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There is life on Mars - but 'we sent it'

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Wonk Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Mar-24-04 08:36 PM
Original message
There is life on Mars - but 'we sent it'
There is life on Mars, a researcher has announced at a conference - unfortunately it is just spaceship-borne contamination.

"I believe there is life on Mars, and it's unequivocally there, because we sent it," Andrew Schuerger of the University of Florida told the Lunar and Planetary Science Conference in Houston, Texas, recently. He has been granted funding from NASA's planetary protection office to help develop better sterilisation techniques for future missions.

Schuerger says that of all the space probes sent to Mars, only the two Viking craft in 1976 were adequately heat sterilised. The procedures used for all missions since then, including NASA's twin rovers and Europe's Beagle 2, would have left some microbes aboard.

After testing whether terrestrial organisms can survive simulated Martian conditions and the procedures used to sterilise spacecraft, he reckons there is a good chance some made it to Mars and might still be living there.

more...
http://www.newscientist.com/news/news.jsp?id=ns99994812
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jpak Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Mar-25-04 12:48 PM
Response to Original message
1. And if we ever send humans there...
Edited on Thu Mar-25-04 12:48 PM by jpak
E. coli will rule the planet!

<cue spooky theremin music>
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Bdog Donating Member (280 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Mar-25-04 07:18 PM
Response to Original message
2. There is a good chance that life has been
...splattered throughout our solar system.

It is even possible that life originated on some other planet and was sent here by steroid impacts.
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NickB79 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Mar-25-04 07:37 PM
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3. Its all in their definition of what constitutes "life"
For example, viable staph bacterial spores from Earth were recovered and cultured from a lunar lander in the 1960's after it had sat on the Moon for several years. Would it be proper to then say there was life on the Moon? The spores have the potential for life, but unless the conditions are sufficient for them to begin to metabolize and divide, they will sit in a state of stasis for decades, centuries, millenia, etc. Current Martian conditions (at least on the planet's surface) are very inhospitable to life, just as the Moon's surface is. It is possible there are Terran spores contaminating the rovers, but there is much less probability they are actively growing on Mars.
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hedgetrimmer Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Mar-26-04 12:11 AM
Response to Reply #3
4. Then it is possible that some flinging space goo microbe could
contaminate a ship and infect Earth when it reached Earth's hospitable environment.

Not fear mongering, just checking out the possibilities.
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Bdog Donating Member (280 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Mar-28-04 08:53 AM
Response to Original message
5. A Clue to the Origin of Life
Edited on Sun Mar-28-04 08:58 AM by Bdog
http://www.xs4all.nl/~carlkop/lefthand.html
Astronomers using the Anglo-Australian Telescope have found a possible explanation for why life on earth almost exclusively uses left-handed amino acids and right-handed sugars as the building blocks of proteins and nucleic acids -- a mystery that has puzzled scientists for 150 years.
They believe the asymmetry was imprinted in organic molecules in interstellar space before the formation of the Solar System. These molecules then found their way onto the Earth via the impacts of comets and meteorites to provide the starting material for the origin of life. This was revealed today in a paper in the international journal 'Science' by Dr Jeremy Bailey, from the Anglo-Australian Observatory, and his colleagues.

In 1848, Louis Pasteur discovered that some molecules can exist in two mirror image forms, right-handed or left handed. In living organisms, molecules tend to be all one form, not a mixture of both. Amino acids for example, the building blocks of protein, are always left-handed, where as sugars (including deoxyribose, an important component of DNA) are always right-handed. When these molecules are synthesised in a laboratory, equal numbers of right and left are formed. The reason for the imbalance puzzled scientists for decades.

In 1930, scientists discovered a way of destroying molecules of one- handedness, providing a partial solution to the problem. They used circularly polarised light.* But this was only part of the story. When life began on earth, there was no source of circularly polarised light.

Last year, scientists at Arizona State University discovered an excess of left-handed amino acids in the Murchison meteorite. (The Murchison metorite fell in 1969 near Murchison in Victoria, Australia and has been found to contain an extraordinary variety of organic molecules.) This remarkable discovery shows that the asymmetry already existed before life began on Earth, and may well have been present in the material from which the Solar System formed.

Dr Bailey and his colleagues used the Anglo-Australian Telescope at Siding Spring Mountain near Coonabarabran to show how the asymmetry might have been generated.

"We detected circularly polarized light (below right) in a region of the Great Nebula in Orion called Orion Molecular Cloud 1 (OMC-1, pictured left). We know that new stars are being formed here, and we also know that organic molecules are present," Dr Bailey said.

"This region may well be similar to the region in which our own solar system formed," he added.

The circularly polarized light in such a region could imprint a preferred handedness on any organic molecules in the region, including those in a cloud beginning to collapse to form a star and its planets.

"We know that ultraviolet circularly polarised light is needed to select handedness in molecules such as amino acids, but unfortunately thick dust clouds prohibited observations at these wavelengths," Dr Bailey said. "So we made the observations at infrared wavelengths. Our calculations however, show that circular polarisation is present at all wavelengths, from infrared to ultraviolet," he added.

Many scientists believe that a preferred handedness in molecules must have been present in order for the origin of life to be possible. These results therefore suggest that the suitability of our planet for life may be as much a consequence of the environment in which our solar system formed as of the local conditions on the early Earth.

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psychopomp Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-29-04 09:14 AM
Response to Original message
6. I don't remember who said it
but I was mocked when I suggested that the current mission could possibly contaminate Mars with terrestrial microbes.

I do not expect it to happen, but it is a possibility. I feel a little redeemed, I suppose.
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