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PTYS 214 – Spring 2011

Announcements. PTYS 214 – Spring 2011. Homework #8 due today Homework #9 available for download from the class website Due Thursday, Apr. 14 Class website: http://www.lpl.arizona.edu/undergrad/classes/spring2011/Pierazzo_214 / Useful Reading: class website  “Reading Material”

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PTYS 214 – Spring 2011

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  1. Announcements PTYS 214 – Spring 2011 • Homework #8 due today • Homework #9available for download from the class website • Due Thursday, Apr. 14 • Class website: http://www.lpl.arizona.edu/undergrad/classes/spring2011/Pierazzo_214/ • Useful Reading:class website  “Reading Material” http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viking_program http://www.cnn.com/2004/TECH/space/08/04/atacama.desert/index.html

  2. Extra Credit Presentation Drew Carlson

  3. The Search for Life on Mars Viking Mission, 1976: First successful landing of a spacecraft on the surface of another planet, and execution of biology experiments Two orbiters + two landers Utopia Planitia Chryse Planitia Cryse Basin Elysium Mons Olympus Mons Hellas Vallis Marineris

  4. Viking Landers

  5. Viking Biology Experiments • Pyrolytic Release (PR) experiment • Labeled Release (LR) experiment • Gas Exchange (GEX) experiment • Gas Chromatograph/Mass Spectrometer (GC/MS) was capable of detecting organics at a level of a few parts per billion (ppb)

  6. Single Sample Collector Carbon Assimilation (Pyrolitic Release) Labeled Release Gas Exchange

  7. 1. Pyrolytic Release (PR) or Carbon Assimilation ExperimentTest for organisms that can use CO and CO2 • Martian soil was put in a chamber and exposed to a mixture of CO2 and CO • CO2 and CO were “labeled” with 14C • Hypothesis: “If biota were in the soil it would incorporate some of the CO2 or CO and convert it to organic material” • After some time: Heat the soil  break organic material  look for release of 14C

  8. 2. Gas exchange (GEX)Look for gases that might be given off by Martian biota • Martian soil was put into a chamber and mixed with plenty of different nutrients (amino acids, glucose, salts, vitamins, etc) • Look for H2, N2, O2, CH4, CO2,and Ar, Kr (for calibration) released from the soil

  9. 3. Labeled release (LR)Test for presence of organisms able to assimilate organic compounds from the environment and release back gas to the atmosphere • Martian soil was put into a chamber and mixed with nutrients (glucose and sulfate) • The nutrients were labeled by 14C and 35S • Look for gas release (especially CO2) enriched in 14C and/or 35S

  10. Evolution of radioactivity after nutrient injection from the LR experiment for Viking soil compared to Lunar and naturally sterile Antarctic soil Control experiments consisted in heating the sample at 160°C for 3 hours prior to injecting the nutrients

  11. Viking Biology Results How does it look in terms of life on Mars?

  12. Viking Biology Results What are the control experiments telling us?

  13. Gas Chromatograph/Mass Spectrometer Results No organics detected above the 10 ppb level • Well below the level expected if there were any active or even dead biota present • Even below the level expected for delivery of organics by asteroids and comets! (each year, 2.4 x 108 grams of organic carbon is delivered to Mars by asteroids and comets) • With regolith mixing to a depth of 1 km, organics should be present at about 500 ppb

  14. Viking Conclusions Important: multiple sets of experiments must be conducted to test for the presence of life • The Martian surface is rich in UV-produced inorganic oxidants at the ppm level, which tends to destroy any organics present and react with water and oxidants to produce CO2 Example? Perchlorate (ClO4-) discovered in the soil by Phoenix… • This reconciles the apparently contradictory results of the other Viking life experiments On the other hand . . .

  15. Testing the Hypothesis: Atacama Desert, Chile Oldest and most arid desert on Earth • The oxidizing soil and hyper-arid conditions in the Atacama Desert are considered an analog for the Martian surface • Atacama desert soil was analyzed with a GC/MS similar to that used by Viking Navarro-Gonzales et al. (2003) Mars-like soils in the Atacama desert, and the dry limit of microbial life. Science 302, p. 1018

  16. Terrestrial Analogs Results • In the most arid sample, both formic acid and benzene were found when heated at 750ºC • But: temperatures of the Viking experiments did • not exceed 500ºC . . . • Using the temperatures used in the Viking experiments, detection of formic acid was reduced by a factor of 4 and there was no benzene detected at all benzene formic acid

  17. One more thing… • Surface soil from the Atacama desert showed no indication of life (no detection of DNA) • Yet, in soil few tens of centimeters below surface living organisms were detected! • Viking only used surface soil…

  18. Limitations of Viking Experiments • Limited pyrolysis temperatures • Not possible to do ‘follow-up’ experiments • Soil samples limited to the surface • All three Viking’s experiments assumed that we would be able to culture potentially present Martian organisms  even on Earth only 1 in 100 organisms can be cultured at best Viking results do not rule out the possibility of life in the martian soil Is there another way to discover martian life?

