Curiosity Found New Carbon Molecules On Mars. What Does It Mean For Alien Life?

Curiosity Found New Carbon Molecules On Mars. What Does It Mean For Alien Life?

Nasa’s Curiosity Mars rover has detected the largest organic (carbon-containing) molecules ever found on the red planet. The discovery is one of the most significant findings in the search for evidence of past life on Mars. This is because, on Earth at least, relatively complex, long-chain carbon molecules are involved in biology. These molecules could actually be fragments of fatty acids, which are found in, for example, the membranes surrounding biological cells.

 

Scientists think that, if life ever emerged on Mars, it was probably microbial in nature. Because microbes are so small, it’s difficult to be definitive about any potential evidence for life found on Mars. Such evidence needs more powerful scientific instruments that are too large to be put on a rover.


Curiosity rover near the site of Mont Mercou on Mars. Source: NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS

 

The organic molecules found by Curiosity consist of carbon atoms linked in long chains, with other elements bonded to them, like hydrogen and oxygen. They come from a 3.7-billion-year-old rock dubbed Cumberland, encountered by the rover at a presumed dried-up lakebed in Mars’s Gale Crater. Scientists used the Sample Analysis at Mars (Sam) instrument on the Nasa rover to make their discovery.

 

Scientists were actually looking for evidence of amino acids, which are the building blocks of proteins and therefore key components of life as we know it. But this unexpected finding is almost as exciting. The research is published in Proceedings of the National Academies of Science.

 

Among the molecules were decane, which has 10 carbon atoms and 22 hydrogen atoms, and dodecane, with 12 carbons and 26 hydrogen atoms. These are known as alkanes, which fall under the umbrella of the chemical compounds known as hydrocarbons.

 

It’s an exciting time in the search for life on Mars. In March this year, scientists presented evidence of features in a different rock sampled elsewhere on Mars by the Perseverance rover. These features, dubbed “leopard spots” and “poppy seeds”, could have been produced by the action of microbial life in the distant past, or not. The findings were presented at a US conference and have not yet been published in a peer reviewed journal.

 

The Mars Sample Return mission, a collaboration between Nasa and the European Space Agency, offers hope that samples of rock collected and stored by Perseverance could be brought to Earth for study in laboratories. The powerful instruments available in terrestrial labs could finally confirm whether or not there is clear evidence for past life on Mars. However, in 2023, an independent review board criticized increases in Mars Sample Return’s budget. This prompted the agencies to rethink how the mission could be carried out. They are currently studying two revised options.

 

Signs of life?

 

Cumberland was found in a region of Gale Crater called Yellowknife Bay. This area contains rock formations that look suspiciously like those formed when sediment builds up at the bottom of a lake. One of Curiosity’s scientific goals is to examine the prospect that past conditions on Mars would have been suitable for the development of life, so an ancient lakebed is the perfect place to look for them.

Cumberland
The Martian rock known as Cumberland, which was sampled in the study. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS

 

The researchers think that the alkane molecules may once have been components of more complex fatty acid molecules. On Earth, fatty acids are components of fats and oils. They are produced through biological activity in processes that help form cell membranes, for example. The suggested presence of fatty acids in this rock sample has been around for several years, but the new paper details the full evidence.

Fatty acids are long, linear hydrocarbon molecules with a carboxyl group (COOH) at one end and a methyl group (CH3) at the other, forming a chain of carbon and hydrogen atoms.

A fat molecule consists of two main components: glycerol and fatty acids. Glycerol is an alcohol molecule with three carbon atoms, five hydrogens, and three hydroxyl (chemically bonded oxygen and hydrogen, OH) groups. Fatty acids may have 4-36 carbon atoms; however, most of them have 12-18. The longest carbon chains found in Cumberland are 12 atoms long.

Mars sample return

Mars Sample Return will deliver Mars rocks to Earth for study. This artist’s impression shows the ascent vehicle leaving Mars with rock samples. Nasa/JPL-Caltech

 

Organic molecules preserved in ancient Martian rocks provide a critical record of the past habitability of Mars and could be chemical biosignatures (signs that life was once there).

 

The sample from Cumberland has been analyzed by the Sam instrument many times, using different experimental techniques, and has shown evidence of clay minerals, as well as the first (smaller and simpler) organic molecules found on Mars, back in 2015. These included several classes of chlorinated and sulphur-containing organic compounds in Gale crater sedimentary rocks, with chemical structures of up to six carbon atoms. The new discovery doubles the number of carbon atoms found in a single molecule on Mars.

 

The alkane molecules are significant in the search for biosignatures on Mars, but how they actually formed remains unclear. They could also be derived through geological or other chemical mechanisms that do not involve fatty acids or life. These are known as abiotic sources. However, the fact that they exist intact today in samples that have been exposed to a harsh environment for many millions of years gives astrobiologists (scientists who study the possibility of life beyond Earth) hope that evidence of ancient life might still be detectable today.

 

It is possible the sample contains even longer chain organic molecules. It may also contain more complex molecules that are indicative of life, rather than geological processes. Unfortunately, Sam is not capable of detecting those, so the next step is to deliver Martian rock and soil to more capable laboratories on the Earth. Mars Sample Return would do this with the samples already gathered by the Perseverance Mars rover. All that’s needed now is the budget.

 

By Derek Ward-Thompson, Professor of Astrophysics, University of Central Lancashire and Megan Argo, Senior Lecturer in Astronomy, University of Central Lancashire. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.The Conversation

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Curiosity Found New Carbon Molecules On Mars. What Does It Mean For Alien Life?

Nasa’s Curiosity Mars rover has detected the largest organic (carbon-containing) molecules ever found on the red planet. The discovery is one of the most significant findings in the search for evidence of past life on Mars. This is because, on Earth at least, relatively complex, long-chain carbon molecules are involved in biology. These molecules could actually be fragments of fatty acids, which are found in, for example, the membranes surrounding biological cells.

 

Scientists think that, if life ever emerged on Mars, it was probably microbial in nature. Because microbes are so small, it’s difficult to be definitive about any potential evidence for life found on Mars. Such evidence needs more powerful scientific instruments that are too large to be put on a rover.


Curiosity rover near the site of Mont Mercou on Mars. Source: NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS

 

The organic molecules found by Curiosity consist of carbon atoms linked in long chains, with other elements bonded to them, like hydrogen and oxygen. They come from a 3.7-billion-year-old rock dubbed Cumberland, encountered by the rover at a presumed dried-up lakebed in Mars’s Gale Crater. Scientists used the Sample Analysis at Mars (Sam) instrument on the Nasa rover to make their discovery.

 

Scientists were actually looking for evidence of amino acids, which are the building blocks of proteins and therefore key components of life as we know it. But this unexpected finding is almost as exciting. The research is published in Proceedings of the National Academies of Science.

 

Among the molecules were decane, which has 10 carbon atoms and 22 hydrogen atoms, and dodecane, with 12 carbons and 26 hydrogen atoms. These are known as alkanes, which fall under the umbrella of the chemical compounds known as hydrocarbons.

 

It’s an exciting time in the search for life on Mars. In March this year, scientists presented evidence of features in a different rock sampled elsewhere on Mars by the Perseverance rover. These features, dubbed “leopard spots” and “poppy seeds”, could have been produced by the action of microbial life in the distant past, or not. The findings were presented at a US conference and have not yet been published in a peer reviewed journal.

