NASA’s Perseverance rover viewed these dust devils swirling across the surface of Mars on July 20, 2021. Scientists want to study the air trapped in samples being collected in metal tubes by Perseverance. Those air samples could help them better understand the Martian atmosphere. NASA/JPL-Caltech
Tucked away with each rock and soil
sample collected by the agency’s Perseverance rover is a potential boon for
atmospheric scientists.
Atmospheric scientists get a little more
excited with every rock core NASA’s Perseverance Mars rover seals in its
titanium sample tubes, which are being gathered for eventual delivery to Earth
as part of the Mars Sample Return campaign. Twenty-four have been taken so far.
Most of those samples consist of rock
cores or regolith (broken rock and dust) that might reveal important
information about the history of the planet and whether microbial life was
present billions of years ago. But some scientists are just as thrilled at the
prospect of studying the “headspace,” or air in the extra room around the rocky
material, in the tubes.
They want to learn more about the Martian atmosphere, which is composed
mostly of carbon dioxide but could also include trace amounts of other gases
that may have been around since the planet’s formation.
“The air samples from Mars would
tell us not just about the current climate and atmosphere, but how it’s changed
over time,” said Brandi Carrier, a planetary scientist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion
Laboratory in Southern California. “It will help us understand how climates
different from our own evolve.”
The Value of
Headspace
Among the samples that could be
brought to Earth is one tube filled solely with gas deposited on the Martian
surface as part of a sample depot. But far more of the gas in the rover’s collection is within the headspace
of rock samples. These are unique because the gas will be interacting with
rocky material inside the tubes for years before the samples can be opened and
analyzed in laboratories on Earth. What scientists glean from them will lend
insight into how much water vapor hovers near the Martian surface, one factor
that determines why ice forms where it does on the planet and how Mars’ water
cycle has evolved over time.
Scientists also want a better
understanding of trace gases in the air at Mars. Most scientifically
tantalizing would be the detection of noble gases (such as neon, argon, and
xenon), which are so nonreactive that they may have been around, unchanged in the
atmosphere, since forming billions of years ago. If captured, those gases could
reveal whether Mars started with an atmosphere. (Ancient Mars had a much
thicker atmosphere than it does today, but scientists aren’t sure whether it
was always there or whether it developed later). There are also big questions
about how the planet’s ancient atmosphere compared with early Earth’s.
The headspace would additionally
provide a chance to assess the size and toxicity of dust particles —
information that will help future astronauts on Mars.
“The gas samples have a lot to
offer Mars scientists,” said Justin Simon, a geochemist at NASA’s Johnson Space
Center in Houston, who is part of a group of over a dozen international experts
that helps decide which samples the rover should collect. “Even scientists
who don’t study Mars would be interested because it will shed light on how
planets form and evolve.”
Apollo’s Air
Samples
In 2021, a group of planetary
researchers, including scientists from NASA, studied the air brought back from
the Moon in a steel container by Apollo 17 astronauts some 50 years earlier.
“People think of the Moon as
airless, but it has a very tenuous atmosphere that interacts with the lunar
surface rocks over time,” said Simon, who studies a variety of planetary
samples at Johnson. “That includes noble gases leaking out of the Moon’s interior
and collecting at the lunar surface.”
The way Simon’s team extracted the
gas for study is similar to what could be done with Perseverance’s air samples.
First, they put the previously unopened container into an airtight enclosure.
Then they pierced the steel with a needle to extract the gas into a cold trap —
essentially a U-shaped pipe that extends into a liquid, like nitrogen, with a
low freezing point. By changing the temperature of the liquid, scientists
captured some of the gases with lower freezing points at the bottom of the cold
trap.
“There’s maybe 25 labs in the world
that manipulate gas in this way,” Simon said. Besides being used to study the
origin of planetary materials, this approach can be applied to gases from hot
springs and those emitted from the walls of active volcanoes, he added.
Of course, those sources provide much more gas than Perseverance has in its sample tubes. But if a single tube doesn’t carry enough gas for a particular experiment, Mars scientists could combine gases from multiple tubes to get a larger aggregate sample — one more way the headspace offers a bonus opportunity for science.
Source: Why Scientists Are Intrigued by Air in NASA’s Mars Sample Tubes - NASA
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