Is there other life in the
universe?
Purdue scientist is ready to search for
the answers
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[November 06, 2020]
Every rock on Mars is a time capsule for Briony Horgan, potentially
holding information from billions of years ago that could help
answer the questions about life in the universe today.
Horgan, an associate professor of planetary science at Purdue, soon
will have an opportunity to delve into those questions by searching
for evidence of past microbial life as part of the NASA Mars rover
Perseverance mission. Horgan’s research and a presentation led NASA
to select the rover landing site.
One of science’s missing pieces of the puzzle is understanding how
common simple life forms such as microbes are in the universe.
Finding evidence of microbial life, even from billions of years ago,
opens the door to new research (Horgan speaks about the mission in
Youtube video).
“This is exciting because it is the first time we are really searing
for ancient life in our solar system or beyond,” Horgan said. “This
is a chance to understand how rare or how common life like us is in
the universe.”
The NASA rover Perseverance is expected to touch down on Mars in
February. It is about a quarter of the way through its flight after
launching on July 31.
To help the mission’s odds of finding evidence of life, the Mars
rover will land in Jezero Crater, just north of the planet’s
equator. Horgan was part of the science team that studied whether
the site, which used to be a lake and large river delta, would be a
good target for Perseverance.
“It has everything we want in a landing site, not just ancient lake
and mineral deposits, but it allows us also to get out of the crater
and get out on the surrounding terrain to get at even older rocks
that could tell us about the earliest parts of Mars history,” Horgan
said. “We’re excited to see everything in and around the crater.”
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Almost 30 years of Mars research has led to this mission, and Horgan is excited
about the location’s possibilities. She has played a key role in the mission,
including an important finding from mineralogy research she led on the location
that contributed to Jezero Crater’s selection and helping design the camera that
will be the scientific eyes for Perseverance.
At this point, Earth is the only data source to help determine how and where
life forms and evolves. But Horgan said erosion and plate tectonics have
destroyed much of the evidence.
“But on Mars those rocks are just sitting on the surface waiting for us,” she
said. “If we show signs of ancient life on Mars, that is going to open up a
whole new field of science trying to understand the origins of not just life on
Mars but also on our own planet.”
About Purdue University
Purdue University is a top public research institution developing practical
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and online, real-world learning, Purdue offers a transformative education to
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most fees at 2012-13 levels, enabling more students than ever to graduate
debt-free. See how Purdue never stops in the persistent pursuit of the next
giant leap at https://purdue.edu/.
[Writer, Media contact: Brian Huchel,
Source: Briony Horgan] |