Xorte logo

News Markets Groups

USA | Europe | Asia | World| Stocks | Commodities



Add a new RSS channel

 
 


Keywords

2024-07-26 17:00:06| Engadget

NASA's Perseverance rover has been collecting samples from Mars since 2021, but one of its most recently collected rocks could help it achieve its goal of finding evidence of ancient life on the planet. Nicknamed Cheyava Falls after the tallest waterfall in the Grand Canyon, the 3.2 feet by 2 feet sample contains "chemical signatures and structures" that could've been formed by ancient microbial life from billions of years ago.  Perseverance collected the rock on July 21 from what was once a Martian river valley carved by flowing water long ago. The sample, which you can see in close up below and from afar at the center of the image above, exhibits large white calcium sulfate veins running along its length. They indicate that water did run through the rock at one point.  More importantly, it contains millimeter-size marks that look like "leopard spots" all over its central reddish band. On our planet, those spots could form on sedimentary terrestrial rocks when there are chemical reactions that turn hematite, one of the minerals responsible for Mars' reddish color, to white. Those reactions can release iron and phosphate, which could've served as an energy source for microbes.  The rover's Planetary Instrument for X-ray Lithochemistry (PIXL) tool already determined that the black rings around the spots contain iron and phosphate. However, that doesn't automatically mean that the rock truly did serve as a host for ancient microbes.  NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS The spots could've been formed by non-biological processes, and that's something scientists will have to figure out. "We cannot say right now that we have discovered life on Mars, Katie Stack Morgan, the deputy project scientist, said. "But what we are saying is that we have a potential biosignature, which is a set of features that could have a biological origin but do need further study and more data."  NASA still has to bring back the samples Perseverance had collected to our planet, including Cheyava Falls. As The New York Times notes, the Mars Sample Return mission is years behind schedule and would not be able to bring back rocks from the red planet until 2040 instead of in the early 2030's like originally planned. NASA recently asked aerospace companies for alternative solutions on how to get the samples to Earth much sooner and will finance their studies due later this year. Scientists will also have to conduct extensive testing to rule out contamination and non-biological processes, as well as other possible explanations for how the leopard spots had formed, before they can proclaim that they're indeed evidence of ancient Martian life.  This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/nasas-perseverance-rover-found-a-rock-on-mars-that-could-indicate-ancient-life-150006064.html?src=rss


Category: Marketing and Advertising

 

Latest from this category

23.10Australian designers develop a compostable alternative to iconic soy sauce fish
22.10How Journalists Feel About the Use of AI by PR Professionals
22.10Beyond Last-Click: Attribution Models That Actually Reflect Modern Customer Journeys
22.10Fitness meets fresh air as Strava and Airbnb tap into the rural run-cation trend
21.10Is AI Effective for Editing Blog Content?
21.10What Drives Customer Loyalty? [Infographic]
21.10Why CX Can't Be a Project: Build Seamless Experiences Into the DNA of Your Business
21.10Cardi B joins baby formula brand to rally parents for paid leave and maternal rights
Marketing and Advertising »

All news

23.10What the UK inflation figures actually mean for you
23.10What the UK inflation figures actually mean for you
23.10Paramount Skydance is in the lead for the Warner Bros Discovery deal. Heres why
23.10European firms unite in bid to rival SpaceX
23.10Tesla stock sinks today after earnings miss. Elon Musk seems more focused on building a robot army
23.10U.S. national debt skyrockets past $38 trillion, the Treasury Department reports
23.10Thank god, Nike is feeling like Nike again
23.10The new Leica M EV1 trades its mechanical soul for a digital viewfinder
More »
Privacy policy . Copyright . Contact form .