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Detection of Nitric Oxide by the Sample Analysis at Mars (SAM) Instrument Implications for the Presence of Nitrates

Authors :
Navarro-Gonzalez, R
Stern, J
Freissinet, C
Franz, H. B
Eigenbrode, J. L
McKay, C. P
Coll, P
Sutter, B
Archer, D
McAdam, A
Cabane, M
Ming, D. W
Glavin, D
Leshin, L
Wong, M
Atreya, S
Wray, J. J
Steele, A
Buch, A
Prats, B. D
Szopa, C
Coscia, D
Teinturier, S
Conrad, P
Owen, T. C
Mahaffy, P
Grotzinger, J. P
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 2014.

Abstract

One of the main goals of the Mars Science Laboratory is to determine whether the planet ever had environmental conditions able to support microbial life. Nitrogen is a fundamental element for life, and is present in structural (e.g., proteins), catalytic (e.g., enzymes and ribozymes), energy transfer (e.g., ATP) and information storage (RNA and DNA) biomolecules. Planetary models suggest that molecular nitrogen was abundant in the early Martian atmosphere, but was rapidly lost to space by photochemistry, sputtering impact erosion, and oxidized and deposited to the surface as nitrate. Nitrates are a fundamental source for nitrogen to terrestrial microorganisms. Therefore, the detection of nitrates in soils and rocks is important to assess the habitability of a Martian environment. SAM is capable of detecting nitrates by their thermal decomposition into nitric oxide, NO. Here we analyze the release of NO from soils and rocks examined by the SAM instrument at Gale crater, and discuss its origin.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
NASA Technical Reports
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsnas.20140012603
Document Type :
Report