Astronomy - February 2014

(John Hannent) #1
WWW.ASTRONOMY.COM 13

Despite previous reports that the martian
atmosphere was home to methane, NASA’s
Curiosity rover failed to detect such mole-
cules. The chemical, composed of four
hydrogen atoms and one carbon atom, is of
special interest to scientists because metab-
olizing microbes sometimes produce it.
Although not slam-dunk evidence, the pres-
ence of methane could have hinted at life on
the Red Planet.
Curiosity sampled Mars’ atmosphere six
times between October 2012 and June 2013,
and analysis revealed that if methane is
there, it must be less than 1.3 parts per bil-
lion. Other missions — either in orbit around
Earth or Mars — had reported pockets of up
to 45 parts per billion, but Curiosity is newer,
more sensitive, and on the ground. Its
results, therefore, trump others’ prior work.
This result, published in the October 18
issue of Science, does not quite put a nail in
the microbes’ coffin. “It reduces the probabil-
ity of current methane-producing martian
microbes,” says Michael Meyer, NASA’s lead
scientist for Mars exploration, “but this
addresses only one type of microbial metab-
olism. As we know, there are many types of
terrestrial microbes that don’t generate
methane.” — S. S.

QUICK TAKES


MAVEN TO MARS
NASA’s Mars Atmosphere and
Volatile Evolution (MAVEN)
spacecraft launched Novem-
ber 18 at 1:28 P.M. EST.
t
LIGHT TANTRUM
An October Astronomy &
Astrophysics paper describes
X-ray observations of gas
clouds 30 to 100 light-years
from the Milky Way’s super-
massive black hole, which
suggest the region became a
million times brighter during
outbursts in the past few
hundred years.
t
JOVIAN JOURNEY
NASA’s Juno spacecraft
entered safe mode October
9 as it flew by Earth for a
gravity boost on its way to
Jupiter. Two days later, the
craft was fully operational
and all systems functional.
t
IN MEMORIAM
George H. Herbig, known for
his important research on
star formation, died October
12 at the age of 93.
t
COMET PIECE
A black pebble found years
ago in the Sahara is a frag-
ment of a comet nucleus
that exploded in Earth’s
atmosphere some 28 million
years ago, say scientists in
the November 15 Earth and
Planetary Science Letters.
t
FAST WORLDS
Researchers found six likely
exoplanets that orbit their
stars in fewer than 12 hours.
They presented their finding
October 8 at the Division for
Planetary Sciences meeting.
t
CLOUD CHAMBER
A study in the September
issue of the Journal of Geo-
physical Research: Planets
describes how scientists re-
created Mars-like tempera-
ture and humidity conditions
and found that martian
clouds required 190 percent
of the chamber’s relative
humidity to form.
t
HOT STUFF
Astronomers discovered an
unexpected cloud of glow-
ing hot “ionized” hydrogen
gas around the red supergi-
ant star W26. They published
their finding online October
16 in the Monthly Notices of
the Royal Astronomical Soci-
ety Letters. — Liz Kruesi

Curiosity smells no


methane on Mars


While studying the debris disks around
stellar remnant white dwarfs, astrono-
mers came across two ingredients
for habitable worlds no scientist had
previously found together: water and
a rocky surface. What they uncov-
ered was the shattered remains of an

asteroid composed of 26 percent water
by mass that likely was once at least 55
miles (90 kilometers) in diameter. The
scientists report their findings in the
October 11 issue of Science.
White dwarfs provide an excellent
laboratory for studying the composition

of the building blocks of solar systems
beyond our own. The only way to see
what distant planets or asteroids are
made of is to break them apart, and
a white dwarf ’s extreme gravitational
pull on nearby worlds does just that.
In the case of the white dwarf GD 61,
its shredding revealed that parts of its
planetary system survived its transition
from a star somewhat larger than the
Sun, and this debris had water amounts
similar to those found on Ceres, the
largest asteroid in our solar system.
“This planetary graveyard swirling
around the embers of its parent star
is a rich source of information about
its former life,” says co-author Boris
Gänsicke of the University of Warwick.
“In these remnants lie chemical clues
which point towards a previous exis-
tence as a water-rich terrestrial body.”
Adds lead author Jay Farihi of the
University of Cambridge’s Institute of
Astronomy: “The finding of water in
a large asteroid means the building
blocks of habitable planets existed
— and may still exist — in the GD 61
system and likely also around a sub-
stantial number of similar parent stars.”
— Karri Ferron

Water found in exoplanet remnants


Null result. The Curiosity rover, which has been on Mars for more than a year,
failed to detect methane, a chemical that could have been a sign of microbial life.

Water-rich remNaNts. Scientists have discovered the remnants of a rocky, water-rich
asteroid that was torn apart by the strong gravity of its white dwarf parent star, as this illus-
tration portrays. MARk A. GARliCk (SPACE-ART.CO.uk)/uNiV. Of WARWiCk/uNiV. Of CAMbRiDGE

NASA/JPl-CAlTECH/MAliN SPACE SCiENCE SySTEMS

Curiosity’s older sibling, the Oppor-
tunity rover, has been exploring the
Red Planet for a decade.

FAST


FACT

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