Microbes grow in Mars conditions 91
Iguana writes "A methane-making, oxygen-hating microbe is able to thrive in Mars-like laboratory conditions, according to a researcher who says the experiment raises fresh hope about the possibility of life on the Red Planet. Check the whole story on MSNBC " "And kids, that the story of how hemos grew cmdrtaco". Oh...er.
Photosynthetic & anaerobic (Score:5)
Photosynthetic organisms (commons ones, anyway) produce oxygen as a byproduct. They use light energy directly to make their own food molecules. Early photosynthetic organisms were probably also anaerobic, but photosynthetic and anaerobic are distinct concepts.
Possible evolution:
1. Anaerobic organisms live and obtain their energy from molecules in their environments.
2. Some anaerobic organisms gain the ability to photosynthesize, being able to use simpler molecules than their predecessors along with light energy from the sun while producing oxygen as a byproduct.
3. Oxygen levels increase due to the prosperity of photosynthetic organisms.
4. Anaerobic organisms die in large numbers as the atmospheric oxygen level rises.
5. New, more efficient aerobic organisms appear and further the decline of anaerobic organisms.
Although I cannot currently access my password to log in, I am
Yet Another Coward
It might destroy possible science. (Score:1)
that might resolve the fuel problems!!!!!!!! (Score:1)
That is really very cool.
Let's fly a couple of spaceships packed with
those microbes to the mars.
They will start producing methan.
Once we run out of fuel. We can just fly to Mars.
compress all that methan they have produced in
50 years or so and use it as a replacement.
come on lets do it
call your senator today
Re:that might resolve the fuel problems!!!!!!!! (Score:1)
> Can you say "great balls of fire"?
oh yeah, in case that we solve the energy problem
before we coulda blow hole mars in pieces, what a
great firework would this be.
>I hope you didn't mean the above. Imagine the
>cost of transporting it
was not really serious
But imagine the cost of having no fuel anymore
and no real alternative for it!!!!!!!!!
those number coulda make you freak out
Re:If it's fuel you want, burn H2 from Jupiter. (Score:1)
Jupiter is virtually a ball of hydrogen. There should be fuel a plenty to burn.
but also a little bit farer away....
But a ball of H2!!!!!!!!!!
Jesus, and I thought a Methanized Mars would be
a great firework!!!!!!!
Mars may be a nice place to visit. . . (Score:1)
can you imagine how hard it would be just to get something like fresh fruit?
I'll stay here on Earth, thank you.
If we can contimplate adjusting Mars' climate, we can contimplate fixing Earth's broken climate too.
Something I think that is a bit more worthwhile.
"The number of suckers born each minute doubles every 18 months."
-jafac's law
Re:BOYCOTT MSNBC (Score:1)
Then, he won't have to worry about Linux anymore.
"The number of suckers born each minute doubles every 18 months."
-jafac's law
Re:Terraforming (Score:1)
The answer to the question is probably: yes. There's a lot of stuff in the universe, and only a little bit of life. Life is a good thing; spreading it to another planet is too.
--
Radiation? (Score:2)
--
NASA Martian Experiments (Score:3)
I hope someone from NASA reads Slashdot and can comment on this. Hopefully, an engineer inside NASA's organization has already thought of this. I can't see why it would be that difficult.
Re:Radiation? (Score:1)
CP
anonymous scoring? (Score:1)
I personally think this post deserved a score...but I didn't think anon posts were even allowed to get a score.
<tim<
Quote (Score:1)
That sentence just looks and sounds hillarious.
In any case, what would the time frame be for methane producing microbes to actually impact the atmosphere on mars? I have to imagine we are talking about thousands (maybe more) of years.
What we really need is a nitrogen-eating oxygen producing microbe.
PS: It's too bad these things dont eat methane. I could use some in my girlfriends restroom. ;-)
Re:Oxygen-hating? (Score:2)
and is it really possible? (Score:1)
The oceans of the Earth absorb an amazing amount of CO2 from the atmosphere. In the water that CO2 reacts with the water to form carbonates, which settle on the ocean floor. The carbonates are recycled back into CO2, back into the atmosphere by underwater volcanos along the Atlantic and Pacific ocean ridges. The amount of CO2 that is put back into the atmosphere that way is exactly the same as the amount of CO2 that is absorbed by the oceans.
