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Mars: New insights and unresolved questions

Authors :
David Beaty
Klara Anna Capova
Juergen Oberst
David A. Rothery
Stefaan de Mey
Sen Hu
Laura Selbmann
Hitesh Changela
Michael Waltemathe
Teresa Rinaldi
Martin Ferus
Alex Ellery
Tiffany D. Dallas
Catharine Conley
Yang Liu
Rishitosh K. Sinha
Kristian Bouw
André Antunes
L. J. Hicks
Ákos Kereszturi
Jorge L. Vago
Alian Wang
Sohan Jheeta
Xiaohui Fu
Bernard Foing
Kazuhisa Fujita
P. M. Ranjith
Hector Andreas Stavrakakis
John Bridges
Z. Vaci
Alexandros Krassakis
Elias Chatzitheodoridis
Ekaterina Dadachova
Charles S. Cockell
Kenneth H. Williford
Yangtin Lin
John E. Hallsworth
Chuanfei Dong
Joseph R. Michalski
Publication Year :
2021

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 confirm (or put into question) the feasibility and/or extent of human habitability of space.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a92c7ab16400a7df93c11415188b2d14