----- Original Message -----
Sent: Sunday, March 28, 2004 8:36 AM
Subject: [DarlingsSpace] David Darling's Newsletter #20

DAVID DARLING'S NEWSLETTER

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Issue #20
March 28, 2004
e-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
website: http://www.daviddarling.info

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NEWS ALERT: POSSIBLE DETECTION OF LIFE ON MARS

This is the first time I've sent out a news alert but there's been a
discovery of such potential importance that I'd like you all to be
aware of it without delay. The discovery is preliminary and it may
turn out to be a false alarm. However, it's implications are so
profound that I didn't want to wait for the next full newsletter to
give you the heads-up.

Briefly, it seems as if methane has been found in the Martian
atmosphere. Separate teams from the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
and the European Space Agency have detected the presence of methane
gas in small quantities. This is hugely significant because methane
must be continually replenished, otherwise photochemical processes
would remove it on a timescale of about 300 years. The likelihood is
that the replenishment is done my methanogenic microbes in the
Martian soil. In other words, this, as-yet-unpublished data,
strongly points to the presence of living organisms on Mars.

The story was broken in The Independent newspaper (London) yesterday
and reads as follows:

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A strong signal of life on Mars has been detected by scientists at
the US National Aeronautics and Space Administration (Nasa) and the
European Space Agency.

Each group has independently discovered tantalising evidence of
methane in the Martian atmosphere. Methane, a waste product of
living organisms on Earth, could also be a by-product of alien
microbes living under the surface of the Red Planet.

The detection of methane has been the holy grail of scientists
studying the Martian atmosphere, as its presence could provide
unequivocal proof that there is life beyond Earth.

Neither Nasa nor the European Space Agency (ESA) has publicly
announced the findings, but specialists who have seen the data
believe the discovery is genuine - although they are unsure what it
means in terms of confirming the presence of life.

The discovery comes weeks after Nasa and ESA announced new findings
relating to the presence of huge bodies of water on Mars which could
have supported life.

The European effort is led by Vittorio Formisano, of the Institute
of Physics and Interplanetary Science in Rome, who operates the
methane-detecting spectrometer on board the Mars Express spacecraft
orbiting the planet. "We can identify the presence of methane in the
Martian atmosphere and we've been able to evaluate how much of it
there would be," Professor Formisano said. "Globally, if I average
all the data I have, I can find something of the order of 10 or 10.5
parts per billion. It's detectable, but only if I average a lot of
data."

Methane is destroyed by the intense ultraviolet radiation on Mars
because the gas has a relatively short photochemical lifetime of
about 300 years, so if it is present there must be something
producing it continually, Professor Formisano said. "[Its presence]
is significant and very important. If it is present you need a
source," he added.

The second group to detect signals of methane in the Martian
atmosphere is led by Michael Mumma of Nasa's Goddard Space Flight
Centre in Maryland, who used powerful spectroscopic telescopes based
on Earth.

This team is even believed to have detected variations in the
concentrations of methane, with a peak coming from the ancient
Martian seabed of Meridiani Planum, which is being explored by a
Nasa rover.

This could indicate a subterranean source of methane which is
pumping out the gas, either due to some residual geological activity
or because of the presence of living organisms producing it as a
waste gas.

Asked whether the continual production of methane is strong evidence
of a biological origin of the gas, Dr Mumma said: "I think it is,
myself personally."

He added: "It's difficult to imagine that primordial methane [from
geological activity] would continue outgassing for four billion
years [the age of Mars]. This looks very intriguing."

Both teams of scientists are now busy validating their results
before their respective organisations are prepared to go public on
the implications.

(http://news.independent.co.uk/world/science_medical/story.jsp?
story=505454)

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If any of you have further information, please contact me or post
your comments on my forum.

Best wishes,
David Darling




 

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