Mars 2020: Searching for signs of past life on the red planet

The surface of Mars, captured by the Spirit rover
Mars appears to be a dry, dusty place, but scientists believe that Mars once had an Earth-like climate well suited to the existence of life. (Credits: NASA/JPL/Cornell University)

Launch: 
Arrival: 
Mission status: 
Active

Rovers sent to Mars – like Spirit, Opportunity, and Curiosity â€“ are designed to be the eyes and hands of scientists. Using their miniaturized tools and instruments, they analyze hundreds of rock and soil samples right on the spot and send data back to Earth.

NASA’s Mars  rover, Perseverance, will use a drill to collect samples in precise locations selected by terrestrial experts. For the first time on the red planet, these small quantities of rock will be sealed and stored for possible return to Earth.

Perseverance will be operating in Jezero Crater, a location just north of Mars’s equator, which is home to several different types of rock that will help scientists meet their mission objectives. As part of future missions, the samples collected by Perseverance could later be retrieved and brought to Earth for analysis with the full range of instruments available to scientists. The Mars 2020 mission will address fundamental questions about the potential for life on Mars.

Mars Sample Return campaign would involve three phases:

  1. Sample selection and collection: the rover would select the samples, collect them and leave them at a specific location.
  2. Sample retrieval and transfer: another rover would go to the selected location to pick up the samples and bring them back to a rocket, or ascent vehicle.
  3. Sample return: the rocket would send the samples into orbit around Mars to be captured by another spacecraft for return to Earth.
Artist's concept of NASA's Mars 2020 rover
An artist’s concept of the Mars 2020 rover on the rugged surface of the red planet. Perseverance will search for evidence of a vastly different environment, including traces of ancient waterways. (Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech)

Objectives

The objectives of the Mars 2020 mission are to:

  • Determine whether habitable conditions ever existed on Mars
  • Look for signs of past microbial life
  • Learn more about Mars’s geology and current climate
  • Prepare for human exploration

Scientists also learn about Mars through Martian meteorites, pieces of the red planet that have travelled here after being knocked off in cosmic collisions.

But surviving the journey through Earth’s atmosphere means that these fragments are made of strong material which does not fully represent all types of rock on Mars. In fact, scientists believe evidence of past life could be locked inside rocks on Mars that are different in makeup from the meteorites that have landed here on Earth.

By using the Mars 2020 rover to collect and store unchanged samples from specific areas on Mars’s surface for possible return to Earth, scientists are paving the way for a new understanding of our planetary neighbour.

Perseverance can see delta remnants at Mars's Jezero Crater
In this view taken by its Mastcam-Z instrument, the Perseverance rover can see a remnant of a fan-shaped deposit of sediments known as a delta. Scientists believe this delta – the raised area of dark brown rock – is what remains of the confluence between an ancient river and a lake at Mars’s Jezero Crater. (Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/ASU/MSSS)

Canada’s role in the mission

Chris Herd
Dr. Chris Herd, professor of Earth and atmospheric sciences at the University of Alberta. (Credit: Faculty of Science, University of Alberta)
Mariek Schmidt
Dr. Mariek Schmidt, associate professor of Earth sciences at Brock University. (Credit: Brian Scott)

The Canadian Space Agency is funding three scientists’ participation in the Mars 2020 mission:

  • Dr. Chris Herd, professor of Earth and atmospheric sciences at the University of Alberta, is working as a Participating Sample Scientist. Dr. Herd was selected by NASA as one of 10 experts designated to enhance the scientific value of the samples to be collected by the mission. He was also chosen to serve as one of two Returned Sample Scientist representatives on the mission’s Project Science Group. In this role, he is part of the team responsible for making critical operational and scientific decisions for the mission. Dr. Herd is contributing his expertise in the analysis of igneous rocks and Martian meteorites to select samples that are most likely to provide key information about Mars’s geological history.
  • Dr. Mariek Schmidt, associate professor of Earth sciences at Brock University, is taking part in the mission as a Participating Scientist. Dr. Schmidt will use data collected by the rover’s PIXL instrument, which is designed to measure, at a very tiny scale, the elemental makeup of Martian rocks and soil. Her work focuses on the dust on the surface of rocks, and how the presence of dust influences the chemical measurements taken by PIXL and similar instruments. Dr. Schmidt will also use PIXL data to interpret the geological history of rocks encountered by the Perseverance rover.
  • Dr. Richard Léveillé, adjunct professor, Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences at McGill University, is a Co-Investigator on the SuperCam instrument, an imager located on the “head” of the rover’s mast. The instrument examines rocks and soils for minerals and organic material, performing analyses on tiny samples from up to seven metres away. Dr. Léveillé will use data gathered by SuperCam to map levels of nitrogen trapped in Martian rock – a key clue for past habitability of Mars.

Igneous rocks are one of three main types of rocks (along with sedimentary and metamorphic). They form when magma (molten rock) cools and crystallizes. They can have many different compositions, depending on what kind of magma they come from, and can vary in appearance based on their cooling conditions.

Richard Léveillé
Dr. Richard Léveillé, adjunct professor, Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences at McGill University. (Credit: R. Léveillé)

(From:https://www.asc-csa.gc.ca/eng/astronomy/mars/missions/mars-2020.asp)

March 16, 2022 · admin · No Comments
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