying, on the same day that Curiosity made its measuremen­ts. There are other observatio­ns on earlier and subsequent dates, Giuranna said, including joint observatio­ns with the Trace Gas Orbiter.

“A lot of data to be processed,” Giuranna said in an email. “I’ll have some preliminar­y results by next week.”

Rovers scheduled for launch next year — one by NASA, one by a RussianEur­opean collaborat­ion — will carry instrument­s designed to search for the building blocks of life, although neither is designed to answer the question of whether there is life on Mars today.

 ?? PHOTO BY NASA/JPL-CALTECH/MSSS VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? This self-portrait was taken by NASA’s Curiosity rover at the Gale Crater on Mars. NASA says Mars is belching a large amount of a gas that could be a sign of microbes living on the planet today.
PHOTO BY NASA/JPL-CALTECH/MSSS VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES This self-portrait was taken by NASA’s Curiosity rover at the Gale Crater on Mars. NASA says Mars is belching a large amount of a gas that could be a sign of microbes living on the planet today.

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