Potentially life-giving water still
flows across the ancient surface of Mars from time to time, NASA
scientists said Monday in revealing a potential breakthrough in both
the search for life beyond Earth and human hopes to one day travel
there.While the discovery doesn't by itself offer evidence of life on
Mars, either past or present, it does boost hopes that the harsh
landscape still offers some refuge for microbes to cling to
existence.
"The existence of liquid water,
even if it is super salty briny water, gives the possibility that if
there's life on Mars, that we have a way to describe how it might
survive," said John Grunsfeld, associate administrator for the
Science Mission Directorate at NASA.NASA
researchers using an imager aboard the Mars
Reconnaissance Orbiter confirmed the watery flows by looking at
light waves returned from seasonal dark streaks on the surface, long
suspected to be associated with liquid water.
The investigation showed the streaks
absorb light at specific wavelengths associated with chemicals known
to pull water from the Martian atmosphere in a process known as
deliquescence, said Georgia Tech doctoral student Lujendra
Ojha, who first discovered the streaks while still an
undergraduate student at the University of Arizona in 2011.The
chemicals allow the water to remain liquid at lower temperatures but
also help keep it from boiling off in the thin atmosphere of Mars,
the researchers said.
Researchers have
known for many years that Mars has water frozen at its poles, in its
thin atmosphere, and, most recently, in tiny puddles that appear to
form at night on the surface.
96 photos: Mars
rover Curiosity
Nor is it the first
potential clue that Mars could have once -- or may still -- host
life. The Mars Curiosity rover, for instance, has
detected methane
on the surface of Mars, as well as other chemical signatures
suggesting the possibility of past or present life.It remains to be
seen whether the new discovery improves the odds of life on Mars, but
researcher Mary Beth Wilhelm said the results suggest "more
habitable conditions on the near surface of Mars than previously
thought."
How habitable, she
said, depends on how salty and how cold the conditions are.
But Alfred McEwen,
who heads up NASA's HiRISE high-resolution camera aboard the Mars
orbiter, said he's fairly confident life will one day be found on
Mars.
NASA:
Proof of alien life closer 01:08"It's very likely, I think, that
there's life somewhere in the crust of Mars, microbes," he
said.Jim Green, director of planetary science at NASA, said the
discovery announced Monday puts NASA in a perfect position to look
for that life.
"We
haven't been able to answer the question, 'Does life exist beyond
Earth?' " Green said. "But following the water is a
critical element of that. We now have, I think, a great opportunity
to be in the right locations on Mars to thoroughly investigate that."
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