A very delicate balance, that didn't, doesn't, and never will exist on Mars. When Mars was young it was probably quite similar to the Earth. Nice and warm. Life might have, and probably did, begin. But the oceans sucked in the CO2, the carbonates settled on the ocean floor, and there were no plate tectonics, no volcanos to recycle those carbonates back into CO2, back into the atmosphere. Slowly but steadily Mars ran out of CO2, the temperatures dropped because the main greenhouse gas was gone, and the planet froze.
Now what would happen if we terraformed Mars? There'd be liquid oceans again. And again the same problem would arise. CO2 would be absorbed into those oceans, carbonates would settle on the ocean floor, and eventually Mars would again freeze up. Sure, then you could terraform again, or you could introduce other greenhouse gasses to keep Mars' temperature elevated, but eventually you wouldn't be able to keep up.
The balance on Earth is so delicate that even a small change can screw up the climates all around the globe. Mars is completely different, it'll have a completely different balance.
Venus, Terra and Mars all started alike. Venus' greenhouse effect got completely out of control and the planet heated up, probably even before life could form. Mars' greenhouse effect screwed up aswell, and the planet froze up before any complex life could form. Terra is right inbetween. A delicate balance that becomes upset after only minute changes. A delicate balance that imho is doomed to fail if attempted on any other planet.
Terraforming mars is nice stuff for fiction, but I'm convinced it will never happen. And if it does, it probably won't last for more than a few hundred or maybe a few thousand years.
)O(
the Gods have a sense of humor,
Re:and is it really possible? (Score:1)
And yes, terraforming Mars will be a long, slow and boring process
)O(
the Gods have a sense of humor,
Re:and is it really possible? (Score:1)
What caused Venus' greenhouse effect to topple is probably the high solar radiation. But what caused Mars' greenhouse effect to topple the other way is not as much the low solar radiation, but more the lack of plate tectonics.
)O(
the Gods have a sense of humor,
Re:and is it really possible? (Score:1)
I hadn't thought of that... It is indeed a possibility, though horribly expensive. But, since terraforming Mars will take hundreds of years to complete with whatever method you use, there'll probably be effective ways to mine the sea bed by then.
My big caveat isn't the fact that terraforming a planet is horrifically expensive, more that it takes horrifically long. Many generations would pass before the project is finished. I still have to find the first person who is willing to pay billions and billions of dollars so his great great great great grandchildren can move to Mars.
)O(
the Gods have a sense of humor,
now THAT is interesting... (Score:1)
I had never heard of that... anybody know any online sources on terraforming Venus? Venus is indeed only a fraction smaller than the Earth, so if it could be terraformed, it would be a perfect Terra II. And Venus is closer than Mars too... Strange that something so obvious is completely overlooked due to the Mars Craze...
)O(
the Gods have a sense of humor,
Re:Radiation? (Score:3)
But then again, in the place that is the most inhospitable to human life here on Earth, in the depths of the oceans, there is life, completely independent from the sun. Actually I think the chance of finding life on Europa are larger than the chance of finding life on Mars. Mars' climate is unlike that anywhere on earth. Below Europa's icey surface are liquid oceans, melted by its volcanos; an environment quite similar to the depths of the Earth's oceans; an environment quite similar to the environment many scientists believe spawned the first life on Earth.
)O(
the Gods have a sense of humor,
Idea! (Score:1)
Seed the universe with life. Lets say intelligent life evolved somewhere (not necessarily Earth). They get lonely. Being the patient species that they are, the figure that they only way to get some company is to make some.
So: They load up a few zillion asteriods with a variety of different microbes, each type tailored to survive in a particular environment. Having sc attered these asteroids throughout the known universe, they sit back and wait for something "interesting" to evolve (say a billion years, give or take).
The universe isn't so lonely any more.
Controversy? (Score:1)
"Penicillin must be stopped. End the killing now!"
Genetic modification is a different matter, but I think you get the idea.
been reading your Arthur C. Clarke (Score:1)
"All these worlds are yours, except Europa. Attempt no landings there."
