Searching For Martian Life In All The Right Places
Despite the fact that the red planet’s soil may be toxic towards life, scientists intend upon sending a robot towards the northern pole of Mars.
(MSNBC) Scientists are scrambling to find an alternative landing site for a long-armed robot set to launch this summer on a mission to dig into Mars’ icy north pole to search for signs of primitive life. [...]
Scientists scouring images of the Martian arctic have narrowed options down to three possible candidates for where the spacecraft can safely touch down. They have until March to choose a destination.
The three sites are clustered around the north pole, which is believed to have a huge amount of ice just below the surface. A site dubbed Green Valley is located within a shallow valley and looks the most secure, Smith said.
It is doubtful that this robot will discover anything within a few yards beneath the surface as the soil has taken a serious beating from cosmic radiation (enough to kill life as we know it).
However this robot’s little adventure in the north should provide a useful map of icy ponds, which will be quite useful when pondering where to set up shop on this distant world.
