logo
Nasa rover discovers largest organic compounds yet found on Mars

Nasa rover discovers largest organic compounds yet found on Mars

The Guardian24-03-2025

Nasa's Curiosity rover has found the largest organic compounds ever seen on Mars, raising tantalising questions about whether life emerged on the red planet billions of years ago.
The compounds were detected in a 3.7bn-year-old rock sample collected in Yellowknife Bay, an ancient Martian lakebed that harboured all the necessary ingredients for life in the planet's warmer, wetter past.
Tests onboard the rover found that the rock contained long-chain alkanes, organic molecules thought to be remnants of fatty acids. The compounds can be made by lifeless chemical reactions, but are crucial constituents of cell membranes in all living organisms on Earth.
The researchers do not claim to have found a biosignature – a 'smoking gun' indicating life was once present – but one expert said the material represented the best chance that scientists had ever had for identifying remains of life on Mars.
'These molecules can be made by chemistry or biology,' said Dr Caroline Freissinet, an analytical chemist who led the research at the Atmospheres and Space Observations Laboratory in Guyancourt, near Paris. 'If we have long-chain fatty acids on Mars, those could come – and it's only one hypothesis – from membrane degradation of cells present 3.7bn years ago.'
The Curiosity rover has trundled more than 20 miles (32km) across the Gale crater since landing on Mars in 2012. Six years into the mission, it detected traces of organics in the ancient mudstone, but all were relatively short carbon-chain molecules.
For the latest study, Freissinet and her colleagues developed a new procedure to test more of the sample drilled from the mudstone. This time, Curiosity detected much larger organics, namely decane, undecane and dodecane.
Work on Earth showed that the Martian rock sample, known as Cumberland, probably contained carboxylic acids, or fatty acids, that converted to alkanes in the heating process. 'Although abiotic processes can form these acids, they are considered universal products of biochemistry, terrestrial, and perhaps Martian,' the scientists wrote in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Further analysis of the organics only deepened the intrigue. When organisms on Earth make fatty acids, the compounds tend to contain more even numbers than odd numbers of carbon atoms. This is because some enzymes build fatty acids by adding two carbon atoms at a time. The scientists saw hints of this in the Martian organics, too. 'Cumberland is teasing us,' Freissinet said. 'The one in the middle with 12 carbons is more abundant than the other two. We have the same trend on Mars, but a trend drawn from three molecules is not a real trend. Still, it's very intriguing.'
The finding suggests, at the very least, that organic signatures of life can be preserved in Martian rock for billions of years, bolstering hopes that should life ever have emerged on the planet, its remnants might still be found.
The pressing question is what to do next. Curiosity is carrying a second sample of the rock that scientists want to analyse for even larger organics. This might boost evidence for more fatty acids containing even numbers of carbons. But that would still not be conclusive.
John Eiler, a professor of geology and geochemistry at the California Institute of Technology, said analysing the different isotopes of carbon and hydrogen in the organics could reveal their origins. However, the tests require equipment found in only a handful of labs on Earth. 'At present, there is no plausible path to making such measurements using an in-situ instrument on Mars,' he said. That will have to wait for a Mars sample-return mission.
'The findings reported in this paper present the best chance we have seen for identifying the remains of life on Mars,' said Eiler. 'But sealing the deal absolutely requires return of such samples to Earth.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The man who orchestrated a British medical scandal
The man who orchestrated a British medical scandal

