The Red Planet: Mystery of the Soil -A Galaxy Classic
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December 06, 2007

The Red Planet: Mystery of the Soil -A Galaxy Classic

Redplanet_2_4Is there life on today?  This question has been fiercely debated by scientists for the past thirty years. 

The evidence sent back from by two Viking Landers in 1976 and 1977 was inconclusive. In fact, NASA's first press release about the Viking tests announced that the results were positive. The "labeled Release" (LR) experiments had given positive results. But after lengthy discussions in which Carl Sagan participated, NASA reversed its position, mainly because another experiment detected no organics in the soil.

Yet to this day,  Gilbert Levin, the principal designer of the LR experiment, believes the tests pointed to life on Mars. When the same two experiments were run on soil from Antarctica, the same conflicting results were obtained (LR - positive; organics - negative.) Soil and ice from Antarctica certainly contains life. The test for organics was negative because it is far less sensitive than the LR experiment. The same problem could have caused the organics test on to give a false negative.

Before oxygen could accumulate in Earth's atmosphere, all the exposed iron had to rust. During that process, lasting hundreds of millions of years, Earth was also a red planet. In the current issue of the journal Nature, Corinna Wu asks: Could the oxygen that rusted the iron on have been produced biologically? Could life on have simply "run out of steam" after that stage of its development?

The answers to these profound questions will hopefully be made by the Phoenix Probe's Thermal and Evolved Gas Analyzer (TEGA) built by the University of Arizona and University of Texas, is a combination high-temperature furnace and mass spectrometer instrument that scientists will use to analyze Martian ice and soil samples. The robotic arm will deliver samples to a hopper designed to feed a small amount of soil and ice into eight tiny ovens about the size of an ink cartridge in a ballpoint pen. Each of these ovens will be used only once to analyze eight unique samples.

Once a sample is successfully received and sealed in an oven, the temperature is slowly increased at a constant rate, and the power required for heating is carefully and continuously monitored. This process, called scanning calorimetry, shows the transitions from solid to liquid to gas of the different materials in the sample: important information needed by scientists to understand the chemical character of the soil and ice.

As the temperature of the furnace increases up to 1000°C (1800°F), the ice and other volatile materials in the sample are vaporized into a stream of gases. These are called evolved gases and are transported via an inert carrier to a mass spectrometer, a device used to measure the mass and concentrations of specific molecules and atoms in a sample. The mass spectrometer is sensitive to detection levels down to 10 parts per billion, a level that may detect minute quantities of organic molecules potentially existing in the ice and soil.

With these precise measurement capabilities, scientists will be able to determine ratios of various isotopes of hydrogen, oxygen, carbon, and nitrogen, providing clues to origin of the volatile molecules, and possibly, biological processes that occurred in the past.

Posted Casey Kazan. Image credit: Max S. Fellwalker.

Related Galaxy posts:

Is there an Interplanetary Mars-Earth Microbe Shuttle?
"The Overview Effect": Is Space Travel Next Step in Human Evolution?
Lonely Hearts of the Cosmos Revisited -NASA's Phoenix Probe & the Search for
Life from the Center of the Earth - The Shadow World of Our Hidden
New Phoenix Mission Technology to Search for Life


Links:

http://www.nature.com/news/2007/070813/full/448742a.html

Comments

Jesse Hatcher

This IS NASA government coverup crap! Mars soil looks just like Earth's WHY WHY WHY! does our evil Gov. do this Shit?

Daniel Appleton

What if there is life of some kind on Mars, but it's not life that uses the same biological processes that life on Earth uses ? Would there still be some kind of indication that we would recognize. If Mars had some kind of planet wide catastrophe that destroyed everything, it might be hard to recognize that. Everyone seems to think that " Life on Mars " ( or any other planet ) equates to spaceships, ray guns, strange machines, exotic cities with weird architecture, flying cars & such, when extra - terrestrial could be on a level with prehistoric life on Earth incapable of fashioning tools or discovering utilizing fire or something similar.

& life there could use totally different metabolic processes unrecognizable to us, as familiar as we are with carbon - based life forms that use oxygen / nitrogen & water.


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