• Curiosity rover detects long-chain carbon molecules on Mars

    From Pro Plyd@21:1/5 to All on Thu Mar 27 15:31:01 2025
    https://www.science.org/content/article/curiosity-rover-detects-long-chain-carbon-molecules-mars

    NASA’s Curiosity rover has detected what
    could be a chemical relic of long-ago life
    on Mars: long-chain organic molecules. Found
    after painstaking reanalysis of data on a
    sample drilled from a lake that dried up
    billions of years ago, the molecules likely
    derived from fatty acids, a common building
    block of cell membranes on Earth. The finding,
    published today in the Proceedings of the
    National Academy of Sciences, is not a
    definite detection of past life; the fatty
    acids could also have formed without life.
    But it’s another in a series of tantalizing
    hints.

    “This is an amazing result,” says Monica
    Grady, a planetary scientist at the Open
    University who wasn’t involved in the new
    research. If these are “breakdown products
    from carboxylic acids, then we are seeing
    something very exciting indeed.” It also
    suggests Curiosity’s successor,
    Perseverance, will find similar molecules,
    says Jack Mustard, a planetary scientist
    at Brown University. Perseverance is
    collecting samples for an ambitious effort
    to return Mars rocks to labs on Earth,
    where scientists will be able to reach
    more definitive conclusions on the
    molecules’ origins.


    https://www.pnas.org/doi/abs/10.1073/pnas.2420580122
    Long-chain alkanes preserved in a Martian mudstone

    Significance
    Decane, undecane, and dodecane were detected
    in a Martian sample at the tens of pmol level
    and may originate from long-chain carboxylic
    acids. The detection of long-chain alkanes in
    the Sheepbed mudstone is important for
    extending studies of habitability on Mars as
    the Curiosity rover continues to map out
    windows of high preservation potential for
    chemically reduced organic compounds. The
    provenance and distribution of these molecules
    are of high interest in the search for
    potential biosignatures on Mars.

    Abstract
    Organic molecules preserved in ancient Martian
    rocks provide a critical record of the past
    habitability of Mars and could be chemical
    biosignatures. Experiments conducted by the
    Sample Analysis at Mars instrument onboard
    the Curiosity rover have previously reported
    several classes of indigenous chlorinated and
    sulfur-containing organic compounds in Gale
    crater sedimentary rocks, with chemical
    structures of up to six carbons. Here, we
    report the detection of decane (C10H22),
    undecane (C11H24), and dodecane (C12H26) at
    the tens of pmol level, released from the
    Cumberland drilled mudstone sample, using a
    modified SAM analytical procedure optimized
    for the detection of larger organic molecules.
    Laboratory experiments support the hypothesis
    that the alkanes detected were originally
    preserved in the mudstone as long-chain
    carboxylic acids. The origin of these
    molecules remains uncertain, as they could
    be derived from either abiotic or biological
    sources.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Kalkidas@21:1/5 to Pro Plyd on Mon Mar 31 13:57:44 2025
    On 3/27/2025 2:31 PM, Pro Plyd wrote:

    https://www.science.org/content/article/curiosity-rover-detects-long- chain-carbon-molecules-mars

    NASA’s Curiosity rover has detected what
    could be a chemical relic of long-ago life
    on Mars: long-chain organic molecules. Found
    after painstaking reanalysis of data on a
    sample drilled from a lake that dried up
    billions of years ago, the molecules likely
    derived from fatty acids, a common building
    block of cell membranes on Earth. The finding,
    published today in the Proceedings of the
    National Academy of Sciences, is not a
    definite detection of past life; the fatty
    acids could also have formed without life.
    But it’s another in a series of tantalizing
    hints.

    “This is an amazing result,” says Monica
    Grady, a planetary scientist at the Open
    University who wasn’t involved in the new
    research. If these are “breakdown products
    from carboxylic acids, then we are seeing
    something very exciting indeed.” It also
    suggests Curiosity’s successor,
    Perseverance, will find similar molecules,
    says Jack Mustard, a planetary scientist
    at Brown University. Perseverance is
    collecting samples for an ambitious effort
    to return Mars rocks to labs on Earth,
    where scientists will be able to reach
    more definitive conclusions on the
    molecules’ origins.


    https://www.pnas.org/doi/abs/10.1073/pnas.2420580122
    Long-chain alkanes preserved in a Martian mudstone

    Significance
    Decane, undecane, and dodecane were detected
    in a Martian sample at the tens of pmol level
    and may originate from long-chain carboxylic
    acids. The detection of long-chain alkanes in
    the Sheepbed mudstone is important for
    extending studies of habitability on Mars as
    the Curiosity rover continues to map out
    windows of high preservation potential for
    chemically reduced organic compounds. The
    provenance and distribution of these molecules
    are of high interest in the search for
    potential biosignatures on Mars.

