The Register® — Biting the hand that feeds IT

Feeds

Martian atmosphere pristine, totally free of fart gas, reports Curiosity

Red world very different from billion-bottomed Earth

Cloud storage: Lower cost and increase uptime

Mars rover Curiosity has taken a whiff of the wind at Rocknest in the Gale Crater - but the Red Planet hasn't been passing the gas the nuclear-powered tank is looking for.

Jersey cow

A common or garden Earth-based methane-producing machine

The rover's Sample Analysis at Mars (SAM) instruments have been sniffing for methane gas because the chemical is a simple precursor to life. On Earth, it's produced by burping and farting cows (also humans), natural gas fields and other things. SAM's preliminary results show little to no methane in the atmosphere after boffins studied the most sensitive measurements they have ever been able to take on the planet.

"Methane is clearly not an abundant gas at the Gale Crater site, if it is there at all. At this point in the mission we're just excited to be searching for it," said SAM Tunable Laser Spectrometer lead Chris Webster. "While we determine upper limits on low values, atmospheric variability in the Martian atmosphere could yet hold surprises for us."

SAM has also discovered the amount of heavier isotopes of carbon in the atmosphere has increased by five per cent compared to estimates of the ratios when Mars was formed. The findings suggest that the top of the planet's atmosphere may have been lost, depleting lighter isotopes, a theory that NASA's Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution (MAVEN) mission will investigate further when it arrives at Mars in 2014.

SAM is set to sniff its first solid sample in the coming weeks as well, searching for organic compounds in the rocks and soil. ®

Customer Success Testimonial: Recovery is Everything

Anonymous Coward

Re: How the hell do they manage to be excited searching for something?

Because they're searching on *Mars* using *nuclear-powered* & *laser-armed* space tank.

27
0

Re: Is there something in the coffee?

Some people enjoy life. You should try it one day before you die.

7
0

Re: Is there something in the coffee?

Life on Mars?

Well, possibly.

There maybe some life on Mars but not before 8PM on a Saturday night and even then it's BYOB, however I have heard that the place is lacking any sort of atmosphere.

3
0

More from The Register

New material enables 1,000-meter super-skyscrapers
Before you read on, see if you can guess how the new stuff will be used
 breaking news
You've seen the Large Hadron Collider. Now comes the HUGE Hadron Collider
International Linear Collider ready to rock and roll
 breaking news
Latest NASA ASTRONAUT class is HALF FEMALE
Newbie 'nauts include lady Marine fighter pilot, male doctor
Boffins find evidence Atlantic Ocean has started closing
'Embryonic subduction zone' that flattened Lisbon headed for Blighty
Google launches broadband balloons, radio astronomy frets
A careless Loon could blind the square kilometre array
Headbangers have a gas, gas, gas in mosh pits
Boffins say heavy metal crowds behave like The Vapours
Hubble spies unlikely planet being born in hostile neighborhood
Hoovering a cloud of sand 7.5 billion miles from a tiny star
 breaking news
Jaguar to open new car-making factory in Blighty (virtually)
Britain still makes stuff, it's just not real any more...
 breaking news
Spin doctors brazenly fiddle with tiny bits in front of the neighbours
Quantum computer address bus just nanometres wide
 breaking news
China's second woman 'naut blasts off for coupling in HEAVEN
Wang and pals test the cosmic waters for Chinese space station