Life on Europa, as intriguing as it seems, hasn't been around long and won't be around longer. Almost all the heat out there is caused by volcanic activity on the moon; as its not very big, chances are that heat won't last very long.
burning? not likely (Score:1)
It's the same reason why Jupiter (a big ball of hydrogen (and some other gasses) with tremendous electrical storms beneath the "surface") hasn't exploded lately. H2 combines swell with 02, but if there's no 02 around, no fire.
Re:NASA Martian Experiments (Score:1)
Re:How cold? (Score:1)
Christopher A. Bohn
Re:Quote (Score:1)
But not to release it into the atmosphere -- this idea is to produce rocket fuel from indigineous resources ("live off the land") and store it for use by a return-sample mission that will arrive two years later.
Christopher A. Bohn
NASA sending microbes: unlikely (Score:1)
Having said that, I think that it's very unlikely that NASA will send any microbes to Mars. To quote David Dubov concerning the Mars Pathfinder [nasa.gov]:
One giant display of fireworks (Score:1)
--
Aliens III - The Microbe Empire counterattacks (Score:1)
Now it is thinking on making a missionary mission. With microbes. Ok don't forget to send the Bible with them.
Lyrics...
Maybe NASA should have always take for serious its own "case for the Face". At least it would have got a loot of publicity. Or search for li'll green men. Then it would never quit newspapers last page.
Yeap it is time for NASA to turn into a masonic house. Every night a session of shamanism... Hoagland will not loose his job for the next 100 years...
PS: One of you guys was talking about the "lack" of plate tectonics in Mars. Mars had them. There are several relicts of it in Mars. Recently NASA
added some fire to this on publishing the results of Surveyor's geomagnetic data. Do not get surprised by this positive note on NASA. That thing is not an organisation. It is a battlefield. Unfortunately the dodos are on some of the tops of it...
How cold? (Score:1)
BTW, imagine a Beowulf cluster of Martian methanogens. Sorry.
Re:and is it really possible? (Score:2)
There's always the Brute Force and Ignorance approach: Mine the limestone back off the ocean floor and break it down into calcium oxide and carbon dioxide again. This would take a fair amount of industry, but if we have the wherewithal to terraform a _planet_, this should be do-able (if we want to).
The last is a big caveat. Terraforming will be horriffically expensive. Either we'd need an extremely good reason to terraform, or the cost would have to drop a *lot* before we would do so.
Re:Oxygen-hating? (Score:1)
Re:Terraforming (Score:1)
Maybe we could just colonize the planet using domes and other resource conservation techniques and have an outpost for a good long time.
Just call me an interplanetary tree hugger!
"Earth First..." (Score:1)
Greenhouse effect? (Score:1)
If it has a warming effect, would it (eventually) rise enough to thaw any liquid water near the surface?
Doh! (Re:Greenhouse effect?) (Score:1)
Efficiency Of Solar Energy (Score:1)
Re:been reading your Arthur C. Clarke (Score:3)
The heat that could keep the system going would, indeed, be caused by vulcanism. However, it is doubtful that that volcanic activity will ever cease. Consider that Europa is probably about the same age as the Earth, and is at least hypothetically volcanically active. This volcanic activity would be caused by the gravitational forces of Jupiter and the other moons, and isn't likely to change (unless something rather drastic happens in the vicinity of Jupiter).
Io, another of Jupiter's moons, is visibly volcanically active (probably the most active body in the whole solar system). It is and will remain very hot because of the gravitation of Jupiter.
So, if Europa is currently volcanically active (a likely hypothesis, given the gravitational oomph of Jupiter), and has a big bunch of water ice (we believe we've observed this), and has liquid water beneath an icy crust (another likely hypothesis, given the heat that must be at the core of that little moon), then assuming that some kind of life could have organized itself there, and could have evolved to the point where it can survive in the water (which must be quite toxic, at least by our standards, by now, though what is garbage to us might well be rich nutrition to some little beasties on Europa), then it's a good possibility that life exists there to this day.
--Corey
You're not *that* far from home! (Score:1)
Actually, you're not that far from Mars. It might take light a second or two to get from here to Mars. In stellar circles, that's just blinking.
