Mashable 2024年11月20日
NASA's Curiosity rover heads to new puzzling Martian destination
index_new5.html
../../../zaker_core/zaker_tpl_static/wap/tpl_guoji1.html

 

NASA的好奇号火星探测器在火星上发现了一个名为“箱形构造”的独特地貌,它可能是在远古时期由温暖的地下水形成的。科学家推测,这种地貌可能曾经存在过单细胞微生物,因为类似的环境可能孕育了早期地球的微生物。好奇号还意外发现了纯硫晶体,这在火星上比较罕见,通常与火山气体或温泉有关,也可能与细菌有关。科学家计划在未来几个月内带领好奇号前往该区域进行探索,希望揭开火星古代历史的秘密,并寻找生命存在的迹象。

🤔好奇号火星探测器在盖迪兹峡谷发现了纯硫晶体,这在地球上通常与火山气体、温泉或细菌有关,而好奇号所在位置附近并没有火山,因此纯硫的出现令人费解。

🔍好奇号的下一个探索目标是位于夏普山山脚下的“箱形构造”区域,该区域从火星侦察轨道器拍摄的图像来看,像是一个绵延数英里的脊状网络,其形成可能与远古时期水流中的矿物质沉积有关。

💧科学家认为,“箱形构造”的形成可能与火星上最后的水流有关,这些水流渗入岩石裂缝并硬化,随着岩石风化,这些矿物质保留下来,形成了独特的“箱形构造”地貌。

🦠科学家推测,在“箱形构造”形成的环境中,可能存在过古代微生物,因为早期地球的微生物也可能在类似的环境中生存。

🌍地球上也存在“箱形构造”,但通常出现在悬崖和洞穴中,而火星上的“箱形构造”规模巨大,覆盖面积达6到12英里,其形成原因和规模都令人好奇。

After a year of exploring a mysterious valley on Mars, NASA's intrepid Curiosity rover is headed to a new destination with its own intrigue. 

The Mini Cooper-sized robotic lab will study an unusual landscape, called a "boxwork," that likely necessitated warm groundwater to form eons ago on the Red Planet. And where there's water, there's potential for life — at least the kind scientists know about. Researchers wonder if the boxwork could have hosted ancient single-celled microorganisms.

"Early Earth microbes could have survived in a similar environment," said Kirsten Siebach, a rover scientist based in Houston, in a statement. "That makes this an exciting place to explore."

Since the mission launched in 2011, Curiosity has traveled about 372 million miles: some 352 million whizzing through space and another 20 rumbling over the Martian terrain. 

At its most recent site, known as Gediz Vallis, the rover literally stumbled upon pure sulfur, its wheels crushing the material to expose a bed of yellow crystals. It turns out there was a whole beach-like field of these rocks. Curiosity is surrounded by plenty of rubble that contains sulfur combined with other materials, but unadulterated sulfur is something special.

When pure sulfur is made naturally on Earth, the element is usually associated with superheated volcanic gasses and hot springs. Another way it can form is through interactions with bacteria — a.k.a. life.

The Curiosity rover stumbled upon pure sulfur, its wheels crushing the material to expose a bed of yellow crystals. Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / MSSS

"We don't think we're anywhere near a volcano where the rover is," Abigail Fraeman, deputy project scientist on the Curiosity mission, told Mashable in September, "so that is a puzzling feature to find in this particular location." 

The next leg of the rover's journey will take a few months to drive. But scientists are eager to investigate the boxwork region at the foot of Mount Sharp because of what clues it could hold about Mars' ancient history. 

From Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter images, the land feature looks like a spiderweb of ridges, spanning several miles. Dark sand fills the hollowed spaces among the lattice of ridges.

Before departing for the boxwork region, Curiosity takes a wide-view image of the field of sulfur stones, which appear white on the outside. Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / MSSS

There are several kinds of landscapes on Mars that appear as interconnected ridges, though they're not all created in the same way. Near the Red Planet's south pole, for instance, is a labyrinthine feature nicknamed "Inca City," which may have formed after a meteor impact. The collision could have led to fault lines in the ground that were then backfilled with bubbling magma.

"Early Earth microbes could have survived in a similar environment."

Scientists believe this particular boxwork in Mount Sharp's foothills may have formed when minerals in the last trickles of water seeped into surface rock cracks and hardened. As the rocks weathered over the ages, minerals that had cemented into those fractures remained, leaving behind the boxwork. 

A boxwork has formed on the ceiling of the Elk's Room, part of Wind Cave National Park in South Dakota. Credit: National Park Service / Kim Acker

Boxwork formations occur on Earth, but they're usually made with groundwater on cliffsides and in caves. The peculiar thing about the example at Mount Sharp is that it must have formed when water was vanishing. Geologists also aren't sure why this Martian feature is so vast, covering an area of six to 12 miles. 

The rover team hopes to figure out whether microbes could have lived in that environment long ago. 

"These ridges will include minerals that crystallized underground, where it would have been warmer, with salty liquid water flowing through," Siebach said.

Fish AI Reader

Fish AI Reader

AI辅助创作,多种专业模板,深度分析,高质量内容生成。从观点提取到深度思考,FishAI为您提供全方位的创作支持。新版本引入自定义参数,让您的创作更加个性化和精准。

FishAI

FishAI

鱼阅,AI 时代的下一个智能信息助手,助你摆脱信息焦虑

联系邮箱 441953276@qq.com

相关标签

好奇号 火星 箱形构造 微生物
相关文章