DTU Camera System Aids in Discovery of Potential Biological Life on Mars

Close-up images of the chemistry of the rocks

When NASA sent the Perseverance rover on the Mars 2020 mission, the goal was to investigate whether the red planet was once habitable and to find signs of biosignatures, which are deposits of microorganisms, and thus the building blocks of life as we understand it.

To examine the Martian surface for biosignatures, Perseverance uses an advanced X-ray spectrometer called PIXL that measures the elemental compositions of the rocks on a microscopic scale. PIXL sits at the end of a robotic arm on the rover, and DTU has developed the camera system that both takes microscopic-level images and ensures the rover can navigate with pinpoint accuracy. In addition, it takes multispectral measurements at different wavelengths to map color and contrast in the rocks.

“It’s huge that DTU is a part of this, and it’s only because some of our spearheads, such as John Leif Jørgensen, have delivered world-class instruments to NASA for a number of years. The fact that we are now in front row getting these measurements is testimony to the fact that the equipment is performing as intended,” says David Arge Klevang.

 

A different understanding of ourselves

So, is there life on Mars? We probably won’t know anytime soon, and David Arge Klevang emphasizes that there is still a lot of detective work ahead to decipher some of the rock’s geological secrets and determine whether or not the finding is biological in origin. Although Perseverance’s instruments are providing researchers with a wealth of data, the rock will have to be returned to Earth before it can be fully analyzed, which will probably not happen until the early 2030s at the earliest. Until then, patience is a virtue.

“We have to declare that we’ve made this discovery and that it’s super interesting, but we also have to declare that there are many elements we don’t understand yet,” says David Arge Klevang.

If it turns out that the rock was once inhabited by microorganisms, what can we use this knowledge for?

“The big question is, what is life really? Is it limited to living on Earth or can it grow on other planets if the conditions are right? If the stone confirms that there once was life on Mars, then we know that life is present on two planets in our solar system – then  what about outside our solar system? That gives us a completely different understanding of ourselves.”