Just trying to keep things in perspective. :)
jaz
Chemists weigh in. (Score:2)
Here's my dad's response, pretty much verbatim. Enjoy knowing the truth, ya'll.
jaz Beez,
(Arrgh...) There were only a few howlers in that Mars story. A major one, though, is the suggestion that bacterial methane might "power" a Mars colony in an atmosphere that contains "no" oxygen. (Whatcha gonna burn it with?) Actually the martian atmosphere doesn't have "no" oxygen, but it's a little scarce: something like 0.1% if I remember right, which is actually enough for a pretty high redox potential, but not a good bet as a fuel burner. Also, in spite of the subhead, the bugs don't "make hydrogen and nitrogen" - which requires Big Bang/ stellar core conditions respectively - nor could they possibly "use hydrogen and nitrogen to make methane" without the intervention of alchemy.
I'd be more impressed about the "martian conditions" if their petrie dishes had been bathed in UV and whiffed with ozone, hydrogen peroxide, and OH radicals like actual martian soil (that's why it has no organics left) and held at 200 - 250 K temperatures.
Finally, they're going to have trouble with that methane-powered rocket back to Earth without an oxidizer. Of course, they could use (faint) solar power to make oxygen out of (scarce) water, - but then why not just use the hydrogen from that as fuel instead of methane?
All of which is not to say that I don't love the breakthrough news. But you gotta watch that MSNBC. Would you trust them for news of a new PC virus?
Love -
Dad
Re:Terraforming (Score:1)
Skeptical (Score:1)
Scientific American [scientificamerican.com] has some information on this.
-Ben Shniper
Re:and is it really possible? (Score:1)
So you find, breed, or genetically engineer organisms that convert the carbonates back into CO2, and set it loose on the bottom of your oceans.
--
This makes me so mad (Score:3)
Oh, wait.... Microbes.... I thought it said "Microsoft".
Never mind.
Re:Terraforming (Score:1)
but if there was life on Mars, and we can't survive in that environment, would we want to?
Terraforming (Score:2)
This idea isn't too new. Like many things that have since happened (such as Arthur C Clarke's prophecy of a network of satellites), I'm sure this terraforming of Mars will happen in the future.
Now the question is: Do we really want to terraform Mars ?
Re:anonymous scoring? (Score:1)
Although I could be mistaken.
Oh right cuz we're too oil dependent to use solar (Score:1)
Re:Nitrogen + Hydrogen != Methane (Score:1)
Exobiology (Score:3)
He is really not trying to say anything special about this experiment; his happens to be a field which excites the imagination and draws popular attention. As such, I think that many of the quotes he has are the result of a request to speculate...
Anyway, his experiment was simply to grow microorganisms in a fairly hostile environment which approximates many of the things that we know about current conditions on Mars. He used volcanic ash which is believed to resemble Martian soil. No temperature or pressure differences were attempted in the first run because little is known about below Mars below the surface. Indeed, the surface is too cold for liquid water (apparently around -200C) and higher temperatures must be assumed if life (as we currently understand it) currently exists on Mars. There are plans for a range of growth conditions which include harsher temperatures and pressures (as far as I know, no one has been able to grow microbes in the experimental conditions, let alone less hospitable ones).
As far as radiation goes, both ionizing and non-ionizing forms are incident on the surface of Mars. However, at subsurface depths there is little reason to think that the intensities will remain the same, especially for non-ionizing (such as UV) forms. Since this is the environment which is to be modeled, radiation was ignored.
Questions about nitrogen appear to stem from a misunderstanding, perhaps, of the metabolism of Archaebacteria. These bacteria are believed by many to be ancestral to the more accessible bacteria which abound on earth and in textbooks. Methanogens, from a very basic understanding that I have, can use a variety of molecules to provide the reducing power necessary to produce biologically accessible forms of energy and, as a result, biologically useful molecules. I know
that NO3 is used but am less sure about pure nitrogen. I am not sure that the researchers themselves know the specific nitrogen source the microbes utilized, but it is believed that the nitrogen content of the experimental medium was ~1%, less than the 3% believed to be present in the Martian atmosphere. In any event, the microbes do not tolerate oxygen (it forms radicals which the cell cannot handle) and it is thought that, esp. given the low level of atmospheric oxygen, subsurface levels of O2 would be conducive to cell growth.
