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Mars: new insights and unresolved questions

Authors :
Changela, Hitesh G.
Chatzitheodoridis, Elias
Antunes, Andre
Beaty, David
Bouw, Kristian
Bridges, John C.
Capova, Klara Anna
Cockell, Charles S.
Conley, Catharine A.
Dadachova, Ekaterina
Dallas, Tiffany D.
de Mey, Stefaan
Dong, Chuanfei
Ellery, Alex
Ferus, Martin
Foing, Bernard
Fu, Xiaohui
Fujita, Kazuhisa
Lin, Yangtin
Jheeta, Sohan
Hicks, Leon J.
Hu, Sen
Kereszturi, Akos
Krassakis, Alexandros
Liu, Yang
Oberst, Juergen
Michalski, Joe
Ranjith, P. M.
Rinaldi, Teresa
Rothery, David
Stavrakakis, Hector A.
Selbmann, Laura
Sinha, Rishitosh K.
Wang, Alian
Williford, Ken
Vaci, Zoltan
Vago, Jorge L.
Waltemathe, Michael
Hallsworth, John E.
Changela, Hitesh G.
Chatzitheodoridis, Elias
Antunes, Andre
Beaty, David
Bouw, Kristian
Bridges, John C.
Capova, Klara Anna
Cockell, Charles S.
Conley, Catharine A.
Dadachova, Ekaterina
Dallas, Tiffany D.
de Mey, Stefaan
Dong, Chuanfei
Ellery, Alex
Ferus, Martin
Foing, Bernard
Fu, Xiaohui
Fujita, Kazuhisa
Lin, Yangtin
Jheeta, Sohan
Hicks, Leon J.
Hu, Sen
Kereszturi, Akos
Krassakis, Alexandros
Liu, Yang
Oberst, Juergen
Michalski, Joe
Ranjith, P. M.
Rinaldi, Teresa
Rothery, David
Stavrakakis, Hector A.
Selbmann, Laura
Sinha, Rishitosh K.
Wang, Alian
Williford, Ken
Vaci, Zoltan
Vago, Jorge L.
Waltemathe, Michael
Hallsworth, John E.

Abstract

Mars exploration motivates the search for extraterrestrial life, the development of space technologies, and the design of human missions and habitations. Here, we seek new insights and pose unresolved questions relating to the natural history of Mars, habitability, robotic and human exploration, planetary protection, and the impacts on human society. Key observations and findings include: – high escape rates of early Mars’ atmosphere, including loss of water, impact present-day habitability; – putative fossils on Mars will likely be ambiguous biomarkers for life; – microbial contamination resulting from human habitation is unavoidable; and – based on Mars’ current planetary protection category, robotic payload(s) should characterize the local martian environment for any life-forms prior to human habitation. Some of the outstanding questions are: – which interpretation of the hemispheric dichotomy of the planet is correct; – to what degree did deep-penetrating faults transport subsurface liquids to Mars’ surface; – in what abundance are carbonates formed by atmospheric processes; – what properties of martian meteorites could be used to constrain their source locations; – the origin(s) of organic macromolecules; – was/is Mars inhabited; – how can missions designed to uncover microbial activity in the subsurface eliminate potential false positives caused by microbial contaminants from Earth; – how can we ensure that humans and microbes form a stable and benign biosphere; and – should humans relate to putative extraterrestrial life from a biocentric viewpoint (preservation of all biology), or anthropocentric viewpoint of expanding habitation of space? Studies of Mars’ evolution can shed light on the habitability of extrasolar planets. In addition, Mars exploration can drive future policy developments and

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, application/pdf, application/pdf, http://oro.open.ac.uk/80347/7/80347.pdf
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1291896729
Document Type :
Electronic Resource