 

The Mars Sample Return mission, a collaboration between Nasa and the European Space Agency, offers hope that samples of rock collected and stored by Perseverance could be brought to Earth for study in laboratories. The powerful instruments available in terrestrial labs could finally confirm whether or not there is clear evidence for past life on Mars. However, in 2023, an independent review board criticized increases in Mars Sample Return’s budget. This prompted the agencies to rethink how the mission could be carried out. They are currently studying two revised options.

 

Signs of life?

 

Cumberland was found in a region of Gale Crater called Yellowknife Bay. This area contains rock formations that look suspiciously like those formed when sediment builds up at the bottom of a lake. One of Curiosity’s scientific goals is to examine the prospect that past conditions on Mars would have been suitable for the development of life, so an ancient lakebed is the perfect place to look for them.

Cumberland
The Martian rock known as Cumberland, which was sampled in the study. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS

 

The researchers think that the alkane molecules may once have been components of more complex fatty acid molecules. On Earth, fatty acids are components of fats and oils. They are produced through biological activity in processes that help form cell membranes, for example. The suggested presence of fatty acids in this rock sample has been around for several years, but the new paper details the full evidence.

Fatty acids are long, linear hydrocarbon molecules with a carboxyl group (COOH) at one end and a methyl group (CH3) at the other, forming a chain of carbon and hydrogen atoms.

A fat molecule consists of two main components: glycerol and fatty acids. Glycerol is an alcohol molecule with three carbon atoms, five hydrogens, and three hydroxyl (chemically bonded oxygen and hydrogen, OH) groups. Fatty acids may have 4-36 carbon atoms; however, most of them have 12-18. The longest carbon chains found in Cumberland are 12 atoms long.

Mars sample return

Mars Sample Return will deliver Mars rocks to Earth for study. This artist’s impression shows the ascent vehicle leaving Mars with rock samples. Nasa/JPL-Caltech

 

Organic molecules preserved in ancient Martian rocks provide a critical record of the past habitability of Mars and could be chemical biosignatures (signs that life was once there).

 

The sample from Cumberland has been analyzed by the Sam instrument many times, using different experimental techniques, and has shown evidence of clay minerals, as well as the first (smaller and simpler) organic molecules found on Mars, back in 2015. These included several classes of chlorinated and sulphur-containing organic compounds in Gale crater sedimentary rocks, with chemical structures of up to six carbon atoms. The new discovery doubles the number of carbon atoms found in a single molecule on Mars.

 

The alkane molecules are significant in the search for biosignatures on Mars, but how they actually formed remains unclear. They could also be derived through geological or other chemical mechanisms that do not involve fatty acids or life. These are known as abiotic sources. However, the fact that they exist intact today in samples that have been exposed to a harsh environment for many millions of years gives astrobiologists (scientists who study the possibility of life beyond Earth) hope that evidence of ancient life might still be detectable today.

 

It is possible the sample contains even longer chain organic molecules. It may also contain more complex molecules that are indicative of life, rather than geological processes. Unfortunately, Sam is not capable of detecting those, so the next step is to deliver Martian rock and soil to more capable laboratories on the Earth. Mars Sample Return would do this with the samples already gathered by the Perseverance Mars rover. All that’s needed now is the budget.

 

By Derek Ward-Thompson, Professor of Astrophysics, University of Central Lancashire and Megan Argo, Senior Lecturer in Astronomy, University of Central Lancashire. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.The Conversation

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Massive Myanmar earthquake. Hundreds feared dead.

A strong 7.7-magnitude earthquake struck in central Myanmar, formerly Burma, earlier today (overnight by clocks in the Americas). In Bangkok, hundreds of miles from the quake’s epicenter, an unfinished high-rise building collapsed with at least 81 construction workers inside (see the video above). Meanwhile, the epicenter was located 10 miles (16 km) northwest of the city of Sagaing in Myanmar, an important religious and monastic center, with numerous Buddhist monasteries. The BBC reports that:

Myanmar has been in political turmoil since a military junta seized power in a 2021 coup. Getting information on the ground is difficult.

But hundreds are feared dead in Myanmar with ‘enormous damage.’

Aftershocks are ongoing at this writing (11 UTC on March 28).

A BBC reporter in Bangkok witnessed the building collapse. 

Read more – with updates – from the BBC.

Dust rises as a building collapses, with startled workers wearing hardhats in the foreground.
The Irish Mirror reported that, following the collapse of an unfinished building in Bangkok, people “struggled to stand up.” The collapse followed a huge 7.4-magnitude earthquake in Myanmar, which happened at 1:20 UTC this morning (8:20 p.m. CDT on March 27), according to USGS.

Bottom line: The strong 7.7-magnitude Myanmar earthquake led to the collapse of an unfinished high-rise building in Bangkok, with at least 70 construction workers inside, earlier today.

The post Massive Myanmar earthquake. Hundreds feared dead. first appeared on EarthSky.



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A strong 7.7-magnitude earthquake struck in central Myanmar, formerly Burma, earlier today (overnight by clocks in the Americas). In Bangkok, hundreds of miles from the quake’s epicenter, an unfinished high-rise building collapsed with at least 81 construction workers inside (see the video above). Meanwhile, the epicenter was located 10 miles (16 km) northwest of the city of Sagaing in Myanmar, an important religious and monastic center, with numerous Buddhist monasteries. The BBC reports that:

Myanmar has been in political turmoil since a military junta seized power in a 2021 coup. Getting information on the ground is difficult.

But hundreds are feared dead in Myanmar with ‘enormous damage.’

Aftershocks are ongoing at this writing (11 UTC on March 28).

A BBC reporter in Bangkok witnessed the building collapse. 

Read more – with updates – from the BBC.

Dust rises as a building collapses, with startled workers wearing hardhats in the foreground.
The Irish Mirror reported that, following the collapse of an unfinished building in Bangkok, people “struggled to stand up.” The collapse followed a huge 7.4-magnitude earthquake in Myanmar, which happened at 1:20 UTC this morning (8:20 p.m. CDT on March 27), according to USGS.

Bottom line: The strong 7.7-magnitude Myanmar earthquake led to the collapse of an unfinished high-rise building in Bangkok, with at least 70 construction workers inside, earlier today.

The post Massive Myanmar earthquake. Hundreds feared dead. first appeared on EarthSky.



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New tree is a towering East African giant of the rainforest

New tree: In a dense rainforest, a man in dark clothes hugs a very large tree.
Newly described species Tessmannia princeps, a giant tree discovered in the Udzungwa Mountains of Tanzania in Eastern Africa, gets a hug. The new tree towers up to 130 feet (40 meters) above the rainforest canopy and is found in only two small, isolated areas. The trees’ main trunks are about 9 feet (2.7 m) in diameter, with another 10 feet (3 m) of buttresses. Image via Andrea Bianchi/ Phytotaxa.

New tree hidden from science for thousands of years

A team of African and European botanists said on March 20, 2025, that they’ve identified a new species of tree in the East African rainforests of Tanzania. And it is both massive and ancient. The new tree – Tessmannia princeps – is a towering giant that lifts its limbs more than 130 feet (40 meters) above the surrounding jungle canopy. Its enormous trunk spreads almost 20 feet (9 m) in diameter. Some of the 100 or so individual trees discovered so far are ancient and have possibly lived 3,000 years or more.

