
Why Is Mars Barren, Uninhabitable? NASA's Curiosity Rover Offers New Clue
A discovery made by a NASA rover has offered a clue for this mystery, new research said Wednesday, suggesting that while rivers once sporadically flowed on Mars, it was doomed to mostly be a desert planet.
Mars is thought to currently have all the necessary ingredients for life except for perhaps the most important one: liquid water.
However the red surface is carved out by ancient rivers and lakes, showing that water once flowed on our nearest neighbour.
There are currently several rovers searching Mars for signs of life that could have existed back in those more habitable times, millions of years ago.
Earlier this year, NASA's Curiosity rover discovered a missing piece in this puzzle: rocks that are rich in carbonate minerals.
These "carbonates" -- such as limestone on Earth -- act as a sponge for carbon dioxide, pulling it in from the atmosphere and trapping it in rock.
A new study, published in the journal Nature, modelled exactly how the existence of these rocks could change our understanding of Mars's past.
Brief 'oases'
Lead study author Edwin Kite, a planetary scientist at the University of Chicago and a member of the Curiosity team, told AFP it appeared there were "blips of habitability in some times and places" on Mars.
But these "oases" were the exception rather than the rule.
On Earth, carbon dioxide in the atmosphere warms the planet. Over long timescales, the carbon becomes trapped in rocks such as carbonates.
Then volcanic eruptions spew the gas back into the atmosphere, creating a well-balanced climate cycle supportive of consistently running water.
However Mars has a "feeble" rate of volcanic outgassing compared to Earth, Kite said. This throws off the balance, leaving Mars much colder and less hospitable.
According to the modelling research, the brief periods of liquid water on Mars were followed by 100 million years of barren desert -- a long time for anything to survive.
It is still possible that there are pockets of liquid water deep underground on Mars we have not yet found, Kite said.
NASA's Perseverance Rover, which landed on an ancient Martian delta in 2021, has also found signs of carbonates at the edge of dried-up lake, he added.
Next, the scientists hope to discover more evidence of carbonates.
Kite said the best proof would be returning rock samples from the Martian surface back to Earth -- both the United States and China are racing to do this in the next decade.
Are we alone?
Ultimately, scientists are searching for an answer to one of the great questions: how common are planets like Earth that can harbour life?
Astronomers have discovered nearly 6,000 planets beyond our Solar System since the early 1990s.
But only for Mars and Earth can scientists study rocks which allow them to understand the planet's past, Kite said.
If we do determine that Mars never hosted even tiny micro-organisms during its watery times, that would indicate it is difficult to kick-start life across the universe.
But if we discover proof of ancient life, that would "basically be telling us the origin of life is easy on a planetary scale," Kite said.
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Time of India
39 minutes ago
- Time of India
New Interstellar visitor 3I/ATLAS is speeding through our Solar System, NASA confirms
NASA and astronomers around the world have confirmed that a comet named 3I/ATLAS is moving through our solar system, and it's not from around here. This is only the third time in history that an object from interstellar space has been detected flying past our Sun. Spotted on July 1 by the ATLAS survey telescope in Hawaii, the comet was moving so fast that scientists immediately suspected it wasn't bound by the Sun's gravity. Its speed of over 60 kilometres per second means it entered our solar system from deep space and will exit just as quickly. Ice ball from another star According to astronomers, 3I/ATLAS shows signs of being made of mostly ice, not rock. That's based on the faint, fuzzy glow around it. Its brightness will increase as it gets closer to the Sun, peaking around October 30, when it passes just inside Mars' orbit. There's a new interstellar comet in the neighborhood! Known as 3I/ATLAS, this comet poses no threat to Earth – but it does provide a rare opportunity to study an object that originated outside of our solar system: While it won't pose any danger to Earth, its flyby is a big deal. Most comets we see come from the outer edges of our solar system. But this one came from far beyond, possibly freed from another star system by gravity when stars passed close together. Jonathan McDowell from the Harvard-Smithsonian Centre for Astrophysics explained that icy objects like this might be formed during the birth of stars, and get pulled away when other stars move past. 3I/ATLAS might have been wandering the galaxy for millions of years before arriving here. Largest interstellar object ever seen? Experts estimate that 3I/ATLAS is about 10 to 20 kilometres wide. That makes it possibly the largest interstellar object ever detected. But if it's made of bright ice, it could be smaller than it looks. Either way, it's bigger than both 'Oumuamua (2017) and 2I/Borisov (2019), the first two interstellar visitors. Astronomers across the globe have been tracking the comet using both new and old telescope data. Pre-discovery images from June 14 have already helped trace its path. It's currently around the distance of Jupiter from Earth and only visible from the Southern Hemisphere for now. More interstellar visitors expected Mark Norris, an astronomer from the University of Central Lancashire, believes this comet is moving even faster than its two predecessors. He also said new telescopes, like the Vera C. Rubin Observatory in Chile, could find thousands of similar objects in the future. NASA determined that 3I/ATLAS will develop a tail. This interstellar comet(?), approaching from 27 Boötis, aligns with the solar system and galactic planes. 'Oumuamua exhibited outgassing but did not resemble a comet. Is 3I/ATLAS emitting signals like 'Oumuamua? #A11pl3Z While it's not possible to send a spacecraft to 3I/ATLAS, it still gives researchers a rare chance to study materials from outside our solar system. If scientists find signs of amino acids or other building blocks of life on it, it could support the idea that life's ingredients exist across the galaxy. So far, this icy wanderer has kept its distance. But it's reminding us that our solar system is not alone. The universe is full of travellers and now, we're finally learning how to spot them.


Hindustan Times
2 hours ago
- Hindustan Times
Rare interstellar object zooming through solar system: All about the mysterious 3I/Atlas
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The Hindu
3 hours ago
- The Hindu
Websites hosting major U.S. climate reports taken down
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