
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission.
The first astronauts to set foot on Mars should hunt for signs of past or present Red Planet life.
That's the overarching conclusion of an in-depth report about human Mars exploration from the U.S. National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine that came out today (Dec. 9).
"The detection of life on Mars is a persistent top priority for explorers of many disciplines, and it is the top science objective in this report," states the 240-page document, which is called "A Science Strategy for the Human Exploration of Mars."
The National Academies prepared the report for NASA, which wants to send astronauts to the Red Planet as soon as the mid-2030s. The document offers recommendations for how the agency can maximize the science gains of its planned crewed Mars campaign.
Those recommendations are extensive and detailed. For example, the report lays out 11 science objectives that such a campaign should pursue, with the search for signs of life (as well as indications of "indigenous prebiotic chemistry" and a broad assessment of habitability) at the top of the list.
The other 10 objectives, listed in order of descending priority, are:
Characterize Mars' water and carbon dioxide cycles
Map Martian geology in detail
Determine how the Martian environment affects the physical and psychological health of astronaut explorers
Figure out what starts and drives Martian dust storms
Determine the availability and accessibility of Martian resources that could "support permanent habitation"
Discover if exposure to the Martian environment affects DNA and reproduction
Learn about the population dynamics of microbes on Mars, and if microbial species from Earth could adversely affect astronauts' health and performance on the Red Planet
Determine how Martian dust affects astronauts and their hardware
Learn how the Martian environment affects a transplanted ecosystem of Earth microbes, plants and animals
Gain a better understanding of the Martian radiation environment and how it may affect crewmembers and their missions
"A Science Strategy for the Human Exploration of Mars" also proposes four possible three-mission campaigns, the top-ranked of which could achieve all 11 of the above objectives.
That campaign would send all three missions to "a low- to mid-latitude site with near-surface glacier ice and diverse geology," the report states. "The search for prebiotic chemistry and life would focus on near-surface niche environments, such as geologically recent transiently habitable zones, and/or ice, including layered ice."
Another possible campaign would target the deep subsurface, establishing a powerful drilling operation that could get 1.2 to 3 miles (2 to 5 kilometers) beneath the red dirt, where pockets of liquid water are thought to exist.
Both of those proposed campaigns would feature an initial 30-sol crewed surface mission, an uncrewed cargo delivery flight and then a 300-sol astronaut mission on the surface. (One sol, or Martian day, is slightly longer than an Earth day — about 24 hours and 40 minutes.) So would a third proposed campaign, though a fourth would launch three crewed 30-sol missions to three different sites on the Red Planet.
There is some commonality across all the proposed campaigns. For example, according to the report, no matter how NASA's crewed Mars plans take shape, the agency should aim to build a science lab on the Red Planet's surface, haul Mars samples home from every astronaut mission and set up a recurring "Mars Human-Agent Teaming Summit" to maximize and coordinate the efforts of robotic missions, astronauts and artificial intelligence.
In addition, the report notes, a concerted search for Mars life will be constrained by current "planetary protection" guidelines, which aim to minimize the chances that our exploration efforts contaminate other worlds with Earth microbes or bring alien life to our shores.
Therefore, the document states, "NASA should continue to collaborate on the evolution of planetary protection guidelines, with the goal of enabling human explorers to perform research in regions that could possibly support, or even harbor, life."
LATEST POSTS
- 1
When fake data is a good thing – how synthetic data trains AI to solve real problems - 2
6 Robot Vacuum Cleaners for Easy Home Cleaning - 3
California is completely free of drought for the first time in 25 years - 4
Weather forecast, Turkana style: A goat's intestines tell it all - 5
Noctourism: the new safari travel trend that's changing the wildlife we can photograph in Africa
Italian police hold suspected boss of Naples Mafia's Mazzarella Clan
A throat bone settles it - Nanotyrannus was not a juvenile T. rex
Japanese H3 rocket fails during launch of navigation satellite (video)
4 Dazzling And Well known Island Objections In US
Holiday weather forecast: Where travelers can expect a wintry mix, flooding and record warmth across the U.S.
'War is not over': Detailed diagrams of prisons found in cells of Oct. 7 terrorists
Unpaid caregiving work can feel small and personal, but that doesn’t take away its ethical value
Vote in favor of the subject that you see as generally captivating and intelligent!
Toyota Motor Europe to roll out smart EV charging through new partnerships