The team, led by Andrea Bianchi of the Muse Science Museum in Trento, Italy, published its peer-reviewed paper in the journal Phytotaxa on March 20, 2025. In it, the team described the newly identified species. It is a member of the Fabacaea family of plants, making it a relative of beans and peas.

2025 EarthSky lunar calendar is available. A unique and beautiful poster-sized calendar with phases of the moon for every night of the year. Get yours today!

New tree: A man holds a sprig of leaves in a forest setting.
Aloyce Mwakisoma, co-discoverer of Tessmannia princeps, a new tree of the East African rainforest, holds a sprig of the recently described plant. Image via Andrea Bianchi/ Phytotaxa.

Tessmannia princeps had local plant experts stumped

Bianchi and two local plant experts – brothers Aloyce and Ruben Mwakisoma – first encountered T. princeps while doing field research in 2019. They were cataloging plants in two village land forest reserves in the Udzungwa Corridor, a reforestation project area that Bianchi oversees.

The Mwakisoma brothers had never seen the new tree before. To Bianchi’s delight, that meant it was likely to be a new species. The botanist described his excitement to Ryan Truscott of Mongabay:

This was already quite a shiver-down-your-back moment because if they didn’t know (the species), it could have been something interesting.

It was something interesting. In 2019, Tessmannia contained only 13 examples, most of which grow on the other, western side of the African continent. This new tree was unknown to botanical science. And it is found only in the Boma la Mzinga and Uluti Village Land forest reserves. About 100 mature trees live high in a mountainous valley. But they grow nowhere else on Earth.

While this makes T. princeps vulnerable, the region is carefully managed. It is an area filled with similarly unique and isolated species. So the new tree may not be adapted to life outside this tiny ecosystem.

New tree: Type identifier sketches of Tessmannian princeps in monochrome.
Artist’s rendering of the identifying characteristics of Tessmannia princeps. The new tree was discovered in 2019 and described in a recent paper. A. Mature tree. B. Branchlet and leaves. C. Leaflet adaxial lamina (top) and abaxial lamina (bottom) showing glands. D, E. Flower. F. Diagram of flower. G. Mature pod. H. Valve of pod after seed dispersal. I. Seeds. Image via Laura Tomasi/ Phytotaxa.

New tree is in the bean, pea and legume family

Some of the tallest princeps rival some of the shortest mature giant sequoias (Sequoiadendron giganteum), which are the world’s most massive trees. The name of the new tree – princeps – means foremost in Latin. Like the sequoia, princeps towers over the canopy of its rainforest home.

Both princeps and sequoias evolved in montane ecosystems, usually growing at high elevation on mountain slopes just below the tree line. The population of princeps grows at 4,250 to 5,000 feet (1,300 to 1,500 m) above sea level.

Its enormous trunk doesn’t branch low to the ground. The mature trees only stretch their limbs sideways high overhead. Gigantic buttressing vine-like limbs surround and support the main trunk. They droop down to the surface from limbs up to 65 feet (20 meters) above.

The new tree’s narrow leaves grow in clusters. This is much like other plants in the Fabaceae family, such as the hundreds of trees and shrubs in the closely related mimosa and acacia genera. Princeps‘ small, white and densely clustered flowers mature eventually into pods containing bean-like seeds.

Mighty T. princeps grows for millennia at a less-than-glacial pace

Working with a sample from a princeps that had fallen naturally, the botanical researchers tested the wood’s density to measure its age. Bianchi counted 12 to 15 rings in a sample less than 1/2 inch (1 cm) long. He said this means the tree takes more than 30 years to add 1 inch (2.54 cm) in width. By comparison, the average speed of a glacier is 10 inches (25 cm) a year.

Bianchi explained the significance of that measurement to Mongabay:

This would put the age of the bigger trees around 2,000 to 3,000 years.

The remaining examples of T. princeps are lucky to be alive. During the last 120 years, the region surrounding the new tree’s tiny home has been extensively logged. Yet the researchers have not found even isolated examples of princeps in regions with trees that grow alongside princeps elsewhere.

Still, the deforestation of the surrounding region, the researchers noted in their paper, likely wiped out other populations of Tessmannia princeps.

Bottom line: A recently described new tree species discovered in the rainforest of eastern Africa – Tessmannia princeps – is a towering giant that grows up to 130 feet (40 m) tall and 20 feet (6 m) wide.

Source: Tessmannia princeps (Fabaceae), a new rainforest tree from the Udzungwa Mountains, Tanzania

Via Mongabay

Read more: Save the giants, save the planet

The post New tree is a towering East African giant of the rainforest first appeared on EarthSky.



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New tree: In a dense rainforest, a man in dark clothes hugs a very large tree.
Newly described species Tessmannia princeps, a giant tree discovered in the Udzungwa Mountains of Tanzania in Eastern Africa, gets a hug. The new tree towers up to 130 feet (40 meters) above the rainforest canopy and is found in only two small, isolated areas. The trees’ main trunks are about 9 feet (2.7 m) in diameter, with another 10 feet (3 m) of buttresses. Image via Andrea Bianchi/ Phytotaxa.

New tree hidden from science for thousands of years

A team of African and European botanists said on March 20, 2025, that they’ve identified a new species of tree in the East African rainforests of Tanzania. And it is both massive and ancient. The new tree – Tessmannia princeps – is a towering giant that lifts its limbs more than 130 feet (40 meters) above the surrounding jungle canopy. Its enormous trunk spreads almost 20 feet (9 m) in diameter. Some of the 100 or so individual trees discovered so far are ancient and have possibly lived 3,000 years or more.

The team, led by Andrea Bianchi of the Muse Science Museum in Trento, Italy, published its peer-reviewed paper in the journal Phytotaxa on March 20, 2025. In it, the team described the newly identified species. It is a member of the Fabacaea family of plants, making it a relative of beans and peas.

2025 EarthSky lunar calendar is available. A unique and beautiful poster-sized calendar with phases of the moon for every night of the year. Get yours today!

New tree: A man holds a sprig of leaves in a forest setting.
Aloyce Mwakisoma, co-discoverer of Tessmannia princeps, a new tree of the East African rainforest, holds a sprig of the recently described plant. Image via Andrea Bianchi/ Phytotaxa.

Tessmannia princeps had local plant experts stumped

Bianchi and two local plant experts – brothers Aloyce and Ruben Mwakisoma – first encountered T. princeps while doing field research in 2019. They were cataloging plants in two village land forest reserves in the Udzungwa Corridor, a reforestation project area that Bianchi oversees.

The Mwakisoma brothers had never seen the new tree before. To Bianchi’s delight, that meant it was likely to be a new species. The botanist described his excitement to Ryan Truscott of Mongabay:

This was already quite a shiver-down-your-back moment because if they didn’t know (the species), it could have been something interesting.

It was something interesting. In 2019, Tessmannia contained only 13 examples, most of which grow on the other, western side of the African continent. This new tree was unknown to botanical science. And it is found only in the Boma la Mzinga and Uluti Village Land forest reserves. About 100 mature trees live high in a mountainous valley. But they grow nowhere else on Earth.

While this makes T. princeps vulnerable, the region is carefully managed. It is an area filled with similarly unique and isolated species. So the new tree may not be adapted to life outside this tiny ecosystem.

