Posted on 01/24/2004 12:32:57 PM PST by ambrose
January 25, 2004
A European mission to Mars has found further evidence that the stuff of life - water - may exist on our red neighbour. Lucy Beaumont reports.
It may only be a thin blue line on the red planet, but it is set to spark a debate about life as we know it.
The European Space Agency's unmanned spacecraft Mars Express has discovered evidence of frozen water at the planet's south pole, backing NASA findings made in 2002. If the planet does hold water, the possibility of extraterrestrial life, past or present, may also become more than just science fiction.
According to Monash University philosopher John Bigelow, humans could not resist linking scientific findings with their quest for meaning: "It touches on our deepest need to know where we came from . . . whether there's always been life or if it originated.
"One possibility is that life developed completely separately on Mars as well as on Earth. The other possibility is that life came to Mars from Earth or to Earth from Mars," Professor Bigelow said.
ESA project leader Michael McKay said confirmation of the presence of frozen water came in high-resolution pictures of the planet's south pole beamed from Mars Express, the mothership of the Beagle 2 probe, which is feared to have crashed while trying to land on Mars a month ago.
Swinburne University astrophysicist Sarah Maddison said the finding of H2O, using infrared chemical analysis, was significant.
"We've known for a long time that the polar caps of Mars are carbon-dioxide ice and it has been thought for a long time that there's probably a water-ice base," Dr Maddison said.
"The fact that there is water ice there lends more weight to the previous hypotheses that there used to be a lot of water on Mars."
Monash University's Andrew Prentice, who is involved with NASA's upcoming mission to Saturn, was thrilled by the latest finding, after having theorised that Mars was the most water-rich of all the solar system's planets.
Dr Prentice's calculations suggested Mars had as much water as Earth, despite being one-tenth its size. The origins of both planets, about 4.5 billion years ago, supported this, he said.
"Mars formed at a cooler temperature than the Earth. So if Earth was successful at capturing water then Mars would have been even more successful."
Other experts reserved judgement on the finding. Melbourne University senior research fellow Nick Hoffman has theorised that ice on Mars was carbon dioxide and therefore not supportive of life. He expected radar data, to be gathered in the next few months, to be more definitive.
But the Mars Express finding gave theologians an exciting new realm of possibility, said Francis Macnab, chief minister at St Michael's Uniting Church, Melbourne.
"It could be that life had many sources and many forms," he said.
This story was found at: http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2004/01/24/1074732656967.html
True. Then NASA ought to go to The MacDonalds corporation and ask them to open up a Mikie D's there to promote economic growth.
http://www.esa.int/export/SPECIALS/Mars_Express/SEM8ZB474OD_0.html
|
"Wouldn't it eventually 'Run Out,'"----SURE!!--after Several Thousand Years!!
Doc
if Mars does have water, wouldn't it be a finite resource?
Limited & scarce certainly, but recyclible. It's not going to disappear. Any in use will certainly be recycled for habitat use, that would be the rule on mars.
One interesting possibility could become economically feasible. Divert cometary ice from the asteroid belts into uninhabited craters on occasion. That would supplement Mar's deficiencies where water is concerned if mining Mars ice proves to be insufficient or uneconomical long term. That's presuming true colonization of Mars, and not just scientific outposts.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.