Telegraph

time2 hours ago

  • Telegraph

The man who orchestrated a British medical scandal

Joanne Briggs's debut, The Scientist Who Wasn't There, is an astonishingly original memoir about truth, identity and the ethics of science. It's thrilling, unsettling – and really rather odd. Winner of the inaugural Bridport Prize for Memoir in 2023, the award that cinched the book's publication, it explores the enigmatic – if not completely bizarre – life of Briggs's father, Professor Michael Briggs, a man whose illustrious, globe-trotting scientific career concealed a vast labyrinth of deception. Born in Manchester, Professor Briggs became a research scientist who worked at NASA, an advisor to the World Health Organisation, and a successful executive in the pharmaceutical industry. On paper, his was a classic rags-to-riches story: he was a self-made, charismatic visionary who surfed the post-war technology boom. But in 1986, his career imploded when a Sunday Times exposé linked him to the hormone pregnancy test Primodos, which worked by triggering menstruation in non-pregnant women, and was alleged to have caused serious birth defects. It seemed Professor Briggs had been faking results. Things get stranger. Professor Briggs not only appears to have forged his qualifications, laundered research funds and bullied sceptical colleagues and anyone who doubted him – he may also have been a spy. He appears to have worked for the British government, possibly connected to Cold War intelligence gathering; may have been involved in espionage in East Berlin, and then somehow got caught up in the making of Stanley Kubrick's film 2001: A Space Odyssey. His death abroad, aged 51, was so sudden that Briggs speculates that there may have been some kind of cover-up. What begins, then, as a daughter's ostensibly simple search for the truth about her absent father, soon becomes a forensic and yet also fantastical investigation – part legal inquiry, part philosophical meditation. A trained lawyer, Briggs approaches the evidence as a prosecutor would: poring over professional records, interviewing colleagues and meeting with the victims of her father's lies and misconduct. Primodos involved high doses of synthetic hormones and though the causal link has never been confirmed, women who used it reported children with defects such as spina bifida, limb abnormalities, and heart issues. Briggs reveals that her father manipulated or suppressed data about these effects while being professionally involved with the pharmaceutical company producing it. But the book is also wildly surreal: Briggs imagines conversations with her father in which they debate the boundaries between science and science fiction, and the book eventually resolves into musings and reverie. The overall effect, frankly, is dizzying – pleasantly so. Briggs often hints that she herself doesn't know the difference between fact and fantasy; in a rather cryptic, ambivalent author's note, she writes: 'My memory of the past is as much made up of dreams, impressions, false beliefs, fantasies, feelings and notions as it is of facts [...] which I hope makes my memoir authentic. But is that a true story? Well, yes, it is to me.' True or not, the book defies neat categorisation. It's certainly a book about a very peculiar, unsavoury man, but it's also a vivid depiction of a world in which ambition and imagination collide, with devastating human consequences. Briggs does, at various points, express deep moral ambivalence about writing the book: she wrestles with the ethics of exposing her father's legacy, particularly given the trauma already borne by his victims. She describes a childhood overshadowed by confusion, secrecy and emotional neglect, but also moments of awe and admiration for her father. Their relationship, as reconstructed here, was fraught and complex – marked more by absence than presence, but never entirely devoid of connection or longing. The Scientist Who Wasn't There is not only an indictment of one man's lies and deceit and his descent into moral oblivion, therefore, but a study of duplicity; personal, institutional, even national and international. Briggs slowly assembles a counterbalanced, complex kind of truth, one that acknowledges the impossibility of total objectivity but which nonetheless insists on the value of the attempt. 'He only ever travelled in one direction,' Briggs writes of her father. 'Forwards, away from the smoke of burning bridges.' She, in contrast, with admirable insight and considerable nerve, turns back – to sift through the still smouldering ruins.

BBC Learning English - Learning English from the News / Astronauts home after 9 months in space
BBC Learning English - Learning English from the News / Astronauts home after 9 months in space

BBC News

time14 hours ago

  • BBC News

BBC Learning English - Learning English from the News / Astronauts home after 9 months in space

