Scientists using data from NASA’s Curiosity rover measured the total organic carbon – a key component in the molecules of life – in Martian rocks for the first time.
“Total organic carbon is one of several
measurements [or indices] that help us understand how much material is
available as feedstock for prebiotic chemistry and potentially biology,” said
Jennifer Stern of NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland.
“We found at least 200 to 273 parts per million of organic carbon. This is
comparable to or even more than the amount found in rocks in very low-life
places on Earth, such as parts of the Atacama Desert in South America, and more
than has been detected in Mars meteorites.”
Organic carbon is carbon bound to a
hydrogen atom. It is the basis for organic molecules, which are created and
used by all known forms of life. However, organic carbon on Mars does not prove
the existence of life there because it can also come from non-living sources,
such as meteorites and volcanoes, or be formed in place by surface reactions.
Organic carbon has been found on Mars before, but prior measurements only
produced information on particular compounds, or represented measurements
capturing just a portion of the carbon in the rocks. The new measurement gives
the total amount of organic carbon in these rocks.
Although the surface of Mars is
inhospitable for life now, there is evidence that billions of years ago the
climate was more Earth-like, with a thicker atmosphere and liquid water that
flowed into rivers and seas. Since liquid water is necessary for life as we
understand it, scientists think Martian life, if it ever evolved, could have
been sustained by key ingredients such as organic carbon, if present in
sufficient amount.
From a position in the shallow "Yellowknife Bay" depression,
NASA's Mars rover Curiosity used its right Mast Camera (Mastcam) to take the
telephoto images combined into this panorama of geological diversity. Credits:
NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS Full caption
Curiosity is advancing the field of astrobiology by investigating
Mars’ habitability, studying its climate and geology. The rover drilled samples
from 3.5-billion-year-old mudstone rocks in the Yellowknife Bay formation of
Gale crater, the site of an ancient lake on Mars. Mudstone at Gale crater was
formed as very fine sediment (from physical and chemical weathering of volcanic
rocks) in water settled on the bottom of a lake and was buried. Organic carbon
was part of this material and got incorporated into the mudstone. Besides
liquid water and organic carbon, Gale crater had other conditions conducive to
life, such as chemical energy sources, low acidity, and other elements
essential for biology, such as oxygen, nitrogen, and sulfur. “Basically, this
location would have offered a habitable environment for life, if it ever was present,”
said Stern, lead author of a paper about this research published June 27 in the
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
The NASA Mars rover Curiosity used its left Navigation Camera to record
this view of the step down into a shallow depression called "Yellowknife
Bay." It took the image on the 125th Martian day, or sol, of the mission
(Dec. 12, 2012), just after finishing that sol's drive. Credits:
NASA/JPL-Caltech Full caption
To make the
measurement, Curiosity delivered the sample to its Sample Analysis at Mars (SAM) instrument, where an oven heated the
powdered rock to progressively higher temperatures. This experiment used oxygen
and heat to convert the organic carbon to carbon dioxide (CO2), the
amount of which is measured to get the amount of organic carbon in the rocks.
Adding oxygen and heat allows the carbon molecules to break apart and react
carbon with oxygen to make CO2. Some carbon is locked up in minerals, so the oven
heats the sample to very high temperatures to decompose those minerals and
release the carbon to convert it to CO2. The experiment was performed in 2014 but required
years of analysis to understand the data and put the results in context of the
mission’s other discoveries at Gale Crater. The resource-intensive experiment
was performed only once during Curiosity’s 10 years on Mars.
This process also allowed SAM to measure
the carbon isotope ratios, which help to understand the source of the carbon.
Isotopes are versions of an element with slightly different weights (masses)
due to the presence of one or more extra neutrons in the center (nucleus) of
their atoms. For example, Carbon-12 has six neutrons while the heavier
Carbon-13 has seven neutrons. Since heavier isotopes tend to react a bit more
slowly than lighter isotopes, the carbon from life is richer in Carbon-12. “In
this case, the isotopic composition can really only tell us what portion of the
total carbon is organic carbon and what portion is mineral carbon,” said Stern.
“While biology cannot be completely ruled out, isotopes cannot really be used
to support a biological origin for this carbon, either, because the range
overlaps with igneous (volcanic) carbon and meteoritic organic material, which
are most likely to be the source of this organic carbon.”
The research was funded by NASA’s Mars Exploration Program. Curiosity’s Mars Science Laboratory mission is led by NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California; JPL is managed by Caltech. SAM was built and tested at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. Charles Malespin is SAM's principal investigator.
Bill
Steigerwald NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Maryland
Source: NASA’s
Curiosity Takes Inventory of Key Life Ingredient on Mars
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