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Mars Methane Mystery May be Starting to Clear Up

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Mars Methane Mystery May be Starting to Clear Up

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Some aspects of the Mars methane mystery are starting to clear up.

Since landing inside the Red Planet’s Gale Crater in 2012, NASA’s Curiosity rover has repeatedly detected methane — a background level of less than 0.5 parts per billion (ppb) molecules of air, with some puzzling surges up to 20 ppb.

Those measurements, made with the Tunable Laser Spectrometer (TLS) instrument in Curiosity’s Sample Analysis at Mars (SAM) chemistry lab, are intriguing to astrobiologists, because methane is a possible biosignature gas. The vast majority of methane in Earth’s air, after all, is generated by microbes.

The gas can also be produced abiotically, however — via the interaction of hot water with certain types of rock, for example — so scientists still aren’t sure where the Martian methane is coming from. And there has been an additional complication in their interpretation of the TLS data as well.

That complication is the non-detection of methane higher up in the atmosphere by the European Space Agency’s Trace Gas Orbiter (TGO), part of the European-Russian ExoMars exploration program. As its name suggests, TGO was designed to sniff out low-abundance gases, methane chief among them.

“When the Trace Gas Orbiter came on board in 2016, I was fully expecting the orbiter team to report that there’s a small amount of methane everywhere on Mars,” TLS lead scientist Chris Webster, who’s based at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California, said in a statement. “But when the European team announced that it saw no methane, I was definitely shocked.”

In 2019, researchers led by Curiosity team member John E. Moores, a planetary scientist at York University in Toronto, proposed a possible answer.

Because TLS is such a power-hungry instrument, Curiosity makes its methane measurements at night, when most of the rover’s other science gear is dormant. But TGO needs sunlight to spot methane and therefore does its sniffing during the day. Perhaps that difference is the key variable, Moores and his colleagues suggested in their 2019 study: Maybe methane seeps out of Gale’s floor at night, building up to levels detectable by Curiosity, but is diluted so much during the day by atmospheric mixing that TGO cannot pick it up.