Mars quite similar to planet Earth
July 3rd, 2009 - 12:35 pm ICT by ANIWashington, July 3 (ANI): A new research has determined that many characteristics of Mars are quite similar to planet Earth, including its landscape, history of water, soil and even its weather.
The research, by Mark Lemmon, a professor of atmospheric sciences, Texas A and M University, US, points out that last year’s Phoenix Mars Lander mission keeps revealing secrets about the planet, answering some questions but raising other big ones.
“Phoenix landed in a place that has access to Martian ice, which is exciting by itself,” Lemmon said of the Mars probe, which landed May 25, 2008.
The mission goals were to investigate the suitability of Mars for past or present life, but Phoenix was incapable of detecting life itself.
“Phoenix was designed to verify and investigate subsurface ice, and it found it almost instantly,” explained Lemmon. “The entire area where it landed has water ice just a few inches under the soil. The area is cold now, but it has been warmer in the past,” he added.
“No water in a liquid state has been found yet, but there is new evidence that Mars had liquid water billions of years ago,” said Lemmon.
Using its robotic arm, the Mars Lander was able to scoop up dirt, which was mixed with ice, and analyze it.
“Where it landed is a barren place that resembles the dry valleys of Antarctica. The area has mounds and troughs, and just like in Antarctic valleys, there is no liquid water but plenty of ice,” said Lemmon.
“Some of these patches are fairly pure. Others have the ice mixed with soil containing energy sources and nutrients that could be used if there were life,” he added.
According to Lemmon, the soil has perchlorate, a form of chlorine that is considered hazardous, but certain types of bacteria are able to live on it here.
“The interesting thing is, the soil has a potential energy source and oxygen source for life on Mars,” he said.
Traces of calcite were also found, which shows a presence of liquid water at some time in the past, Lemmon notes.
Phoenix also found weather patterns similar to those on Earth, including cold fronts that bring in gusty winds and sub-freezing temperatures.
Another bonus: Phoenix saw small Martian snowflakes, which leads the team to believe that snowfall on Mars was once a common occurrence.
“To sum it up, we found a place on Mars that is similar to cold, dry environments on Earth, and those environments are capable of supporting life,” Lemmon explained. (ANI)
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- Mars has natural antifreeze that may keep it running with water - Feb 19, 2009
- Evidence of salt water found on Mars, scientists say - Mar 18, 2009
- NASA spacecraft detects significant changes in Mars' atmosphere - Apr 22, 2011
- NASA planning one-way mission to colonise Mars - Oct 28, 2010
- Antarctic-like salty, water sucking soil could exist on Mars too - Feb 28, 2012
- Life ruled out on Mars after 600 mn year drought - Feb 05, 2012
- 'Organics' Found On Mars, Says New NASA Study - Jan 08, 2011
Tags: barren place, dry valleys, lander mission, landscape history, life on mars, liquid state, liquid water, mark lemmon, mars probe, mission goals, oxygen source, perchlorate, phoenix mars lander, planet earth, robotic arm, texas a and m university, these patches, types of bacteria, water ice, water soil