NASA finds this on Mars and is already looking for life: It’s the biggest discovery in history
by Edwin O.
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In the Appendix, three papers by NASA researchers report that liquid water has been found on Mars’s surface. This finding could lead to a revolutionary method for studying Mars and looking for life on the planet. This unprecedented finding was made on August 12, 2024, based on materials obtained from the Mars Insight Lander spacecraft, launched in 2018.
Seismic activity recorded by the InSight lander during its four years on the red planet included more than 1,300 ‘Marsquakes’, which aided the researchers in understanding the Martian interior structure and composition. It is a significant scientific breakthrough in research on Mars that offers new data about its ability to sustain life and geological activities. Liquid water in any state has fascinated researchers as they looked for evidence of liquid water on Mars.
Marsquakes and seismic data: what they tell us about liquid water ponds on Mars
From the seismic wave data, it was found that subsurface water is present. The procedures scientists used resembled a search for water sources on Earth. These water sources are situated at depths between 10 and 20 kilometres deep. This discovery offers concrete data supporting the historical hypothesis about the disappearance of water on Mars’s surface.
It means that the volume of water estimated here could cover the Mars surface to more than half a kilometre in depth if it were to spread out. It essentially means that this discovery is significant progress in understanding Mars’s geology and the planet’s current state.
Dr Vashan Wright of the University of California, San Diego Scripps Institution of Oceanography research team involves more than 1,300 Marsquakes recorded by the Insight lander. These discoveries indicate that such water reservoirs are not rare but could exist worldwide and occupy a substantial underground ocean that has evaded saturation mapping for Billions of years.
What the discovery of subsurface water means for finding life on Mars
Well-water springs unlock the opportunity to dwell beneath the soil. The deep biosphere of Earth helps explain the possibility of microbial life on Mars. There is a hypothesis that chemosynthetic microbes can exist deep in Martian rocks. They note that the recent discovery of methane plumes on Mars may suggest the existence of life forms. Scholars are now discussing how to continue the study of these water reservoirs.
Despite the severe conditions on the surface of Mars, subsurface areas could be more conducive for life. This discovery once again brings back the concept of planetary habitability and that of extraterrestrial life within the solar system. To support the idea of extremophiles living in these deep aquifers, the authors paired the concept to similar biospheres on Earth that have microbial life located in deep waters and underground devoid of sunlight or organic carbon because they derive theirs from rocks and minerals.
The technological hurdles and future missions needed to explore deep Martian water
Mars: ‘Getting to deep Martian water is not a piece of cake in terms of technology’. However, it is impossible to penetrate Mars and travel 10-20 kilometres beneath the red planet’s surface. Maybe there is another way to get there – through mud volcanoes. The Mars Sample Return mission might be helpful. Other methane plumes might give researchers the indirect evidence they need for further research.
Strategic objectives may include calls for strategic long-term goals like improved drilling methods. The search for Martians might continue for several decades or centuries if more astrobiological missions were conducted or if newer, better technology was developed.
Researchers are still exploring other geophysical instruments, including ground-penetrating radar and other remote sensing technology, that may provide a better definition of these subsurface water resources. They can use this information to pinpoint the areas with the highest potential for mission and exploration.
Why this discovery of liquid water on Mars could change everything we know about space exploration
Thus, discovering liquid water deposits beneath the Martian surface significantly advances space exploration. This discovery not only changes the concept of Mars’s geology but also significantly contributes to the presence or absence of microbial life on our planet Mars. Continuing the mission of searching for new Martian areas to inhabit, the comparisons are once again referring to the Earth’s deep hot biosphere inhabited by tough microorganisms.
Future tasks will remain challenging and novel, requiring new concepts and approaches to study these subterranean environments. Still, this finding has initiated a new search for Mars, which refers to scientific curiosity and the public’s imagination. It is the type of question that is on the brink of being answered with the help of science, bringing people closer to the potential discovery of extraterrestrial life.