New tree: Type identifier sketches of Tessmannian princeps in monochrome.
Artist’s rendering of the identifying characteristics of Tessmannia princeps. The new tree was discovered in 2019 and described in a recent paper. A. Mature tree. B. Branchlet and leaves. C. Leaflet adaxial lamina (top) and abaxial lamina (bottom) showing glands. D, E. Flower. F. Diagram of flower. G. Mature pod. H. Valve of pod after seed dispersal. I. Seeds. Image via Laura Tomasi/ Phytotaxa.

New tree is in the bean, pea and legume family

Some of the tallest princeps rival some of the shortest mature giant sequoias (Sequoiadendron giganteum), which are the world’s most massive trees. The name of the new tree – princeps – means foremost in Latin. Like the sequoia, princeps towers over the canopy of its rainforest home.

Both princeps and sequoias evolved in montane ecosystems, usually growing at high elevation on mountain slopes just below the tree line. The population of princeps grows at 4,250 to 5,000 feet (1,300 to 1,500 m) above sea level.

Its enormous trunk doesn’t branch low to the ground. The mature trees only stretch their limbs sideways high overhead. Gigantic buttressing vine-like limbs surround and support the main trunk. They droop down to the surface from limbs up to 65 feet (20 meters) above.

The new tree’s narrow leaves grow in clusters. This is much like other plants in the Fabaceae family, such as the hundreds of trees and shrubs in the closely related mimosa and acacia genera. Princeps‘ small, white and densely clustered flowers mature eventually into pods containing bean-like seeds.

Mighty T. princeps grows for millennia at a less-than-glacial pace

Working with a sample from a princeps that had fallen naturally, the botanical researchers tested the wood’s density to measure its age. Bianchi counted 12 to 15 rings in a sample less than 1/2 inch (1 cm) long. He said this means the tree takes more than 30 years to add 1 inch (2.54 cm) in width. By comparison, the average speed of a glacier is 10 inches (25 cm) a year.

Bianchi explained the significance of that measurement to Mongabay:

This would put the age of the bigger trees around 2,000 to 3,000 years.

The remaining examples of T. princeps are lucky to be alive. During the last 120 years, the region surrounding the new tree’s tiny home has been extensively logged. Yet the researchers have not found even isolated examples of princeps in regions with trees that grow alongside princeps elsewhere.

Still, the deforestation of the surrounding region, the researchers noted in their paper, likely wiped out other populations of Tessmannia princeps.

Bottom line: A recently described new tree species discovered in the rainforest of eastern Africa – Tessmannia princeps – is a towering giant that grows up to 130 feet (40 m) tall and 20 feet (6 m) wide.

Source: Tessmannia princeps (Fabaceae), a new rainforest tree from the Udzungwa Mountains, Tanzania

Via Mongabay

Read more: Save the giants, save the planet

The post New tree is a towering East African giant of the rainforest first appeared on EarthSky.



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Outstanding Einstein ring revealed in new image

Einstein ring: A bright, diffuse center with glowing rings around it in shades of blue and orange.
The James Webb Space Telescope has captured this outstanding image of an Einstein ring. In this case, a foreground elliptical galaxy (bright, fuzzy object at center) is acting as a gravitational lens, which bends the light to reveal the background spiral galaxy. The spiral galaxy appears as an Einstein ring around the elliptical. Image via ESA/ Webb/ NASA/ CSA/ G. Mahler.

Webb images an outstanding Einstein ring

The James Webb Space Telescope imaged an unusual galaxy that appears to be sporting the spiral arms of a more distant galaxy. On March 27, 2025, ESA shared this image of an Einstein ring, a rare event when one galaxy is perfectly positioned in front of a more distant galaxy. The massive foreground galaxy acts as a gravitational lens, bending the light of the more distant galaxy. In this case, we see an elliptical galaxy at center with the spiral galaxy wrapped around it in an Einstein ring.

As ESA explained, Einstein rings are possible because:

spacetime, the fabric of the universe itself, is bent by mass, and therefore light traveling through space and time is bent as well. This effect is much too subtle to be observed on a local level, but it sometimes becomes clearly observable when dealing with curvatures of light on enormous, astronomical scales, such as when the light from one galaxy is bent around another galaxy or galaxy cluster. When the lensed object and the lensing object line up just so, the result is the distinctive Einstein ring shape, which appears as a full circle (as seen here) or a partial circle of light around the lensing object, depending on the precision of the alignment.

The galaxies in the image

The galaxy at the center is the one that is closest to us. This is an elliptical galaxy with a bright core and fuzzy, diffuse body. Astronomers dubbed it SMACSJ0028.2-7537.

Meanwhile, the rings are part of a more distant spiral galaxy. The light from this galaxy gets warped as it passes the massive foreground galaxy. Even so, this unique Einstein ring still allows us to make out star cluster and gas lanes.

Bottom line: The Webb space telescope captured this unusual image of two galaxies. The closer, elliptical galaxy acts as a gravitational lens, warping the light from a spiral galaxy behind it and allowing us to see it in the form of an Einstein ring.

Via ESA

Read more: Einstein ring spotted around a nearby galaxy

The post Outstanding Einstein ring revealed in new image first appeared on EarthSky.



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Einstein ring: A bright, diffuse center with glowing rings around it in shades of blue and orange.
The James Webb Space Telescope has captured this outstanding image of an Einstein ring. In this case, a foreground elliptical galaxy (bright, fuzzy object at center) is acting as a gravitational lens, which bends the light to reveal the background spiral galaxy. The spiral galaxy appears as an Einstein ring around the elliptical. Image via ESA/ Webb/ NASA/ CSA/ G. Mahler.

Webb images an outstanding Einstein ring

The James Webb Space Telescope imaged an unusual galaxy that appears to be sporting the spiral arms of a more distant galaxy. On March 27, 2025, ESA shared this image of an Einstein ring, a rare event when one galaxy is perfectly positioned in front of a more distant galaxy. The massive foreground galaxy acts as a gravitational lens, bending the light of the more distant galaxy. In this case, we see an elliptical galaxy at center with the spiral galaxy wrapped around it in an Einstein ring.

As ESA explained, Einstein rings are possible because:

spacetime, the fabric of the universe itself, is bent by mass, and therefore light traveling through space and time is bent as well. This effect is much too subtle to be observed on a local level, but it sometimes becomes clearly observable when dealing with curvatures of light on enormous, astronomical scales, such as when the light from one galaxy is bent around another galaxy or galaxy cluster. When the lensed object and the lensing object line up just so, the result is the distinctive Einstein ring shape, which appears as a full circle (as seen here) or a partial circle of light around the lensing object, depending on the precision of the alignment.

The galaxies in the image

The galaxy at the center is the one that is closest to us. This is an elliptical galaxy with a bright core and fuzzy, diffuse body. Astronomers dubbed it SMACSJ0028.2-7537.

Meanwhile, the rings are part of a more distant spiral galaxy. The light from this galaxy gets warped as it passes the massive foreground galaxy. Even so, this unique Einstein ring still allows us to make out star cluster and gas lanes.

Bottom line: The Webb space telescope captured this unusual image of two galaxies. The closer, elliptical galaxy acts as a gravitational lens, warping the light from a spiral galaxy behind it and allowing us to see it in the form of an Einstein ring.

