Sunday, March 30 2025 01:00 AEST

Miniature Lasers Could Be The Next Tool Sent To Mars To Find Evidence Of Life In Rocks

Scientists have successfully used lasers to identify microbe fossils in rocks from Earth, which are like the rocks found on Mars, opening up the possibility of searching for fossils on the Red Planet.

Billions of years ago, the water on Mars dried up. Gypsum and other sulfates formed when pools evaporated, leaving behind minerals that precipitated out of the water – and potentially fossilizing any organic life left behind. This means that if microbes such as bacteria lived there, traces of their presence could be preserved as fossils.

But to identify these microbial fossils we first need to prove we can identify similar fossils in places where we know such microbes existed — such as Mediterranean gypsum formations that developed during the Messinian Salinity Crisis – the event that occurred when the Mediterranean Sea was cut off from the Atlantic Ocean, leading to rapid evaporation, causing the sea to become hypersaline and depositing thick layers of evaporites, including gypsum.

The scientists selected an instrument that could be used on a spaceflight: a miniature laser-powered mass spectrometer, which can analyse the chemical composition of a sample in detail as fine as a micrometer. Using strict criteria, they were able to identify and distinguish between carbonaceous material, the elements of life, and minerals like clay and dolomite.

https://youtube.com/shorts/O3N2VIUNUHg

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