Tuesday, June 18, 2013
FAIRFIELD-SUISUN, CALIFORNIA
99 CENTS

Mars rover shows planet could have supported life

Mars Curiosity

This image released by NASA shows the Curiosity rover holding a scoop of powdered rock on Mars. The rover recently drilled into a Martian rock for the first time and transferred a pinch of powder to its instruments to analyze the chemical makeup. (AP Photo/NASA)

LOS ANGELES — Drilling into a rock near its landing site, the Curiosity rover has answered a key question about Mars: The red planet long ago harbored some of the ingredients needed for primitive life to thrive.

Topping the list is evidence of water and basic elements that teeny organisms could feed on, scientists said Tuesday.

“We have found a habitable environment that is so benign and supportive of life that probably if this water was around and you had been on the planet, you would have been able to drink it,” said chief scientist John Grotzinger of the California Institute of Technology.

The discovery comes seven months after Curiosity touched down in an ancient crater. Last month, it flexed its robotic arm to drill into a fine-grained, veiny rock and then tested the powder in its onboard labs.

Curiosity is the first spacecraft sent to Mars that could collect a sample from deep inside a rock, and scientist said they hit pay dirt with that first rock.

Mars today is a frigid desert, constantly bombarded by radiation. Previous missions have found that the planet was more tropical billions of years ago. And now scientists have their first evidence of a habitable spot outside of Earth.

This was an environment where microbes “could have lived in and maybe even prospered in,” Grotzinger said.

The car-size rover made a dramatic “seven-minutes-of-terror” landing last August near the planet’s equator. As high-tech as Curiosity is, it lacks the tools to detect actual microbes, living or extinct. It can only use its chemistry lab to examine Martian rocks to determine the kind of environment they might have lived in.

The analysis revealed the rock that Curiosity bore into contained a chemical soup of sulfur, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, phosphorus and simple carbon — essential chemical ingredients for life. Also present were clay and sulfate minerals, signs that the rock formed in a watery environment.

NASA rovers Opportunity and Spirit — before it fell silent — also uncovered evidence of a wet Martian past elsewhere on the planet, but scientists think the water would have been too acidic for microbes.

The ancient water at Curiosity’s pit stop appears to be neutral and not too salty. It previously found a hint of the site’s watery past — an old streambed that the six-wheel rover crossed to get to the flat bedrock.

Curiosity has yet to turn up evidence of complex carbon compounds, fundamental to all living things. Scientists said a priority is to search for a place where organics might be preserved.

The drilled rock isn’t far from Curiosity’s landing spot in Gale Crater; the rover is ultimately headed to a mountain in the crater’s middle. Images from space spied signs of clay layers at the base of the mountain — a good spot to hunt for the elusive organics.

It has been slow going as engineers learn to handle the rover, which is far more tech-savvy than anything that has landed before on Earth’s planetary neighbor.

Over the years, Mars spacecraft in orbit and on the surface have beamed back a wealth of information about the planet’s geology. Scientists have also been able to study rocks from Mars that have occasionally landed on Earth.

The latest news comes during a lull in the two-year mission. Curiosity has been prevented from doing science experiments as engineers troubleshoot a computer problem.

Scientists still plan to drive toward the mountain but not until Curiosity drills into another rock at its current location. Since flight controllers on Earth will be out of touch with Mars spacecraft for most of next month due to a planetary alignment, the second drilling won’t get under way until May.

___

Online:

NASA: http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/msl/index.html

The Associated Press

The Associated Press

LEAVE A COMMENT

Discussion | No comments

The Daily Republic does not necessarily condone the comments here, nor does it review every post. Read our full policy

.

Solano News

Trauma center applicants question labor, delivery requirement

By Barry Eberling | From Page: A1 | Gallery

 
Rio Vista police, fire seek more staff with Measure O money

By Heather Ah San | From Page: A1 | Gallery

New officer hits streets in Rio Vista

By Susan Winlow | From Page: A1 | Gallery

 
Fire threatens Fairfield home, fence

By Amy Maginnis-Honey | From Page: A3 | Gallery

Fairfield plans Japan sister city event

By John Glidden | From Page: A3, 2 Comments

 
Citizenship class comes to Fairfield library

By John Glidden | From Page: A3

 
First day of summer hike set at Rockville Trails

By John Glidden | From Page: A3

Food Bank fundraiser on track on Mare Island

By John Glidden | From Page: A3

 
Local governments set meeting schedules

By John Glidden | From Page: A3

Vacaville police investigate drive-by shooting

By Ian Thompson | From Page: A3 | Gallery

 
Vallejo police seek suspected killer

By Glen Faison | From Page: A3 | Gallery

 
Solano wins award for anti-poverty campaign

By Barry Eberling | From Page: A4

 
Big-rig crash snarls traffic on Highway 12

By Amy Maginnis-Honey | From Page: A4, 4 Comments

Minor injuries in 2-car crash

By Amy Maginnis-Honey | From Page: A4, 1 Comment

 
Library Foundation names new executive director

By Amy Maginnis-Honey | From Page: A4

Crash, search snarl highway, shut down Lyon Road

By Ian Thompson | From Page: A4

 
Pitt tries to stop zombies; monsters in college debut on big screen

By Amy Maginnis-Honey | From Page: A5 | Gallery

 
Fairfield police log Sunday, June 16, 2013

By John Glidden | From Page: A8

1 dead, 2 hurt in Vallejo shooting

By Amy Maginnis-Honey | From Page: A8, 2 Comments

 
.

