  
Mars rover gives negative result on Mars methane 
     BY STEPHEN CLARK SPACEFLIGHT NOW Posted: September 22, 2013 
       
Contrary to earlier measurements from Earth and orbiting sensors, scientists analyzing data from the Curiosity rover have concluded the Martian atmosphere contains no methane, dashing hopes the red planet may still harbor microbial life.
 
  
    The rover's Mars Hand Lens Imager took dozens of exposures to be compiled into this mosaic self-portrait while Curiosity was stationed at a work site named "John Klein" earlier this year. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS   
The findings, reported Thursday in the journal Science Express, are based on analyses of six samples collected by Curiosity's tunable laser spectrometer inside the nuclear-powered rover's Sample Analysis at Mars, or SAM, instrument, the largest of 10 science instruments carried aboard Curiosity.
 The SAM payload ingested Martian air six times from October 2012 through June, passing gas through a chamber illuminated by infrared lasers to check the atmosphere's chemical make-up for methane - a molecule formed by binding one carbon atom to four hydrogen atoms.
 NASA says the lack of methane detected by Curiosity, coupled with the spectrometer's sensitivity, bracket the lower limit for the Martian atmosphere's methane concentration at no more than 1.3 parts per billion.
 Ground telescopes and Europe's Mars Express orbiter collected data indicating methane's presence in the Martian atmosphere, an indication of current microbial life or undiscovered geologic activity - the two most likely sources of methane.
 "It would have been exciting to find methane, but we have high confidence in our measurements, and the progress in expanding knowledge is what's really important," said the report's lead author, Chris Webster of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. "We measured repeatedly from Martian spring to late summer, but with no detection of methane." 
 
  
    This picture shows a lab demonstration of the measurement chamber inside the Tunable Laser Spectrometer, an instrument that is part of the Sample Analysis at Mars investigation on NASA's Curiosity rover. This demonstration uses visible lasers - rather than the infrared ones on the actual spectrometer - to show how the lasers bounce between the mirrors in the measurement chamber. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech   
After initial methane detections from ground-based data in 2003, follow-up observations showed the methane almost completely vanished by 2006, indicating its concentrations could change with Martian seasons.
 Curiosity began follow-up methane studies soon after the rover touched down inside Gale Crater on Mars in August 2012. Curiosity's tunable laser spectrometer offers 100 times better spectral resolution than any other instrument tasked with Mars methane research.
 "This important result will help direct our efforts to examine the possibility of life on Mars," said Michael Meyer, NASA's lead scientist for Mars exploration. "It reduces the probability of current methane-producing Martian microbes, but this addresses only one type of microbial metabolism. As we know, there are many types of terrestrial microbes that don't generate methane."
 Earlier measurements detected localized methane abundances of up to 45 parts per billion, but NASA says Curiosity's data are inconsistent with such concentrations of methane, even if it had dispersed globally.
 "There's no known way for methane to disappear quickly from the atmosphere," said one of the paper's co-authors, Sushil Atreya of the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. "Methane is persistent. It would last for hundreds of years in the Martian atmosphere. Without a way to take it out of the atmosphere quicker, our measurements indicate there cannot be much methane being put into the atmosphere by any mechanism, whether biology, geology, or by ultraviolet degradation of organics delivered by the fall of meteorites or interplanetary dust particles."
 Curiosity is not finished with work on the methane question.
 Scientists plan more observations to increase the fidelity of the data and seek methane concentrations well below 1 part per billion, according to NASA.
 
  
Additional coverage for subscribers: 
 VIDEO:
THE MARS SCIENCE LAB FULL LAUNCH EXPERIENCE PLAY | HI-DEF 
 VIDEO:
ATLAS 5 ROCKET LAUNCHES MARS SCIENCE LAB PLAY | HI-DEF 
 VIDEO:
ONBOARD CAMERA VIEW OF NOSE CONE JETTISON PLAY | HI-DEF 
 VIDEO:
ONBOARD CAMERA VIEW OF THE STAGING EVENT PLAY | HI-DEF 
 VIDEO:
ONBOARD VIEW OF ROCKET RELEASING MSL PLAY 
 VIDEO:
LAUNCH DECLARED A SUCCESS PLAY 
  
 VIDEO:
LAUNCH REPLAYS: OUR VIEW OF LIFTOFF PLAY | HI-DEF 
 VIDEO:
LAUNCH REPLAYS: VAB ROOF PLAY | HI-DEF 
 VIDEO:
LAUNCH REPLAYS: PATRICK AFB PLAY | HI-DEF 
 VIDEO:
LAUNCH REPLAYS: SOUTH OF THE PAD PLAY | HI-DEF 
 VIDEO:
LAUNCH REPLAYS: THE BEACH TRACKER PLAY | HI-DEF 
 VIDEO:
LAUNCH REPLAYS: SHUTTLE PAD CAMERA PLAY | HI-DEF 
 VIDEO:
LAUNCH REPLAYS: SHUTTLE WATER TOWER PLAY | HI-DEF 
 VIDEO:
LAUNCH REPLAYS: TRACKER WEST OF THE PAD PLAY | HI-DEF 
 VIDEO:
LAUNCH REPLAYS: CLOSE-UP ON UMBILICALS PLAY | HI-DEF 
 VIDEO:
LAUNCH REPLAYS: COMPLEX 41 VIF PLAY | HI-DEF 
 VIDEO:
LAUNCH REPLAYS: THE PRESS SITE PLAY | HI-DEF 
  