Via ESA

Read more: Einstein ring spotted around a nearby galaxy

The post Outstanding Einstein ring revealed in new image first appeared on EarthSky.



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Farewell to Gaia after 12 successful years

Farewell, Gaia! Spacecraft powers down

On March 27, 2025, ESA powered down the Gaia spacecraft after 12 years of operations. But the good news is that there’s still a mountain of data from Gaia ripe for analysis. Gaia project scientist Johannes Sahlmann said:

Gaia’s extensive data releases are a unique treasure trove for astrophysical research, and influence almost all disciplines in astronomy.

In fact, the 4th data release from Gaia isn’t until 2026, with the final data release around 2030.

Gaia underwent testing in January, which temporarily made it brighter in the sky. Normally, Gaia has been a very faint magnitude 21 as it orbits the sun out at Lagrange Point 2. But for a couple months it brightened within reach of a large telescope. And in the video above, you can see its last appearance courtesy of Zhuo-Xiao Wang.

Best animation of our Milky Way galaxy

The European Space Agency’s Gaia spacecraft launched in 2013 and spent more than a decade measuring and mapping our home galaxy, the Milky Way. ESA ended its operations in January 2025. Scientists released a short animation giving a quick overview of a few of the new insights Gaia helped make possible. Gaia data was used to put together this animation of our galaxy. ESA said on January 15:

Gaia has changed our impression of the Milky Way. Even seemingly simple ideas about the nature of our galaxy’s central bar and the spiral arms have been overturned. Gaia has shown us that it has more than two spiral arms and that they are less prominent than we previously thought. In addition, Gaia has shown that its central bar is more inclined with respect to the sun.

No spacecraft can travel beyond our galaxy, so we can’t take a selfie, but Gaia is giving us the best insight yet of what our home galaxy looks like. Once all of Gaia’s observations collected over the past decade are made available in two upcoming data releases, we can expect an even sharper view of the Milky Way.

Enjoy the animation in the ESA video above.

The 2025 EarthSky lunar calendar is available now. Moon phases every day on a poster-sized calendar. Get yours today!

Beloved spacecraft ends its operations

The goal of Gaia was to make a precise 3D map of the Milky Way. Over the past decade, it has tracked and measured the motions, luminosity, temperature and composition of nearly 2 billion objects.

Gaia’s mission was designed to last for five years. Like many space missions, it went longer. Gaia arrived in 2014 at Lagrange Point 2, or L2, in the Earth-sun system. Lagrangian points are places in a system where a craft can remain stable without using too much of its fuel for propulsion.

But, ESA said, Gaia did eventually run low on fuel. The cold gas propellant that keeps the mission working is nearly gone. While Gaia has now ceased taking measurements of our galaxy, the data releases from the project will continue for some years. Gaia’s first three data releases so far came in 2016, 2018 and 2022. The 4th data release should be ready in 2026. And the 5th and final data release covering all 10 1/2 years of data will be around the end of the decade. The massive amounts of data take a long time to process!

What will happen to Gaia next?

Gaia will not float around at the Lagrange Point 2 forever. Engineers have planned to remove Gaia from its current orbit. ESA said:

Gaia will be inserted into an orbit that makes sure it does not come too close to the Earth-moon system in the near future. The Gaia spacecraft will be fully passivated when it moves to its final orbit, to avoid any harm or interference with other spacecraft.

Gaia: Glowing band of stars in space and spacecraft with square body set in the center of a dish-shaped antenna.
Artist’s concept of ESA’s Gaia spacecraft mapping the stars of the Milky Way. Gaia’s observations came to an end on January 15, 2025. Image via ESA/ ATG medialab. Background ESO/ S. Brunier.

What has Gaia already shown us?

Astronomers have used the data from Gaia to make all sorts of new discoveries about our galaxy. Here are some highlights:

Also, Gaia has made discoveries outside the Milky Way, including spotting stars flying between galaxies and the discovery of an enormous ghost galaxy on the Milky Way’s outskirts.

Watch what Phil Plait had to say about Gaia during a recent livestream with Deborah Byrd.

Bottom line: ESA has now switched off the Gaia spacecraft, sending it into retirement on March 27, 2025. Gaia measured some 2 billion Milky Way objects and astronomers will still be processing data from it for years to come.

Via ESA

The post Farewell to Gaia after 12 successful years first appeared on EarthSky.



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Farewell, Gaia! Spacecraft powers down

On March 27, 2025, ESA powered down the Gaia spacecraft after 12 years of operations. But the good news is that there’s still a mountain of data from Gaia ripe for analysis. Gaia project scientist Johannes Sahlmann said:

Gaia’s extensive data releases are a unique treasure trove for astrophysical research, and influence almost all disciplines in astronomy.

In fact, the 4th data release from Gaia isn’t until 2026, with the final data release around 2030.

Gaia underwent testing in January, which temporarily made it brighter in the sky. Normally, Gaia has been a very faint magnitude 21 as it orbits the sun out at Lagrange Point 2. But for a couple months it brightened within reach of a large telescope. And in the video above, you can see its last appearance courtesy of Zhuo-Xiao Wang.

Best animation of our Milky Way galaxy

The European Space Agency’s Gaia spacecraft launched in 2013 and spent more than a decade measuring and mapping our home galaxy, the Milky Way. ESA ended its operations in January 2025. Scientists released a short animation giving a quick overview of a few of the new insights Gaia helped make possible. Gaia data was used to put together this animation of our galaxy. ESA said on January 15:

Gaia has changed our impression of the Milky Way. Even seemingly simple ideas about the nature of our galaxy’s central bar and the spiral arms have been overturned. Gaia has shown us that it has more than two spiral arms and that they are less prominent than we previously thought. In addition, Gaia has shown that its central bar is more inclined with respect to the sun.

No spacecraft can travel beyond our galaxy, so we can’t take a selfie, but Gaia is giving us the best insight yet of what our home galaxy looks like. Once all of Gaia’s observations collected over the past decade are made available in two upcoming data releases, we can expect an even sharper view of the Milky Way.

Enjoy the animation in the ESA video above.

The 2025 EarthSky lunar calendar is available now. Moon phases every day on a poster-sized calendar. Get yours today!

Beloved spacecraft ends its operations

The goal of Gaia was to make a precise 3D map of the Milky Way. Over the past decade, it has tracked and measured the motions, luminosity, temperature and composition of nearly 2 billion objects.

Gaia’s mission was designed to last for five years. Like many space missions, it went longer. Gaia arrived in 2014 at Lagrange Point 2, or L2, in the Earth-sun system. Lagrangian points are places in a system where a craft can remain stable without using too much of its fuel for propulsion.

But, ESA said, Gaia did eventually run low on fuel. The cold gas propellant that keeps the mission working is nearly gone. While Gaia has now ceased taking measurements of our galaxy, the data releases from the project will continue for some years. Gaia’s first three data releases so far came in 2016, 2018 and 2022. The 4th data release should be ready in 2026. And the 5th and final data release covering all 10 1/2 years of data will be around the end of the decade. The massive amounts of data take a long time to process!

What will happen to Gaia next?

Gaia will not float around at the Lagrange Point 2 forever. Engineers have planned to remove Gaia from its current orbit. ESA said:

Gaia will be inserted into an orbit that makes sure it does not come too close to the Earth-moon system in the near future. The Gaia spacecraft will be fully passivated when it moves to its final orbit, to avoid any harm or interference with other spacecraft.

