New analysis of data from the
Viking
Mars probes, which landed on the planet in the 1970s, suggests that life may
well exist on the surface.
Dr Joop Houtkooper, of the
University
of Giessen in Germany, presented his findings last Friday at the
European
Planetary Science Congress in Potsdam.
He is suggesting that life based around hydrogen peroxide and water could
actually be common on Mars.
Dr Houtkooper's theory is based on a re-examination of the data from the Gas
Exchange experiment conducted by both probes.
The experiment involved taking a sample of the Martian soil and cleaning it
with helium before using a gas chromatograph to measure levels of oxygen and
carbon dioxide.
The results were inconclusive but Dr Houtkooper believes that they could be
explained if life on the planet is based on organisms that derive not just from
water but from hydrogen peroxide as well.
"The Gas Exchange experiment measured unexplained rises in oxygen and carbon
dioxide levels when incubating samples," he said.
"If we assume these gases were produced during the breakdown of organic
material together with hydrogen peroxide solution, we can calculate the masses
needed to produce the volume of gas measured. From that, we can estimate the
total biomass in the sample of Martian soil."
Based on these calculations Dr Houtkooper estimates that biomass, or living
matter, makes up about one part per thousand in the soil, about the same
proportion as in Antarctic soil.
Hydrogen peroxide is used in the animal kingdom. The Bombardier beetle, for
example, uses a 25 per cent solution of hydrogen peroxide to produce a steam
explosion for defence.
"There does not appear to be any basic reason why hydrogen peroxide could not
be used by living systems," concluded Dr Houtkooper.
"While organisms on Earth have found it advantageous to include salt in their
intracellular fluids, hydrogen peroxide may have been more suitable for
organisms adapting to the cold, dry environment of Mars."
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