    Abstract
    Organic molecules preserved in ancient Martian
    rocks provide a critical record of the past
    habitability of Mars and could be chemical
    biosignatures. Experiments conducted by the
    Sample Analysis at Mars instrument onboard
    the Curiosity rover have previously reported
    several classes of indigenous chlorinated and
    sulfur-containing organic compounds in Gale
    crater sedimentary rocks, with chemical
    structures of up to six carbons. Here, we
    report the detection of decane (C10H22),
    undecane (C11H24), and dodecane (C12H26) at
    the tens of pmol level, released from the
    Cumberland drilled mudstone sample, using a
    modified SAM analytical procedure optimized
    for the detection of larger organic molecules.
    Laboratory experiments support the hypothesis
    that the alkanes detected were originally
    preserved in the mudstone as long-chain
    carboxylic acids. The origin of these
    molecules remains uncertain, as they could
    be derived from either abiotic or biological
    sources.

    LOL. Some scientist ate a chili dog and forgot to wash his hands before
    working on the equipment.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Bob Casanova@21:1/5 to All on Mon Mar 31 17:39:08 2025
    On Mon, 31 Mar 2025 13:57:44 -0700, the following appeared
    in talk.origins, posted by Kalkidas <eat@joes.pub>:

    On 3/27/2025 2:31 PM, Pro Plyd wrote:

    https://www.science.org/content/article/curiosity-rover-detects-long-
    chain-carbon-molecules-mars

    NASAs Curiosity rover has detected what
    could be a chemical relic of long-ago life
    on Mars: long-chain organic molecules. Found
    after painstaking reanalysis of data on a
    sample drilled from a lake that dried up
    billions of years ago, the molecules likely
    derived from fatty acids, a common building
    block of cell membranes on Earth. The finding,
    published today in the Proceedings of the
    National Academy of Sciences, is not a
    definite detection of past life; the fatty
    acids could also have formed without life.
    But its another in a series of tantalizing
    hints.

    This is an amazing result, says Monica
    Grady, a planetary scientist at the Open
    University who wasnt involved in the new
    research. If these are breakdown products
    from carboxylic acids, then we are seeing
    something very exciting indeed. It also
    suggests Curiositys successor,
    Perseverance, will find similar molecules,
    says Jack Mustard, a planetary scientist
    at Brown University. Perseverance is
    collecting samples for an ambitious effort
    to return Mars rocks to labs on Earth,
    where scientists will be able to reach
    more definitive conclusions on the
    molecules origins.


    https://www.pnas.org/doi/abs/10.1073/pnas.2420580122
    Long-chain alkanes preserved in a Martian mudstone

    Significance
    Decane, undecane, and dodecane were detected
    in a Martian sample at the tens of pmol level
    and may originate from long-chain carboxylic
    acids. The detection of long-chain alkanes in
    the Sheepbed mudstone is important for
    extending studies of habitability on Mars as
    the Curiosity rover continues to map out
    windows of high preservation potential for
    chemically reduced organic compounds. The
    provenance and distribution of these molecules
    are of high interest in the search for
    potential biosignatures on Mars.

    Abstract
    Organic molecules preserved in ancient Martian
    rocks provide a critical record of the past
    habitability of Mars and could be chemical
    biosignatures. Experiments conducted by the
    Sample Analysis at Mars instrument onboard
    the Curiosity rover have previously reported
    several classes of indigenous chlorinated and
    sulfur-containing organic compounds in Gale
    crater sedimentary rocks, with chemical
    structures of up to six carbons. Here, we
    report the detection of decane (C10H22),
    undecane (C11H24), and dodecane (C12H26) at
    the tens of pmol level, released from the
    Cumberland drilled mudstone sample, using a
    modified SAM analytical procedure optimized
    for the detection of larger organic molecules.
    Laboratory experiments support the hypothesis
    that the alkanes detected were originally
    preserved in the mudstone as long-chain
    carboxylic acids. The origin of these
    molecules remains uncertain, as they could
    be derived from either abiotic or biological
    sources.

    LOL. Some scientist ate a chili dog and forgot to wash his hands before >working on the equipment.

    Oh, look! The poster child for Idiocy is back!

    --

    Bob C.

    "The most exciting phrase to hear in science,
    the one that heralds new discoveries, is not
    'Eureka!' but 'That's funny...'"

    - Isaac Asimov

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)