Gaia: Glowing band of stars in space and spacecraft with square body set in the center of a dish-shaped antenna.
Artist’s concept of ESA’s Gaia spacecraft mapping the stars of the Milky Way. Gaia’s observations came to an end on January 15, 2025. Image via ESA/ ATG medialab. Background ESO/ S. Brunier.

What has Gaia already shown us?

Astronomers have used the data from Gaia to make all sorts of new discoveries about our galaxy. Here are some highlights:

Also, Gaia has made discoveries outside the Milky Way, including spotting stars flying between galaxies and the discovery of an enormous ghost galaxy on the Milky Way’s outskirts.

Watch what Phil Plait had to say about Gaia during a recent livestream with Deborah Byrd.

Bottom line: ESA has now switched off the Gaia spacecraft, sending it into retirement on March 27, 2025. Gaia measured some 2 billion Milky Way objects and astronomers will still be processing data from it for years to come.

Via ESA

The post Farewell to Gaia after 12 successful years first appeared on EarthSky.



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Surprisingly big organic molecules on Mars: A hint of life?


NASA’s Curiosity rover has found the largest organic molecules on Mars we’ve yet seen. They seem to be the remains of fatty acids. Video via NASA Goddard.

  • Did life ever exist on Mars? Rovers have found various types of organic molecules, but whether any of them relate to ancient life remains unknown.
  • NASA’s Curiosity rover has now discovered the largest known organic molecules to date. They are three kinds of long-chained carbon molecules that scientists say are the remains of fatty acids. Fatty acids are common in life on Earth, but can also form without life.
  • The complex carbon molecules are in mudstone rocks that used to be at the bottom of an ancient lake. Scientists don’t yet know how they formed, but they are certainly tantalizing.

Surprisingly large organic molecules on Mars

The prospects for ancient life on Mars might have just received a big boost. NASA’s Curiosity rover has discovered the largest organic molecules so far on the red planet. NASA said on March 24, 2025, that the molecules – thought to be fatty acids – contain chains of up to 12 carbon atoms. That’s significantly more complex than organic compounds previously found on Mars. On Earth, fatty acids help form cell membranes and assist with other biological functions. But non-biological processes can form them as well. So the discovery is tantalizing, although not yet proof of life.

The international team of researchers published their peer-reviewed finding in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences on March 24, 2025.

2025 EarthSky lunar calendar is available now. A unique and beautiful poster-sized calendar with phases of the moon for every night of the year. Get yours today!

Largest organic molecules on Mars

Curiosity found the molecules with its Sample Analysis at Mars (SAM) mini-lab onboard the rover. The molecules were in a sample of mudstone – a fine-grained sedimentary rock – nicknamed Cumberland, in a region called Yellowknife Bay. The rover first studied and drilled into Cumberland back in 2013. Yellowknife Bay seemed intriguing according to data from orbiters. And it’s in Gale crater, which used to be an ancient lake a few billion years ago.

Cumberland turned out to be a goldmine for scientists. Curiosity found it to be rich in clay minerals, sulfur and nitrates. Sulfur is ideal for preserving organic molecules. And both plant and animal life on Earth use nitrates.

Curiosity found the molecules inadvertently while doing other analysis work on the sample. The rover was looking for evidence of amino acids, the building blocks of proteins. It didn’t find any – but – it did find decane, undecane and dodecane, which are long-chain alkane molecules. The mission scientists thought they might have broken off larger molecules during the heating process in SAM.

The findings show that rovers can find evidence of past life on Mars. Caroline Freissinet, the lead study author and research scientist at the National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS) in Guyancourt, France, said:

Our study proves that, even today, by analyzing Mars samples we could detect chemical signatures of past life, if it ever existed on Mars.

Organic molecules on Mars: A complex rover-type vehicle sitting on reddish rocky terrain. A box on the left side depicts 3 long carbon atoms with small black and white spheres attached in zig-zag patterns.
View larger. | Graphic depicting the long-chain organic molecules decane, undecane and dodecane. Curiosity mission scientists think they are the remains of complex fatty acid molecules. Image via NASA/ Dan Gallagher.

Remains of fatty acids?

The discovery excited scientists, because the decane, undecane and dodecane could be the remains of fatty acids. Fatty acids are another building block of life. They help form cell membranes and perform other biological functions as well. More specifically, the scientists thought the three molecules could be the remnants of the fatty acids called undecanoic acid, dodecanoic acid and tridecanoic acid, respectively.

To find out, the researchers needed to do some testing in the lab back on Earth. They mixed undecanoic acid into a Mars-like clay and conducted a SAM-like experiment on the sample. And, sure enough, after heating it the same way as in SAM on Mars, the undecanoic acid released decane, as they predicted. The researchers then referenced experiments already published by other scientists to show that the undecane could have broken off from dodecanoic acid and dodecane from tridecanoic acid.

Monica Grady, a planetary scientist at the Open University in the U.K., told Science:

This is an amazing result. If these are breakdown products from carboxylic acids, then we are seeing something very exciting indeed.

Woman holding a small model of a Mars rover in one hand.
Caroline Freissinet at the National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS) in France is the lead author of the new study. Image via CNRS/ Women & Sciences/ Vincent Moncorgé.

Evidence of Martian life?

While the discovery of these molecules is exciting, scientists don’t know its specific source. They could be the remains of once-living cells, or they might have formed without life. Curiosity is limited in being able to determine which is the case. There might be even longer carbon chains in Cumberland, but the rover’s instruments aren’t ideal for findings them.

There is an interesting detail, however, that might suggest a biological origin. The “backbone” each of the three fatty acids – decane, undecane and dodecane – is a long straight chain of 11 to 13 carbon atoms. On Earth at least, non-biological fatty acids tend to have shorter chains of less than 12 carbon atoms.

Also, on Earth, fatty acids from living things tend to be even-numbered in terms of their carbon atoms. Interestingly, the undecane molecule would have originated from an even-numbered fatty acid, and it is slightly more abundant than the others in the Cumberland sample.

The fact that Gale crater used to be an ancient lake makes the findings all the more fascinating. Co-author Daniel Glavin at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, said:

There is evidence that liquid water existed in Gale crater for millions of years and probably much longer, which means there was enough time for life-forming chemistry to happen in these crater-lake environments on Mars.

As to the search for complex organics like fatty acids, Glavin told Science:

It’s been a long journey to this point. This is really searching for a needle in a haystack. There’s no question about it. We have three needles.

Surface of reddish, bumpy rock with a deep hole drilled into it. Lighter-colored powder is spilling out of the hole onto the surrounding rock.
View larger. | The Curiosity rover made this drill hole in the Cumberland mudstone on May 19, 2013. Image via NASA/ JPL-Caltech/ MSSS.

The limits of Curiosity’s lab analysis

In order to definitively determine the origin of the molecules, the samples would ideally need to be brought back to Earth. Scientists can only use Curiosity itself to analyze these particular samples. And its onboard lab, while powerful, has its limits for detecting the biological origins of molecules.

There might be a way around that, however. When Curiosity obtained the samples back in 2013, it collected two “doggie bags.” But the rover has only used one of them so far. Mission scientists think they might be able to tweak the onboard lab to search for a wider range of alkanes. That would help them better determine the ratio of even to uneven carbon atoms.