 VIDEO:
PRE-LAUNCH INTERVIEW WITH PROJECT MANAGER PLAY | HI-DEF 
 VIDEO:
NARRATED PREVIEW OF ATLAS 5 ASCENT PROFILE PLAY | HI-DEF 
 VIDEO:
ROCKET'S LAUNCH CAMPAIGN HIGHLIGHTS PLAY | HI-DEF 
 VIDEO:
MSL'S LAUNCH CAMPAIGN HIGHLIGHTS PLAY | HI-DEF 
 VIDEO:
SPACECRAFT CLEANROOM TOUR PLAY | HI-DEF 
  
 VIDEO:
ATLAS ROCKET ROLLS OUT TO LAUNCH PAD PLAY | HI-DEF 
 VIDEO:
TIME-LAPSE VIEWS OF ROCKET ROLLOUT PLAY | HI-DEF 
  
 VIDEO:
THE PRE-LAUNCH NEWS CONFERENCE PLAY 
 VIDEO:
CURIOSITY ROVER SCIENCE BRIEFING PLAY 
 VIDEO:
LOOKING FOR LIFE IN THE UNIVERSE PLAY 
 VIDEO:
WHAT WE KNOW ABOUT THE RED PLANET PLAY 
 VIDEO:
ROBOTICS AND HUMANS TO MARS TOGETHER PLAY 
  
 VIDEO:
PREVIEW OF ENTRY, DESCENT AND LANDING PLAY | HI-DEF 
 VIDEO:
PREVIEW OF CURIOSITY ROVER EXPLORING MARS PLAY | HI-DEF 
 VIDEO:
A FLYOVER OF THE GALE CRATER LANDING SITE PLAY | HI-DEF 
  
 VIDEO:
NUCLEAR GENERATOR HOISTED TO ROVER PLAY | HI-DEF 
 VIDEO:
MARS SCIENCE LAB MOUNTED ATOP ATLAS 5 PLAY | HI-DEF 
 VIDEO:
MOVING MSL TO ATLAS ROCKET HANGAR PLAY | HI-DEF 
 VIDEO:
SPACECRAFT PLACED ABOARD TRANSPORTER PLAY | HI-DEF 
  
 VIDEO:
APPLYING MISSION LOGOS ON THE FAIRING PLAY | HI-DEF 
 VIDEO:
MSL ENCAPSULATED IN ROCKET'S NOSE CONE PLAY | HI-DEF 
 VIDEO:
FINAL LOOK AT SPACECRAFT BEFORE SHROUDING PLAY | HI-DEF 
  
 VIDEO:
HEAT SHIELD INSTALLED ONTO SPACECRAFT PLAY | HI-DEF 
 VIDEO:
BEAUTY SHOTS OF SPACECRAFT PACKED UP PLAY | HI-DEF 
 VIDEO:
ATTACHING THE RING-LIKE CRUISE STAGE PLAY | HI-DEF 
 VIDEO:
PARACHUTE-EQUIPPED BACKSHELL INSTALLED PLAY | HI-DEF 
 VIDEO:
SKYCRANE AND CURIOSITY MATED TOGETHER PLAY | HI-DEF 
  
 VIDEO:
TWO-HALVES OF ROCKET NOSE CONE ARRIVES PLAY | HI-DEF 
 VIDEO:
CENTAUR UPPER STAGE HOISTED ATOP ATLAS PLAY | HI-DEF 
 VIDEO:
FINAL SOLID ROCKET BOOSTER ATTACHED PLAY | HI-DEF 
 VIDEO:
FIRST OF FOUR SOLID BOOSTERS MOUNTED PLAY | HI-DEF 
 VIDEO:
FIRST STAGE ERECTED ON MOBILE LAUNCHER PLAY | HI-DEF 
 VIDEO:
STAGES DRIVEN FROM HARBOR TO THE ASOC PLAY | HI-DEF 
 VIDEO:
ROCKET ARRIVES ABOARD SEA-GOING VESSEL PLAY | HI-DEF 
  
 VIDEO:
STOWING ROVER'S INSTRUMENTED ROBOT ARM PLAY | HI-DEF 
 VIDEO:
DEPLOYING CURIOSITY'S SIX WHEELS ON EARTH PLAY | HI-DEF 
 VIDEO:
MMRTG PUT BACK INTO STORAGE AT SPACEPORT PLAY | HI-DEF 
 VIDEO:
NUCLEAR GENERATOR FIT-CHECK ON THE ROVER PLAY | HI-DEF 
 VIDEO:
ROVER'S NUCLEAR POWER SOURCE ARRIVES PLAY | HI-DEF 
 VIDEO:
SPIN-TESTING THE RING-LIKE CRUISE STAGE PLAY | HI-DEF 
  
 VIDEO:
UNCOVERING CURIOSITY ROVER IN CLEANROOM PLAY | HI-DEF 
 VIDEO:
UNVEILING THE ROCKET-POWERED SKYCRANE PLAY | HI-DEF 
 VIDEO:
UNBOXING THE ROVER FROM SHIPPING CRATE PLAY | HI-DEF 
 VIDEO:
ROVER HAULED FROM RUNWAY TO PHSF FACILITY PLAY | HI-DEF 
 VIDEO:
MARS ROVER ARRIVES AT KENNEDY SPACE CENTER PLAY | HI-DEF 
  
 VIDEO:
DESCENT WEIGHTS INSTALLED ON BACKSHELL PLAY | HI-DEF 
 VIDEO:
SOLAR ARRAY PANELS ATTACHED TO CRUISE RING PLAY | HI-DEF 
 SUBSCRIBE NOW 
  
		
  |