  19. Evidence for Life in Martian Meteorite(s) ALH84001 has become famous because it appeared to contain structures that were considered to be fossilized remains of bacteria-like life forms

  20. History of ALH84001 • Crystallization Age: ~4.5 Gyr old • Carbonate globules formed ~3.9 Gyr old • Rock remained on the surface of Mars until 16 Myr ago when it was ejected • It fell into Antarctica 13,000 years ago • Covered with snow and ice until 700 years ago • Recovered in 1984

  21. Carbonate globules (50-250 m) Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons Magnetite crystals (Fe3O4) Ovoid structures (20-100 nm)

  22. Arguments in favor of “life on Mars” from ALH84001 • Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) can form as decay products of microorganisms • Magnetite crystals have structures similar to crystals produced by some terrestrial bacteria • Ovoid structures in carbonate globules are similar to terrestrial microbes McKay et al. (1996) Search for past life on Mars: Possible relic biogenic activity in Martian meteorite ALH 84001. Science 273, p. 924

  23. ALH84001: Martian PAHs? 1. Contamination Problem: Most of the organic molecules (maybe even up to 80%!) could be contamination, including PAHs • Some Martian organic carbon is present in the carbonate globules (which were formed on Mars) 2. PAHs can be produced abiotically when impact generated gases (CO, CO2, H2) cool

  24. ALH84001: Ovoid structures 1. The size of these structures is 20-100 nanometers, considered to be too small to contain even a single ribosome • On Earth, the smallest terrestrial bacteria (deep sea hydrothermal vent) is ~150 nm - viruses can be 20-400 nm but they are not independent organisms 2. These structures could have an non-biologic origin, maybe artifacts of sample preparation We need more than just shape to characterize “fossils” of ancient living organisms

  25. ALH84001: Magnetite Crystals On Earth microorganisms called magnetotactic bacteria (like MV-1) produce chains of tiny magnetic minerals But, similar grains can be made inorganically Example: an impact event… Inconclusive! Bell (2007) Thomas-Keprta et al. (2000)

  26. Summary of ALH84001 • The morphological fossils (“ovoid” structures) could be artifacts of sample preparation (more evidence is needed) • PAHs could have been produced by non-biological processes; there is strong evidence of terrestrial contamination for organic molecules in the meteorite • The magnetite grains can be made abiotically, such as during the impact even that ejected the rock from the surface of Mars! McKay et al. found fossil like structures in other Martian meteorites (Nakhla 1.3 Gyr and Shergotty 165 Myr)

  27. Can Martian Biota “Hide” Below the Surface? • Primitive life is very resilient • On Earth we found that • Some bacteria can grow under -15°C (and lower) • Some bacteria have tolerance to extreme desiccation for long periods of time • Some bacteria live in rocks at substantial depth (>1 mile) and do not need light or O2

  28. Methane in the Martian Atmosphere Mumma et al. (2009) Science 323, p. 1041

  29. What Does It Mean? • Martian atmosphere is strongly oxidizing: CO2, N2, Ar, CO, O2, traces of H2O • CH4 production by atmospheric chemistry is negligible • Normally, CH4 in the atmosphere would be removed in less than 300 years; results suggest much faster removal (interaction with the soil)! Methane in the Martian atmosphere… …must have been released RECENTLY and from SUB-SURFACE RESERVOIRS

  30. Sources of Methane • On Earth: • 90% of atmospheric CH4 is produced by living systems • Non-biological sources of CH4 are related to CO2 combining with H2O at high pressures and temperatures (like in the carbonate-silicate cycle), which requires volcanism or active plate tectonics • On Mars: • There is no plate tectonics nor indication of volcanism today! Stay tuned…

  31. Stability of the Martian Environment ~10 km Grand Canyon Like Grand Canyon, Nanedi Vallis may have required millions of years to form Could a CO2/H2O atmosphere have warmed early Mars above freezing? (after all Mars experienced major volcanic activity early on…) Nanedi Vallis (Mars Global Surveyor)

  32. Problems… • No plate tectonics • without plate tectonics, the • carbonate-silicate feedback • breaks down, increasing CO2 in • the atmosphere • Increase of atmospheric CO2 cause condensation and cloud formation • CO2 clouds decrease the world’s albedo • Less solar radiation reaches the surface, warming the planet • A 30% CO2 atmosphere would start to condense at 200K (-73ºC) CO2 alone does not work!

  33. Alternate Possibilities for an Early Warm Mars • Additional greenhouse gas: CH4 - hard to justify high levels of CH4 on Mars • Liquid water occurs on Mars surface right after large impacts - some features required millions of years to form and warming effects from impacts do not last that long The mystery of a warm and wet early Mars remains unresolved …

  34. Quiz Time !

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