There are also plans for a future mission – Mars Sample Return – to bring back samples that the Perseverance rover has obtained. Some of those also show tantalizing hints of possible ancient microbial life. Glavin said:

We are ready to take the next big step and bring Mars samples home to our labs to settle the debate about life on Mars.

Bottom line: NASA’s Curiosity rover has discovered the most complex organic molecules ever seen on Mars, the remains of fatty acids up to an incredible 12 carbon atoms long.

Via Science

Via NASA

Source: Long-chain alkanes preserved in a Martian mudstone

Read more: Curiosity rover reaches ancient ridge of mud and boulders

Read more: Life on Mars? Odd rings and spots tantalize scientists

The post Surprisingly big organic molecules on Mars: A hint of life? first appeared on EarthSky.



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NASA’s Curiosity rover has found the largest organic molecules on Mars we’ve yet seen. They seem to be the remains of fatty acids. Video via NASA Goddard.

  • Did life ever exist on Mars? Rovers have found various types of organic molecules, but whether any of them relate to ancient life remains unknown.
  • NASA’s Curiosity rover has now discovered the largest known organic molecules to date. They are three kinds of long-chained carbon molecules that scientists say are the remains of fatty acids. Fatty acids are common in life on Earth, but can also form without life.
  • The complex carbon molecules are in mudstone rocks that used to be at the bottom of an ancient lake. Scientists don’t yet know how they formed, but they are certainly tantalizing.

Surprisingly large organic molecules on Mars

The prospects for ancient life on Mars might have just received a big boost. NASA’s Curiosity rover has discovered the largest organic molecules so far on the red planet. NASA said on March 24, 2025, that the molecules – thought to be fatty acids – contain chains of up to 12 carbon atoms. That’s significantly more complex than organic compounds previously found on Mars. On Earth, fatty acids help form cell membranes and assist with other biological functions. But non-biological processes can form them as well. So the discovery is tantalizing, although not yet proof of life.

The international team of researchers published their peer-reviewed finding in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences on March 24, 2025.

2025 EarthSky lunar calendar is available now. A unique and beautiful poster-sized calendar with phases of the moon for every night of the year. Get yours today!

Largest organic molecules on Mars

Curiosity found the molecules with its Sample Analysis at Mars (SAM) mini-lab onboard the rover. The molecules were in a sample of mudstone – a fine-grained sedimentary rock – nicknamed Cumberland, in a region called Yellowknife Bay. The rover first studied and drilled into Cumberland back in 2013. Yellowknife Bay seemed intriguing according to data from orbiters. And it’s in Gale crater, which used to be an ancient lake a few billion years ago.

Cumberland turned out to be a goldmine for scientists. Curiosity found it to be rich in clay minerals, sulfur and nitrates. Sulfur is ideal for preserving organic molecules. And both plant and animal life on Earth use nitrates.

Curiosity found the molecules inadvertently while doing other analysis work on the sample. The rover was looking for evidence of amino acids, the building blocks of proteins. It didn’t find any – but – it did find decane, undecane and dodecane, which are long-chain alkane molecules. The mission scientists thought they might have broken off larger molecules during the heating process in SAM.

The findings show that rovers can find evidence of past life on Mars. Caroline Freissinet, the lead study author and research scientist at the National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS) in Guyancourt, France, said:

Our study proves that, even today, by analyzing Mars samples we could detect chemical signatures of past life, if it ever existed on Mars.

Organic molecules on Mars: A complex rover-type vehicle sitting on reddish rocky terrain. A box on the left side depicts 3 long carbon atoms with small black and white spheres attached in zig-zag patterns.
View larger. | Graphic depicting the long-chain organic molecules decane, undecane and dodecane. Curiosity mission scientists think they are the remains of complex fatty acid molecules. Image via NASA/ Dan Gallagher.

Remains of fatty acids?

The discovery excited scientists, because the decane, undecane and dodecane could be the remains of fatty acids. Fatty acids are another building block of life. They help form cell membranes and perform other biological functions as well. More specifically, the scientists thought the three molecules could be the remnants of the fatty acids called undecanoic acid, dodecanoic acid and tridecanoic acid, respectively.

To find out, the researchers needed to do some testing in the lab back on Earth. They mixed undecanoic acid into a Mars-like clay and conducted a SAM-like experiment on the sample. And, sure enough, after heating it the same way as in SAM on Mars, the undecanoic acid released decane, as they predicted. The researchers then referenced experiments already published by other scientists to show that the undecane could have broken off from dodecanoic acid and dodecane from tridecanoic acid.

Monica Grady, a planetary scientist at the Open University in the U.K., told Science:

This is an amazing result. If these are breakdown products from carboxylic acids, then we are seeing something very exciting indeed.

Woman holding a small model of a Mars rover in one hand.
Caroline Freissinet at the National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS) in France is the lead author of the new study. Image via CNRS/ Women & Sciences/ Vincent Moncorgé.

Evidence of Martian life?

While the discovery of these molecules is exciting, scientists don’t know its specific source. They could be the remains of once-living cells, or they might have formed without life. Curiosity is limited in being able to determine which is the case. There might be even longer carbon chains in Cumberland, but the rover’s instruments aren’t ideal for findings them.

There is an interesting detail, however, that might suggest a biological origin. The “backbone” each of the three fatty acids – decane, undecane and dodecane – is a long straight chain of 11 to 13 carbon atoms. On Earth at least, non-biological fatty acids tend to have shorter chains of less than 12 carbon atoms.

Also, on Earth, fatty acids from living things tend to be even-numbered in terms of their carbon atoms. Interestingly, the undecane molecule would have originated from an even-numbered fatty acid, and it is slightly more abundant than the others in the Cumberland sample.

The fact that Gale crater used to be an ancient lake makes the findings all the more fascinating. Co-author Daniel Glavin at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, said:

There is evidence that liquid water existed in Gale crater for millions of years and probably much longer, which means there was enough time for life-forming chemistry to happen in these crater-lake environments on Mars.

As to the search for complex organics like fatty acids, Glavin told Science:

It’s been a long journey to this point. This is really searching for a needle in a haystack. There’s no question about it. We have three needles.

Surface of reddish, bumpy rock with a deep hole drilled into it. Lighter-colored powder is spilling out of the hole onto the surrounding rock.
View larger. | The Curiosity rover made this drill hole in the Cumberland mudstone on May 19, 2013. Image via NASA/ JPL-Caltech/ MSSS.

The limits of Curiosity’s lab analysis

In order to definitively determine the origin of the molecules, the samples would ideally need to be brought back to Earth. Scientists can only use Curiosity itself to analyze these particular samples. And its onboard lab, while powerful, has its limits for detecting the biological origins of molecules.

There might be a way around that, however. When Curiosity obtained the samples back in 2013, it collected two “doggie bags.” But the rover has only used one of them so far. Mission scientists think they might be able to tweak the onboard lab to search for a wider range of alkanes. That would help them better determine the ratio of even to uneven carbon atoms.

There are also plans for a future mission – Mars Sample Return – to bring back samples that the Perseverance rover has obtained. Some of those also show tantalizing hints of possible ancient microbial life. Glavin said:

We are ready to take the next big step and bring Mars samples home to our labs to settle the debate about life on Mars.

