快猫短视频

Dig for life on Mars

NASA's mole will smash its way down until it finds water

FIND liquid water on Mars, and life may not be far behind. Many scientists
believe that this water can only exist thousands of metres beneath the planet鈥檚
surface. So a team of engineers at NASA鈥檚 Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena,
California, is developing a robotic mole that can drill deep into Mars and
return samples to the surface through a tube that it constructs as it digs.

JPL鈥檚 Martian mole moves through the ground like a piledriver, repeatedly
raising an internal weight and then hammering it into the ground. On Mars it
will be wired up to a set of solar panels on the surface that provide only
enough power to illuminate a few light bulbs. So the designers had to make a
machine that could penetrate the ground using only this meagre power.

The design JPL came up with has a hammer head that spins at up to 20 000
revolutions per minute before engaging a central thread that drives it into the
ground. This delivers roughly twice the force of a sledgehammer blow on Earth,
and enables the mole to burrow at up to 10 metres per day.

As it digs, the mole extrudes a tiny tube containing two passageways which
provide a link to the surface and back. Liquid xenon circulating through these
tubes will carry samples that can be sieved and analysed on the surface.

One possible target for the mission is a potential aquifer that many
scientists believe may exist about 5 kilometres down near the Martian equator,
says Brian Wilcox, the project leader. Another option is to aim for one of the
planet鈥檚 polar ice caps and study Mars鈥檚 climate history over the past few
million years by examining ice samples.

The group has already built a prototype of the hammer mechanism and is now
planning the tube extruder. In 2002, Wilcox plans to test the complete system in
the Alaskan permafrost. He says his team could be ready to tackle Mars within a
decade.

鈥淒rilling may well be the only way we can get to places that have a chance of
having life on Mars today,鈥 says Michael Carr, a geologist at the US Geological
Survey who is reviewing NASA鈥檚 Mars programme.

More from 快猫短视频

Explore the latest news, articles and features