NASA's Viking Project May Have Found Life On Mars 50 Years Ago, Then Accidentally Killed It

0
978

NASA May Have Found Life On Mars 50 Years Ago, Then Accidentally Killed It

As the search for life on Mars continues – with the Mars Sample Return program set to return samples of the planet in the early 2030s – one scientist has suggested that we may have already found life on the Red Planet, almost 50 years ago. And then, in what would not be an all-time great first impression, we destroyed it.

Long before the Curiosity rover set robotic wheels on Mars, two landers touched down. NASA's Viking Project, as well as capturing the first-ever images from the Martian surface, saw the landers conduct biological tests on the Martian soil, specifically to look for signs of life. 

The results were fairly unexpected and confusing to scientists. Most of the experiments were not promising. In one part of the experiment, traces of chlorinated organics were found, though these were believed at the time to be contaminants brought from Earth.

One part of the experiment saw water containing nutrients and radioactive carbon added to Martian soil. If life were present, the idea was that the microorganisms would consume the nutrients and emit the radioactive carbon as a gas

While the first experiment did find this radioactive gas (control experiment found none) later results were mixed. If microbes were present in the soil, giving them more of the radioactive nutrients and incubating them for longer should produce more radioactive gas. But a second and third injection of the mix did not lead to the production of more gas. The initial positive result was put down to perchlorate, a compound used in fireworks and rocket fuel, which could have metabolized the nutrients.

However, there are other ideas. Dirk Schulze-Makuch, professor for planetary habitability and astrobiology at the Technical University Berlin, suggests that adding water to the experiment was a mistake and may have killed off microbes we were attempting to find. 

In a piece published in June for BigThink, he cites examples of life on Earth found in the most extreme environments on Earth, such as the Atacama Desert, living entirely within salt rocks and drawing humidity from the air. 

Pouring water on these microbes would kill them, perhaps explaining why the further injections of nutrients didn't result in the detection of radioactive gas. When you've just been drowned by an alien robot, you don't tend to be all that hungry.

"Imagine something similar happened to you [as a human]. For example, if there was an alien in a spaceship coming down to Earth and found you somewhere in the desert. Then they said 'OK, look, that's a human and it needs water,' and puts you directly in the middle of the ocean. You wouldn't like that, right? Even though that is what we are. We are water-filled bags, but too much water is a bad thing, and I think that's what happened with the Viking life-detection experiments," Schulze-Makuch told Space.com in 2024.

Schultz-Makuch had previously suggested that Martian life could have hydrogen peroxide in their cells, which might be another factor in the results of the Viking experiments. 

"This adaptation would have the particular advantages in the Martian environment of providing a low freezing point, a source of oxygen and hygroscopicity," Schultz-Makuch and co-author Joop M. Houtkooper wrote in a 2007 study.

"If we assume that indigenous Martian life might have adapted to its environment by incorporating hydrogen peroxide into its cells, this could explain the Viking results," Schulze-Makuch wrote for BigThink, adding that the gas chromatograph mass-spectrometer heated up samples before analyzing them. 

"If the Martian cells contained hydrogen peroxide, that would have killed them. Moreover, it would have caused the hydrogen peroxide to react with any organic molecules in the vicinity to form large amounts of carbon dioxide — which is exactly what the instrument detected."

Though it's a huge if, if this were correct, it would mean that we found life on Mars nearly 50 years ago, then killed it, like the bad aliens in movies.

An earlier version of this story was published in August 2023.

Suche
Kategorien
Mehr lesen
Technology
Sonys WH-1000XM4 noise-cancelling headphones are under $200
Best headphones deal: Sony WH-1000XM4s for under $200...
Von Test Blogger7 2025-08-08 16:00:18 0 827
Spiele
Ten Call of Duty games mysteriously taken offline for "maintenance" all at once
Ten Call of Duty games mysteriously taken offline for "maintenance" all at once As an Amazon...
Von Test Blogger6 2025-07-02 11:00:14 0 1KB
Home & Garden
11 Lightweight and Cooling Quilts and Comforters That Are Up to 52% Off Today
11 Lightweight and Cooling Quilts and Comforters That Are Up to 52% Off Today If you click on...
Von Test Blogger9 2025-10-06 11:00:33 0 280
Home & Garden
Dan Pelosi's Joyful Approach to Entertaining Is Guaranteed to Put You in a Party Mood
Dan Pelosi's Joyful Approach to Entertaining Is Guaranteed to Put You in a Party Mood On the...
Von Test Blogger9 2025-09-03 11:00:24 0 585
Technology
Apple iPhone 17 Pro and Pro Max announced: New design, huge battery, powerful cameras
Apple iPhone 17 Pro and Pro Max: New design, huge battery, powerful cameras...
Von Test Blogger7 2025-09-09 21:00:12 0 540