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  • NARRATOR: July 20, 1976--

  • NASA's unmanned Viking 1 Orbiter and Lander touches

  • down on the surface of Mars.

  • Three weeks later, it is joined by its companion, the Viking 2.

  • For the first time ever, humanity has established

  • a presence on another planet.

  • The Viking Landers actually landed on Mars

  • and took a sample, but they landed in one spot

  • and they stayed in one spot.

  • We've since sent the Pathfinder Sojourner.

  • For the first time, we have a system on Mars

  • that if we see something shiny over there

  • and we want to go check it out, we'll send the rover

  • and get a very close look at it, take samples, get

  • high definition video from it.

  • And that is a very good start for figuring

  • out where people need to go when we

  • get ready to send them there.

  • NARRATOR: In 2012, the Curiosity Rover

  • landed on Mars' Gale Crater.

  • It was the most ambitious Mars mission flown by NASA today.

  • [cheering]

  • NARRATOR: One if its objectives was to gather data that will

  • help scientists determine what is

  • needed to make the planet more habitable for human

  • exploration.

  • In June 2018, Scientist and Aerospace Engineer Dr.

  • Travis Taylor traveled to Johnson

  • Space Center in Houston, Texas.

  • There he met with NASA Exploration Mission

  • Scientist Dr. Elizabeth Rampe.

  • Dr. Rampe analyzes data obtained by the Mars Curiosity Rover,

  • which six years into its mission,

  • is sending back some of its most extraordinary findings yet.

  • So there was very late breaking news recently

  • from the Curiosity Rover, and some interesting information

  • came out of the Sample Analysis at Mars, or SAM instrument.

  • So SAM can measure gases in the atmosphere.

  • And it can also measure gases that are evolved from samples.

  • So basically, we drill a rock, deliver that powder

  • to the instrument, and then that instrument heats up the sample

  • and measures the gases that are coming off.

  • Whatever out gases, it can tell you what this--

  • what that is, right?

  • Exactly.

  • So a big piece of information from the atmosphere

  • is that we've been tracking methane

  • over the last few martian years.

  • And what we see is that there is a cycle to it,

  • where it spikes late summer, early autumn, and then dips

  • again.

  • Wow.

  • Yeah, so the big question is why is that happening?

  • Right, so that could possibly be due to an organic material,

  • right, or a biological source?

  • Exactly. So that's--

  • Meaning life.

  • Right, I know, so huge.

  • Wow.

  • It's not the only hypothesis out there.

  • TRAVIS TAYLOR: Sure.

  • But there is the possibility that there

  • is extant life on Mars that is creating this methane.

  • Wow.

  • The fact that NASA has now released information

  • that they've measured a cycle of methane that

  • goes up in the summer and down in the winter--

  • it sounds very similar to how biological processes

  • create methane here on Earth.

  • That could be evidence that there's life right now on Mars.

  • [music playing]

NARRATOR: July 20, 1976--

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遠古外星人:火星上有生命嗎?(第十三季) | 歷史 (Ancient Aliens: Is There Life on Mars? (Season 13) | History)

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    林宜悉 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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