US / World

Bill would let Calif cities decide on open records

By The Associated Press | From Page: A1, 1 Comment

 
Military plans would put women in most combat jobs

By The Associated Press | From Page: A1, 1 Comment | Gallery

Military women moving into jobs closer to combat

By The Associated Press | From Page: A1

 
Lawsuits filed against Calif.’s Delta Plan

By The Associated Press | From Page: A4

Boy, 16, suspected of killing elderly Calif couple

By The Associated Press | From Page: A4

 
North Korea changes tack and tells US: Let’s talk

By The Associated Press | From Page: A6

Summary of Supreme Court actions Monday

By The Associated Press | From Page: A6

 
Court: Ariz. citizenship proof law illegal

By The Associated Press | From Page: A6

G8 exposes rift among leaders on Syria

By The Associated Press | From Page: A6, 1 Comment

 
NASA picks 8 new astronauts, 4 of them women

By The Associated Press | From Page: A6

.

Opinion

Sex in the military a real concern

By Thomas Sowell | From Page: A7, 3 Comments

 
California’s electric power system strains

By Dan Walters | From Page: A7

Kudos on steps to reclaim downtown

By Letter to the Editor | From Page: A7

 
Iran elects a moderate leader in surprise vote

By Scripps Howard News Service | From Page: A7

 
.

Living

Today in History for June 18, 2013

By The Associated Press | From Page: A2

 
Community calendar Tuesday, June 18, 2013

By John Glidden | From Page: A2

 
Horoscopes for June 18, 2013

By Holiday Mathis | From Page: B5

 
.

Entertainment

TVGrid

By Daily Republic Syndicated Content | From Page: A5

 
.

Sports

Bruins beat Blackhawks 2-0, lead Cup finals 2-1

By The Associated Press | From Page: B1

 
A’s lose 8-7 in opener of 4-game series at Texas

By The Associated Press | From Page: B1

Bishop, Packers part ways

By Mike Corpos | From Page: B1 | Gallery

 
Camp reactions illustrate 49ers, Raiders status

By Brad Stanhope | From Page: B1

Pete D’Alessandro begins ‘dream job’ as Kings GM

By The Associated Press | From Page: B1

 
Little League gets 1st woman as board chair

By The Associated Press | From Page: B2

Back home, Heat try to stop a 5th Spurs NBA title

By The Associated Press | From Page: B3

 
.

Business

EU, US agree to start free trade talks at G-8

By The Associated Press | From Page: A6

 
Lowe’s offers to buy Orchard Supply for $205M

By The Associated Press | From Page: B6

.

Obituaries

.

Comics

Garfield

By Daily Republic Syndicated Content | From Page: B4

 
Zits

By Daily Republic Syndicated Content | From Page: B4

Wizard of Id

By Daily Republic Syndicated Content | From Page: B4

 
Sally Forth

By Daily Republic Syndicated Content | From Page: B4

Frank and Ernest

By Daily Republic Syndicated Content | From Page: B4

 
Rose is Rose

By Daily Republic Syndicated Content | From Page: B4

B.C.

By Daily Republic Syndicated Content | From Page: B4

 
Blondie

By Daily Republic Syndicated Content | From Page: B4

Beetle Bailey

By Daily Republic Syndicated Content | From Page: B4

 
Pickles

By Daily Republic Syndicated Content | From Page: B4

Get Fuzzy

By Daily Republic Syndicated Content | From Page: B4

 
Baldo

By Daily Republic Syndicated Content | From Page: B4

For Better or Worse

By Daily Republic Syndicated Content | From Page: B4

 
Peanuts

By Daily Republic Syndicated Content | From Page: B4

Fort Knox

By Daily Republic Syndicated Content | From Page: B4

 
Dilbert

By Daily Republic Syndicated Content | From Page: B4

Word Sleuth

By Daily Republic Syndicated Content | From Page: B5

 
Crossword

By Daily Republic Syndicated Content | From Page: B5

Cryptoquote

By Daily Republic Syndicated Content | From Page: B5

 
Sudoku

By Daily Republic Syndicated Content | From Page: B5

Bridge

By Daily Republic Syndicated Content | From Page: B5