NASA's Mars curiosity rover finds 'tenfold spike' in methane, organic chemicals on 'Red planet'

NASA's Mars curiosity rover has found tenfold spike in methane in the Martian atmosphere and other organic chemicals in the red planet's soil, it has been reported.

It has measured methane, an organic chemical, in the atmosphere around it and detected other organic molecules in a rock-powder sample collected by the robotic laboratory's drill.
Sushil Atreya of the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, a member of the Curiosity rover science team, said that this temporary increase in methane, sharply up and then back down, suggested that there must be some relatively localized source and there are many possible sources, biological or non-biological, such as interaction of water and rock.
Curiosity also detected different Martian organic chemicals in powder drilled from a rock dubbed Cumberland, the first definitive detection of organics in surface materials of Mars. These Martian organics could either have formed on Mars or been delivered to Mars by meteorites.
Organic molecules, which contain carbon and usually hydrogen, are chemical building blocks of life, although they could exist without the presence of life. Curiosity's findings from analyzing samples of atmosphere and rock powder do not reveal whether Mars has ever harbored living microbes, but the findings do shed light on a chemically active modern Mars and on favorable conditions for life on ancient Mars.
Researchers also reported that Curiosity's taste of Martian water, bound into lakebed minerals in the Cumberland rock more than three billion years ago, indicates the planet lost much of its water before that lakebed formed and continued to lose large amounts after.

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