Earth sits right in the middle of
our sun’s habitable zone, the region where the heat of the star allows liquid
water to exist on the surface of a planet. Mars orbits at the outer edge of
this zone. Astronomers generally agree that Mars once sported rivers, lakes
and, oceans. Mars reached such life-supporting conditions even before Earth. Its
smaller size allowed it to cool more quickly from the heat of formation.
But Mars’ smaller size also allowed
its core to cool and solidify long ago, killing its magnetic field. Without
that magnetic field, solar radiation slowly knocked the atmosphere of Mars into
space. Lacking an atmosphere, Mars couldn’t trap the sun’s heat, so it turned
cold. Nighttime temperatures routinely drop to near 100 degrees below zero.
But, prior to the loss of its atmosphere,
Mars sported conditions that could have supported life. That is no longer true
of the surface of Mars. The thin atmosphere can no longer warm the surface of
Mars nor protect it from cosmic radiation. Many scientists, including astrophysicist
and research scientist Dimitra Atri, from the Center for Space Science at NYU
Abu Dhabi, believe that conditions not far below the surface could potentially
support life, albeit only at the bacterial level.
In 2022, the European Space Agency
and Roscosmos, the Russian space organization, will launch the ExoMars craft,
which includes the Rosiland Franklin rover. Atri says that rover will have the
ability to detect any such subsurface life on the Red Planet. "It is
exciting to contemplate that life could survive in such a harsh environment, as
few as two meters (six feet) below the surface of Mars," said Atri.
"When the Rosalind Franklin rover onboard the ExoMars mission, equipped
with a subsurface drill, is launched in 2022, it will be well-suited to detect
extant microbial life."
If we find life on Mars, it will indicate that life forms easily, given that life developed on both planets in our solar system capable of supporting it. That tells astronomers that perhaps many of the tens of billions of Earth-like planets in our Milky Way galaxy likely did, too.
Interesting therory. Maybe Star Trek wasn't so far off after all.
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