The search for Martian life begins, 1959 - 1965
Abstract
When the Viking spacecraft was launched to Mars in 1975, three biological experiments and a gas chromatograph-mass spectrometer, instruments with an intellectual and technological history reaching back to the early days of American space science, were on board. A systematic study of the evolution of the Martian surface and atmosphere was conceived with the following goals: (1) determination of the physical and chemical conditions of the martian surface as a potential environment for life; (2) determination whether life is or was present on Mars; (3) determination of the characteristics of that life, if present; and (4) investigation of the pattern of chemical evolution without life.
- Publication:
-
On Mars: Exploration of the Red Planet, 1958 - 1978
- Pub Date:
- 1984
- Bibcode:
- 1984omer.rept...51.
- Keywords:
-
- Exobiology;
- Extraterrestrial Life;
- Mariner 4 Space Probe;
- Mars (Planet);
- Space Exploration;
- Atmospheric Composition;
- Biochemistry;
- Evolution (Development);
- Life Sciences;
- Molecular Biology;
- Spaceborne Experiments;
- Lunar and Planetary Exploration