Close Menu

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Travel Tips: How to Wait in Line (and Keep Your Cool)

    July 17, 2026

    ‘Today’ Show Intruder Lunged at Craig Melvin, Shouted Racial Slur

    July 17, 2026

    It’s Humiliating. It’s Exhilarating. It’s a Line.

    July 17, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • Travel Tips: How to Wait in Line (and Keep Your Cool)
    • ‘Today’ Show Intruder Lunged at Craig Melvin, Shouted Racial Slur
    • It’s Humiliating. It’s Exhilarating. It’s a Line.
    • Google Workers Rally for Job Security at Mountain View HQ
    • Iran war live: US carries out strikes on civilian infrastructure in south
    • Jennifer Lopez, Lindsey Vonn, Heather Graham and More!
    • loanDepot asks judge to toss West Capital Lending complaint
    • Microsoft CEO says Anthropic Fable is being ‘editorially controlled’
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Industry Movement
    • Home
    • Entertainment
    • Business
    • News
    • Real Estate
    Industry Movement
    Home»Business»Mars Scores Another Win in the Search for Alien Life
    Business

    Mars Scores Another Win in the Search for Alien Life

    adminBy adminAugust 12, 2024No Comments14 Views
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Tumblr Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


    Scientists discovered evidence of a reservoir of liquid water seven to 13 miles below the Martian surface, lingering in the pores of the planet’s crust.

    They believe there’s enough to cover the entire planet with an ocean about one mile deep.

    The water, if it exists, is too deep to access in the foreseeable future. Still, it’s another promising sign that Mars could one day yield the most disruptive discovery in human history — that of life beyond Earth.

    The discovery, announced Monday, comes just weeks after NASA’s Perseverance rover drilled a rock sample on Mars that could contain evidence of microbial life from a bygone era.


    gritty yellow ring with speckled solid rock sample inside

    A rock sample that could contain evidence of ancient Martian microbes, secured inside Perseverance’s drill bit.

    NASA/JPL-Caltech/ASU/MSSS



    Ancient remnants of long-extinct alien life are all NASA can hope for on the parched Martian surface. But any sizeable source of liquid water, like these potential underground reservoirs, is a place to check for active microbial life — even though water 10 miles underground would never see the light of day.

    “It’s certainly true on Earth — deep, deep mines host life, the bottom of the ocean hosts life. We haven’t found any evidence for life on Mars, but at least we have identified a place that should, in principle, be able to sustain life,” Michael Manga, a co-author of the study and planetary scientist at the University of California, Berkeley, said in a press release.

    Marsquakes helped NASA find water clues

    When NASA put a seismometer on Mars, aboard its InSight lander, the goal was to peer into the planet’s interior.


    mars brown planet with blue-black and white splotches in the black of space

    Mars used to have liquid water on its surface, but no longer.

    NASA/JPL



    Though the InSight mission ended in 2022, scientists are still sifting through all the data it collected in hopes of learning something new about Mars’s depths.

    InSight’s seismometer instrument measured Marsquake activity, mapping seismic waves. As those waves move through the Martian interior, their timing and the direction they travel are influenced by the material they’re traveling through deep underground.

    So, by measuring the waves, the scientists of the new study can tell what’s underneath the planet’s surface. It’s similar to how the waves of an X-ray or CAT scan can reveal what’s inside a human body.

    Manga and his colleagues used mathematical modeling to determine that a deep layer of fractured igneous rock, saturated with water, best explains InSight’s data. Their findings were published in the peer-reviewed journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences on Monday.


    illustration of a column cutout of mars planetary interior beneath the insight lander with a deep layer of cracked rock with water in the cracks

    A cutout of the Martian interior beneath NASA’s Insight lander, according to the new study’s interpretation.

    James Tuttle Keane and Aaron Rodriquez, courtesy of Scripps Institute of Oceanograph



    A clue in a Mars mystery

    In addition to being downright fascinating and potentially overturning humanity’s conception of Mars as a lifeless, dry red rock, the new findings may help solve one of the planet’s greatest mysteries: where all the water went.

    Mars’s surface was once lush with water. Heck, the Perseverance rover is exploring a basin that used to be a giant lake and river delta.

    But the planet didn’t have a strong magnetic field, like Earth’s, to help it hold onto its atmosphere. As a result, the sun’s radiation wore away what little protective layer of atmospheric gases existed, and the planet dried up.

    By about 3 billion years ago, all the water was gone. Some of it is still frozen in Mars’s ice caps. Perhaps some simply vaporized in the harsh space environment. But scientists haven’t really figured out where it all went.

    The new findings suggest some of the water seeped deep into the planet’s crust.





    Source link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email
    admin

    Related Posts

    Google Workers Rally for Job Security at Mountain View HQ

    July 17, 2026

    Microsoft CEO says Anthropic Fable is being ‘editorially controlled’

    July 17, 2026

    We Visited Kernel to Test Its $117,200 Brain-Scanning Headset.

    July 16, 2026
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Recent Posts
    • Travel Tips: How to Wait in Line (and Keep Your Cool)
    • ‘Today’ Show Intruder Lunged at Craig Melvin, Shouted Racial Slur
    • It’s Humiliating. It’s Exhilarating. It’s a Line.
    • Google Workers Rally for Job Security at Mountain View HQ
    • Iran war live: US carries out strikes on civilian infrastructure in south
    Recent Comments
      Archives
      • July 2026
      • December 2024
      • November 2024
      • October 2024
      • September 2024
      • August 2024
      Categories
      • Business
      • Entertainment
      • News
      • Real Estate
      Meta
      • Log in
      • Entries feed
      • Comments feed
      • WordPress.org
      Demo
      Top Posts

      How To Avoid These 12 Costly Business Traps

      November 30, 202430

      Gen Zer Won NYC Housing Lottery, Pays $1.6K Rent for Queens Apartment

      October 1, 202427

      SEC Chair Gary Gensler will step down Jan. 20, making way for Trump replacement

      November 21, 202424

      Better Pay, More Time Off: What Real Estate Agents Want This Labor Day

      August 31, 202424
      Don't Miss

      Travel Tips: How to Wait in Line (and Keep Your Cool)

      By adminJuly 17, 20260

      A bouncer in England, where people are renowned for queuing up respectably, offers six tips…

      ‘Today’ Show Intruder Lunged at Craig Melvin, Shouted Racial Slur

      July 17, 2026

      It’s Humiliating. It’s Exhilarating. It’s a Line.

      July 17, 2026

      Google Workers Rally for Job Security at Mountain View HQ

      July 17, 2026
      Stay In Touch
      • Facebook
      • Twitter
      • Pinterest
      • Instagram
      • YouTube
      • Vimeo

      Subscribe to Updates

      Get the latest creative news from SmartMag about art & design.

      Demo
      Our Picks

      Travel Tips: How to Wait in Line (and Keep Your Cool)

      July 17, 2026

      ‘Today’ Show Intruder Lunged at Craig Melvin, Shouted Racial Slur

      July 17, 2026

      It’s Humiliating. It’s Exhilarating. It’s a Line.

      July 17, 2026
      Most Popular

      How To Avoid These 12 Costly Business Traps

      November 30, 202430

      Gen Zer Won NYC Housing Lottery, Pays $1.6K Rent for Queens Apartment

      October 1, 202427

      SEC Chair Gary Gensler will step down Jan. 20, making way for Trump replacement

      November 21, 202424
      Legal Pages
      • About Us
      • Disclaimer
      • DMCA Notice
      • Privacy Policy

      Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.