homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Mars bite tastes like Earth - soil similar to Hawaii

After Curiosity had a bite of Martian turf at the site of Rocknest a few days earlier, soil analysis results have finally come in. According to scientists at NASA, the Martian sand in the rover’s vicinity is very much akin to volcanic soils found on Earth such as those of  Hawaii. Though Mars is far from being […]

Tibi Puiu
October 31, 2012 @ 4:26 am

share Share

The Martian sand collected by the Curiosity rover turns out to be similar to volcanic soil on Hawaii, NASA scientists say. (c) AP

The Martian sand collected by the Curiosity rover turns out to be similar to volcanic soil on Hawaii, NASA scientists say. (c) AP

After Curiosity had a bite of Martian turf at the site of Rocknest a few days earlier, soil analysis results have finally come in. According to scientists at NASA, the Martian sand in the rover’s vicinity is very much akin to volcanic soils found on Earth such as those of  Hawaii. Though Mars is far from being a resort itself.

The findings follow a slew of premiering successes from Curiosity, as the high-tech lab on wheels recently performed for the first time analysis using the alpha particle X-ray spectrometer at the end of its arm, and shot the ChemCam laser on its mast at spots up to 23 feet away to analyze the rock it vaporizes. The next instrument in lined was  its chemistry and mineralogy module, known as CheMin, which bombards soil samples with X-rays to reveal their mineral composition and abundance.

Like I said, Curiosity successfully trialed other instruments on-board in the past few weeks, some of which also offered detailed elemental analysis. But knowing what atoms and molecules make up a sample is far from being enough, since the manner in which they are arranged counts just as much. Take carbon for instance, the most famous allotrope; it can occur as graphite, a very soft material typically used in pencils, or diamond, one of the hardest materials known to man. So you see while the chemical mark-up is the same, the way the carbon atoms are connected with one another makes all the difference in the world.

The instrument, called CheMin, for chemistry and mineralogy, is a marvel of miniaturization. No larger than a shoe box, it fits inside the rover and does the same analytic work as X-ray diffraction instruments the size of refrigerators. After  Curiosity uses a scoop at the end of its arm to collect soil, it carefully positions the tablet sized sample in the CheMin instrument. Before analysis can begin, however, the instruments shooks the sample 2000 times per second to filter out larger grains; the remaining crystals are then bombarded with X-rays in order to revelad their precise atomic structure. This was the first time X-rays from Earth have been deployed on an alien planet.

Roughly half the Martian soil, NASA scientists say, appears to be noncrystalline particles, meaning they’re like obsidian, a form of volcanic glass that the CheMin instrument’s x-rays cannot probe. This will be tasked to other instruments.

The Curiosity Rover main objective in its 2-year mission is that of reaching the Gale Crater’s Mt. Sharp, a 3-mile-high mountain in the middle of the crater whose lower layers may hold clues to whether Mars is capable of sustaining life or not.

share Share

Meet the world's rarest mineral. It was found only once

A single gemstone from Myanmar holds the title of Earth's rarest mineral.

A massive 8.8 earthquake just struck off Russia's coast and it is one of the strongest ever recorded

The earthquake in Kamchatka is the largest worldwide since 2011. Its location has been very seismically active in recent months.

Scientists Analyzed a Dinosaur’s Voice Box. They Found a Chirp, Not a Roar

A new fossil suggests dinosaurs may have sung before birds ever took flight

Humans Built So Many Dams, We’ve Shifted the Planet’s Poles

Massive reservoirs have nudged Earth’s axis by over a meter since 1835.

Our Radar Systems Have Accidentally Turned Earth into a Giant Space Beacon for the Last 75 Years and Scientists Say Aliens Could Be Listening

If aliens have a radio telescope, they already know we exist.

A Sixth Ocean Is Forming as East Africa Splits Apart

In East Africa, tectonic forces are slowly splitting the continent, creating a future ocean basin.

NASA finally figures out what's up with those "Mars spiders"

They're not actual spiders, of course, but rather strange geological features.

Melting Glaciers May Unleash Hundreds of Dormant Volcanoes and Scientists Are Worried

Glacier retreat is triggering more explosive eruptions, with global consequences

Fireball Passes Over Southeastern United States

It’s a bird! It’s a plane! It’s… a bolide!

Paleontologists Discover "Goblin-Like" Predator Hidden in Fossil Collection

A raccoon-sized predator stalked dinosaur nests 76 million years ago.