Space

Hydrogen and asteroid impacts may have aided life on ancient Mars

Hydrogen and asteroid impacts may have aided life on ancient Mars
Data from NASA's Curiosity Mars rover were used in a new paper studying how asteroids impacting the ancient Martian atmosphere could have produced key ingredients to life
Data from NASA's Curiosity Mars rover were used in a new paper studying how asteroids impacting the ancient Martian atmosphere could have produced key ingredients to life
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This flask served as part of a laboratory test simulating the effect of asteroids impacting the ancient Martian atmosphere
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This flask served as part of a laboratory test simulating the effect of asteroids impacting the ancient Martian atmosphere
Data from NASA's Curiosity Mars rover were used in a new paper studying how asteroids impacting the ancient Martian atmosphere could have produced key ingredients to life
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Data from NASA's Curiosity Mars rover were used in a new paper studying how asteroids impacting the ancient Martian atmosphere could have produced key ingredients to life

Data from NASA's Curiosity rover indicates that if you want life on Mars, add hydrogen and and send down some asteroids. A new study used the results from Curiosity's Sample Analysis at Mars (SAM) instrument and laboratory simulations to show that the impact of asteroids caused hydrogen in the ancient Martian atmosphere to stimulate the creation of the nitrates required to sustain life.

Nitrogen is a literally vital ingredient when it comes to life as we know it. Without nitrogen, there can be no proteins, no nucleic acids, or any of a long list of organic compounds that are needed by even the simplest of organisms. The problem is that nitrogen is a relatively inert element to the point where it is commonly used to preserve historical artifacts.

Before nitrogen can be used to help establish or sustain life, it has to be transformed into ammonia or some other more reactive molecule form like nitrites and nitrates. These fixed forms of nitrogen have been detected by the SAM experiment as Curiosity traversed Gale Crater on Mars, but how did they get there?

This flask served as part of a laboratory test simulating the effect of asteroids impacting the ancient Martian atmosphere
This flask served as part of a laboratory test simulating the effect of asteroids impacting the ancient Martian atmosphere

To answer this question, a team of scientist led by Rafael Navarro-González at the Institute of Nuclear Sciences of the National Autonomous University of Mexico in Mexico City worked to recreate the primordial Martian atmosphere in the laboratory as well as running theoretical models.

For the experiment, the team placed a mixture of hydrogen, nitrogen, and carbon dioxide gases in a flask, then zapped them with infrared laser beam pulses to simulate the high-energy shock waves produced by asteroids striking the atmosphere. Unexpectedly, nitrates appeared in the aftermath.

"The big surprise was that the yield of nitrate increased when hydrogen was included in the laser-shocked experiments that simulated asteroid impacts," says Navarro-González. "This was counterintuitive as hydrogen leads to an oxygen-deficient environment while the formation of nitrate requires oxygen. However, the presence of hydrogen led to a faster cooling of the shock-heated gas, trapping nitric oxide, the precursor of nitrate, at elevated temperatures where its yield was higher."

According to NASA, these findings are important because there is very little nitrogen in the Martian atmosphere, so the presence of nitrates poses questions about how it got there. In addition, having a better understanding of the role hydrogen played on ancient Mars can help in understanding the history of the Martian climate.

"Having more hydrogen as a greenhouse gas in the atmosphere is interesting both for the sake of the climate history of Mars and for habitability," says Jennifer Stern, a planetary geochemist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center. "If you have a link between two things that are good for habitability – a potentially warmer climate with liquid water on the surface and an increase in the production of nitrates, which are necessary for life – it's very exciting. The results of this study suggest that these two things, which are important for life, fit together and one enhances the presence of the other."

The research was published in the Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets.

Source: NASA

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Douglas Bennett Rogers
Nitrogen bricks may one day be flown in from Pluto to build the Martian atmosphere.