(Photo via Keegan Barber/NASA via Getty Images) ____________________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________ The story After nine months in space, Nasa astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams have finally arrived back on Earth. Their stay on the International Space Station (ISS) was only supposed to last eight days, but their mission was dramatically extended after the spacecraft that they arrived on, called 'Starliner', began to have technical problems. Starliner was sent back to Earth empty in September 2024, so Butch and Suni needed an alternative spacecraft to take them home. Nine months after they arrived, they're finally back. News headlines Nasa's stranded astronauts finally begin return to Earth after being stuck in space for months The Independent Two astronauts stuck in space for more than nine months head back to Earth Sky News NASA's stranded astronauts are FINALLY on way home after nine grueling months Daily Mail Key words and phrases stuck unable to move The lock on the bathroom door broke, so I was stuck in there for hours! head back return My parents are just heading back from the restaurant now – they'll be home soon. grueling/gruelling extremely tiring or difficult I've got a gruelling schedule at work tomorrow – back-to-back meetings all day with no breaks. Next If you like learning English from the news, click here. Learn more phrasal verbs with Georgie.

A strange object is sending radio signals through space and experts don't know why
A strange object is sending radio signals through space and experts don't know why

Daily Record

timea day ago

  • Daily Record

A strange object is sending radio signals through space and experts don't know why

Astronomers, including one from Edinburgh, have been left perplexed over a new type of cosmic phenomenon Our understanding of space is ever-growing, but what lies beyond earth is so huge that astronomers often face stumbling blocks that prevent them from getting their head round just exactly what is going on beyond our planet. This is what has happened over in Australia, where astronomers, including one from University of Edinburgh, have stumbled across a strange object that is emitting radio waves every two minutes - and they don't know why. ‌ The object - a long-period transient (LPT) - is emitting pulses of radio waves and X-rays for two minutes every 44 minutes. LPTs are a relatively new class of astrophysical objects that are known to emit radio waves periodically. ‌ This is unusually slow compared to most periodic radio objects. However, this is the first time such objects have been detected in X-rays. There is currently no clear explanation for what is causing the signals, or why they 'switch on' and 'switch off' at such long, regular and unusual intervals. When the LPT is 'on,' it is so bright that the Milky Way gas is blocking out some of the radio light. Explanations could be that the object is a magnetar - the core of a dead star with powerful magnetic fields - or a pair of stars in a binary system where one of the two is a highly magnetised white dwarf. ‌ In other words, a low-mass star at the end of its evolution. However, even those theories do not fully explain what is being seen up above. Incredibly, the discovery could even hint at a new type of physics or new models of stellar evolution. ‌ Astronomers from the International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research (ICRAR) made the finding, which they hope may provide insights into what is behind other mysterious signals which have been spotted across the sky. The team discovered the object by joining the dots between the radio signals with X-ray pulses detected by NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory, which just happened to be observing the same part of the sky. ‌ Dr Marcin Glowacki from the University of Edinburgh School's Institute for Astronomy was involved in the collaboration. He looked for hydrogen gas located between the LPT and Earth. By detecting this gas within the LPT signal, he was able to place a lower limit on how far away this unusual object is, which was important to rule out a link with other objects in that part of the sky. ‌ The investigation continues, but as of yet, there is no clear cut answer to what the curious entity is, and why it's doing what it's doing. Back in Scotland, people should get ready to witness a phenomenon for themselves, as the Milky Way comes into view this month. June means that Milky Way "Core Season" is here, according to NASA. This is the time of year when the Milky Way is visible as a faint band of hazy light arching across the sky all night. Excitingly, the space agency has revealed exactly how and when best to catch a glimpse of it. Join the Daily Record WhatsApp community! Get the latest news sent straight to your messages by joining our WhatsApp community today. You'll receive daily updates on breaking news as well as the top headlines across Scotland. No one will be able to see who is signed up and no one can send messages except the Daily Record team. All you have to do is click here if you're on mobile, select 'Join Community' and you're in! If you're on a desktop, simply scan the QR code above with your phone and click 'Join Community'. We also treat our community members to special offers, promotions, and adverts from us and our partners. If you don't like our community, you can check out any time you like. To leave our community click on the name at the top of your screen and choose 'exit group'.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store