Finally, as to previous proof of life on Mars (esp. the ALH001 meteorite), recent research has cast doubt on Zare, et. al's hypotheses. In fact, this past year Dr. Kral coauthored a paper which suggested that similar chemical patterns could be identified on rocks taken from the moon. Because the moon is such an unlikely candidate for life, the meteorite evidence shouldn't stand on its own as proof of life anywhere.
This all just goes to say that no one will really know anything for certain about life on Mars until some redneck terraformer comes down with a cold...
Sources for this post come from the university press release:
http://PIGTRAIL.UARK.EDU/NEWS/june99/ mars_life.html [uark.edu]
Sears D. W. G. and Kral T. A. (1998) Martian "microfossils" in lunar meteorites? Meteoritics and Planetary Science 33, 791-794,
and correspondence with members of the research group. All information presented herein represent the (somewhat poor) understanding of an
unrelated party (me!) and do not represent the actual researchers' beliefs or opinions.
Invicta{HOG}
Re:and is it really possible? (Score:1)
Re:Terraforming (Score:1)
Great Series. I bought it as a set and killed about 3 weeks of vacation time last summer.
Oxygen-hating? (Score:1)
I think it makes it sound as if the Red Planet is even more hostile to complex life than we imagine. Still, if microbes are able to thrive there, it doesn't mean they have.
"There is no surer way to ruin a good discussion than to contaminate it with the facts."
Re:Radiation? (Score:3)
Another important thing to think about (and I hope that people don't draw this conclusion) is that just because we've found something that could _conceiveably_ survive on Mars, it doesn't mean that it or anything like it ever did. I only mention this because the header of the
Have we *already* sent our microbes? (Score:1)
Not a Good Thing.
I'm wholly unburdened with technical knowledge in the area, but I suspect we know less than we think...first, do no harm.
Life on Mars (Score:1)
Everyone thinks we tried to copy the conditions on the surface of Mars, But life can grow underground. On Earth there was a discovery a few years back that bacteris existed in granite aquifers two miles below the surface. So if Mars is like earth and there is liquid water underground, then there,theoretically, could be life. Water is the key, and according to our results not that much water only about 0.5 ml per 5g of soil. Radiation would not be a factor since the organisms would be subterranian. Also methanogens use Hydrogen and Carbon Dioxide to make methane, this is it's chemoautotrophic mechanism to make energy. Nitrogen would be used to make amino acids and other compounds.
The atmosphere of Mars is about 1/100th of that on earth, it is composed of CO2, N2, and CO. Some archea bacteria can exist only on CO and water. Also again subterranian water could have dissovled gases, such as hydrogen from various chemical and/or volcanic sources. As evidence I refer you to the above topic of granite aquifers. Also volcanic plums in deepsea vents harbor bacteria.
So as conditions are now, life cannot exist on the surface of mars, too cold, not enough water, oxidation, radiation, ect. But it could have existed at one point, and it still could exist today under ground.
Any other Questions can be asked to me, my email is cbekkum@comp.uark.edu
Thanks, and i hope i answered at least some of your questions.
Discovery Channel & iron eating microbe (Score:1)
They(Discovery ch.) suggested that this microbe could survive in outerspace with a sufficent supply of iron.
...when the mars probe data came back, there was a very small blurb on an excessive amount of magnetism, I beleive I read magnetite. Next probe needs to test for signs of this microbe. Anybody see a picture of the hugh crater on the other side of Mars??? if this microbe needs a carrier, that sucker would've been large enough.
LIFE ON MARS !!!!!
I'm a Sweet Oxygen-Hating Microbe from... (Score:1)
This isn't such groundbreaking news, NASA have been aware of the existence of microbes on Mars since August 1996 when scientists publically announced that an ancient meteorite that had plunged to Earth from Mars and revealed signs of primitive life. Astronomer Donald Goldsmith published a book detailing microbe findings which were traced from the rock remnants.
Sure we're doing it now and here but we're still literally light years away.
Re:How cold? (Score:1)