Tuesday, 9 June 2015

Window Cleaning Jobs On Mars

Window cleaning jobs on Mars - could become a reality with glass already present.
Glass Deposits on Mars Provide Window Into Ancient Signs of Life: In a pioneering feat, researchers have discovered glass deposits on the Red Planet, providing a delicate window into the possibility of ancient life on the Red Planet. Using data from Nasa's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO), the team from Brown University detected deposits of glass within impact craters on Mars formed in the searing heat of a violent impact.

Previous research has shown that ancient biosignatures can be preserved in impact glass. "Knowing this, we wanted to go look for them on Mars and that is what we did here. Before this paper, no one had been able to definitively detect them on the Martian surface," said Kevin Cannon, PhD student at Brown University.

Cannon and co-author professor Jack Mustard showed that large glass deposits are present in several ancient yet well-preserved craters scattered across the Martian surface. These glass deposits are relatively common impact features on Mars and could be targets for future exploration. To identify minerals and rock types remotely, scientists measure the spectra of light reflected off the planet's surface.

Researchers have found deposits of impact glass preserved in Martian craters like Alga (above) using data from NASA's Compact Reconnaissance Imaging Spectrometer for Mars (CRISM). Green indicates the presence of glass. (Blues are pyroxene; reds are olivine.) 
But impact glass does not have a particularly strong spectral signal. "Glasses tend to be spectrally bland or weakly expressive, so signatures from the glass tend to be overwhelmed by the chunks of rock mixed in with it. But Kevin found a way to tease that signal out," Mustard said.

In the lab, Kevin mixed together powders with a similar composition of Martian rocks and fired them in an oven to form glass and measured the spectral signal from that glass. Once he had the signal from the lab glass, he used an algorithm designed to pick out similar signals in data from Nasa's MRO. The technique was able to pinpoint deposits around several crater central peaks.

The fact that the deposits were found on central peaks is a good indicator that they have an impact origin. Knowing that impact glass can preserve ancient signs of life opens a potential new strategy in the search for ancient Martian life. "We think these could be interesting targets for future exploration. In fact, we have a particular spot in mind," the authors said.



Human Settlement on Mars: Mars One is a not for profit foundation with the goal of establishing a permanent human settlement on Mars. To prepare for this settlement the first unmanned mission is scheduled to depart in 2020. Crews will depart for their one-way journey to Mars starting in 2026; subsequent crews will depart every 26 months after the initial crew has left for Mars. Mars One is a global initiative aiming to make this everyone's mission to Mars, including yours. Join Mars One’s efforts to enable the next giant leap for mankind.

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