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Dig
deeper to find Martian life
30 January 2007
Layers
Exposed at Polar Canyon
Image
credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Univ. of Arizona.
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Probes designed to find
life on Mars do not drill deep enough to find the living cells
that scientists believe may exist well below the surface of Mars,
according to research led by UCL (University College London).
Although current drills may find essential tell-tale signs that
life once existed on Mars, cellular life could not survive the
radiation levels for long enough any closer to the surface of
Mars than a few meters deep – beyond the reach of even
state-of-the-art drills.
The study, published in the
journal ‘Geophysical Research Letters’ (GRL), maps
out the cosmic radiation levels at various depths, taking into
account different surface conditions on Mars, and shows that the
best place to look for living cells is within the ice at Elysium,
the location of the newly discovered frozen sea on Mars.
The lead author, Lewis
Dartnell, UCL Center for Mathematics and Physics in the Life
Sciences & Experimental Biology (CoMPLEX), said: “Finding
hints that life once existed – proteins, DNA fragments or
fossils – would be a major discovery in itself, but the
Holy Grail for astrobiologists is finding a living cell that we
can warm up, feed nutrients and reawaken for studying.
“It just isn’t
plausible that dormant life is still surviving in the
near-subsurface of Mars – within the first couple of meters
below the surface – in the face of the ionizing radiation
field. Finding life on Mars depends on liquid water surfacing on
Mars, but the last time liquid water was widespread on Mars was
billions of years ago. Even the hardiest cells we know of could
not possibly survive the cosmic radiation levels near the surface
of Mars for that long.”
Survival times near the surface
reach only a few million years. This means that the chance of
finding life with the current probes is slim. Scientists will
need to dig deeper and target very specific, hard-to-reach areas
such as recent craters or areas where water has recently
surfaced.
Dr Andrew Coates, UCL
Department of Space & Climate Physics, said: “This
study is trying to understand the radiation environment on Mars
and its effect on past and present life. This is the first study
to take a thorough look at how radiation behaves in the
atmosphere and below the surface and it’s very relevant to
planned missions. The best chance we have of finding life is
looking in either the sea at Elysium or fresh craters.”
The team found that the best
places to look for living cells on Mars would be within the ice
at Elysium because the frozen sea is relatively recent – it
is believed to have surfaced in the last five million years –
and so has been exposed to radiation for a relatively short
amount of time. H2O provides an ideal shield of hydrogen to
protect life on Mars from destructive cosmic radiation particles.
Ice also holds an advantage because it is far easier to drill
through than rock. Even here, surviving cells would be out of the
reach of current drills. Other ideal sites include recent
craters, because the surface has been exposed to less radiation,
and the gullies recently discovered in the sides of craters, as
they are thought to have flowed with water in the last five
years.
The team developed a radiation
dose model to study the radiation environment for possible life
on Mars. Unlike Earth, Mars is not protected by a global magnetic
field or thick atmosphere and for billions of years it has been
laid bare to radiation from space. The team quantified how solar
and galactic radiation is modified as it goes through the thin
Martian atmosphere to the surface and underground.
Three different surface
scenarios were tested; dry regolith, water ice, and regolith with
layered permafrost. The particle energies and radiation doses
were measured on the surface of Mars and at regular depths
underground, allowing the calculation of cell survival times.
The team took the known
radiation resistance of terrestrial cells combined with the
annual radiation doses on Mars to calculate the survival time of
dormant populations of the cells. Some strains are
radiation-resistant and are able to survive the effects because,
when active, they successfully repair the DNA breaks caused by
ionizing radiation. However, when cells are dormant, such as when
frozen as in the subsurface of Mars, they are preserved but
unable to repair the damage, which accumulates to the point where
the cell becomes permanently inactivated.
Mr Dartnell said: “With
this model of the subsurface radiation environment on Mars and
its effects on the survival of dormant cells we have been able to
accurately determine the drilling depth required for any hope of
recovering living cells. We have found that this suspected frozen
sea in Elysium represents one of the most exciting targets for
landing a probe, as the long-term survival of cells here is
better than underground in icy rock. This could be crucial for
the scientists and engineers planning future Mars missions to
find life.”
Source
/ Credit: University College London
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