Bottom line: NASA’s Curiosity rover has discovered the most complex organic molecules ever seen on Mars, the remains of fatty acids up to an incredible 12 carbon atoms long.

Via Science

Via NASA

Source: Long-chain alkanes preserved in a Martian mudstone

Read more: Curiosity rover reaches ancient ridge of mud and boulders

Read more: Life on Mars? Odd rings and spots tantalize scientists

The post Surprisingly big organic molecules on Mars: A hint of life? first appeared on EarthSky.



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Famous, rare ‘pinwheel death star’ isn’t a threat after all

pinwheel death star: Large bright whitish-red blob in space, with long reddish tail curving around it. Thousands of tiny stars are in the background.
View larger. | Artist’s concept of the Wolf-Rayet 104 pinwheel star system. A new study confirms 2 massive stars are orbiting each other, producing a giant spiral composed of hydrocarbon dust. The study also shows the poles of the stars are not oriented directly toward us as 1st thought, so there is little to no danger of a gamma-ray burst from them hitting Earth, if one of the stars explodes in a supernova. Image via W. M. Keck Observatory/ Adam Makarenko.
  • Wolf-Rayet 104 is a star system where two massive stars orbit each other. A huge spiral of dust circles around the stars, making it a rare pinwheel star system.
  • The pinwheel faces right toward us, so astronomers thought the poles of the stars did also. This could present a danger to Earth. Why? If one of the stars exploded in a supernova, it could send a powerful gamma-ray burst directly toward our solar system.
  • But that isn’t likely to happen, new research from the Keck Observatory shows. The stars’ poles are tilted so much that any gamma-ray burst coming from them would miss us.

Meet Wolf-Rayet 104, the ‘pinwheel death star’

Wolf-Rayet 104 is a famous, rare type of star system known as a pinwheel star. Discovered in 1999, astronomers suspected it consists of two massive stars orbiting each other. As the stars orbit, their stellar winds collide, producing huge amounts of dust. The dust rotates in a giant pinwheel shape. Astronomers using the W. M. Keck Observatory in Hawaii said on March 18, 2025, that they have now confirmed the pair of stars. In addition, they also determined there is little to no danger of Wolf-Rayet 104 emitting a dangerous gamma-ray burst directly toward Earth, as astronomers had previously thought could happen. So the pinwheel death star will seemingly spare us from extinction. Phew!

Astronomer Grant Hill at the Keck Observatory is the author of the latest peer-reviewed research paper. He originally published it in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society on September 19, 2024. Keck issued the new press release on March 18, 2025.

2025 EarthSky lunar calendar is available now. A unique and beautiful poster-sized calendar with phases of the moon for every night of the year. Get yours today!

A rare pinwheel star

Astronomers discovered Wolf-Rayet 104 back in 1999. It is a rare pinwheel star system due to the huge spiral formation of dust circling a pair of stars. Scientists now suspect it’s actually a triple system, with a third much more distant star connected by gravity. But the pinwheel effect is created by the two main stars. The first of the two is a Wolf-Rayet star. Those stars are hot, bright and massive. Its stellar wind, similar to our sun’s solar wind, is rich in carbon. The other star, an OB star, is even more massive, and its solar wind is mostly hydrogen.

The stellar winds are huge streams of charged particles, or plasmas, flowing out from each star. As the two stars orbit each other, their stellar winds collide, forming hydrocarbon dust. That dust rotates in a giant pinwheel shape around the stars, and it glows brightly in infrared.

Is Wolf-Rayet 104 a pinwheel death star?

As it happens, Wolf-Rayet 104’s orientation is such that the pinwheel looks face-on to us. That adds to its beauty, but it also concerned astronomers. Why? It meant the rotational poles of the two stars might be aimed right toward us. Astronomers expect that one or both of the stars will likely explode in a supernova at some point in the future. That explosion could be powerful enough to produce a gamma-ray burst (GRB). And if that pole on the star was indeed oriented toward us, then the gamma-ray burst would come right toward our solar system, endangering life on Earth.

But based on the new study, however, it appears that’s not be the case. Hill explained:

Our view of the pinwheel dust spiral from Earth absolutely looks face-on (spinning in the plane of the sky), and it seemed like a pretty safe assumption that the two stars are orbiting the same way. When I started this project, I thought the main focus would be the colliding winds and a face-on orbit was a given. Instead, I found something very unexpected. The orbit is tilted at least 30 or 40 degrees out of the plane of the sky.

Another surprising mystery

That 30 to 40 degrees is a healthy margin, meaning any gamma-ray burst would most likely miss us. But why is the dust spiral so tilted relative to the orbits of the stars? That is another mystery researchers will now have to solve. As Hill surmised:

This is such a great example of how, with astronomy, we often begin a study and the universe surprises us with mysteries we didn’t expect. We may answer some questions but create more. In the end, that is sometimes how we learn more about physics and the universe we live in. In this case, WR 104 is not done surprising us yet!

Bottom line: A new study from the Keck Observatory confirms two massive stars in the pinwheel death star won’t send a gamma-ray burst toward Earth after all.

Source: Is WR 104 a face-on, colliding-wind binary?

Via W. M. Keck Observatory

Read more: Spiral arms around a star, made by a giant planet

Read more: Keck Planet Finder begins search for other Earths

The post Famous, rare ‘pinwheel death star’ isn’t a threat after all first appeared on EarthSky.



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pinwheel death star: Large bright whitish-red blob in space, with long reddish tail curving around it. Thousands of tiny stars are in the background.
View larger. | Artist’s concept of the Wolf-Rayet 104 pinwheel star system. A new study confirms 2 massive stars are orbiting each other, producing a giant spiral composed of hydrocarbon dust. The study also shows the poles of the stars are not oriented directly toward us as 1st thought, so there is little to no danger of a gamma-ray burst from them hitting Earth, if one of the stars explodes in a supernova. Image via W. M. Keck Observatory/ Adam Makarenko.
  • Wolf-Rayet 104 is a star system where two massive stars orbit each other. A huge spiral of dust circles around the stars, making it a rare pinwheel star system.
  • The pinwheel faces right toward us, so astronomers thought the poles of the stars did also. This could present a danger to Earth. Why? If one of the stars exploded in a supernova, it could send a powerful gamma-ray burst directly toward our solar system.
  • But that isn’t likely to happen, new research from the Keck Observatory shows. The stars’ poles are tilted so much that any gamma-ray burst coming from them would miss us.

Meet Wolf-Rayet 104, the ‘pinwheel death star’

Wolf-Rayet 104 is a famous, rare type of star system known as a pinwheel star. Discovered in 1999, astronomers suspected it consists of two massive stars orbiting each other. As the stars orbit, their stellar winds collide, producing huge amounts of dust. The dust rotates in a giant pinwheel shape. Astronomers using the W. M. Keck Observatory in Hawaii said on March 18, 2025, that they have now confirmed the pair of stars. In addition, they also determined there is little to no danger of Wolf-Rayet 104 emitting a dangerous gamma-ray burst directly toward Earth, as astronomers had previously thought could happen. So the pinwheel death star will seemingly spare us from extinction. Phew!

Astronomer Grant Hill at the Keck Observatory is the author of the latest peer-reviewed research paper. He originally published it in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society on September 19, 2024. Keck issued the new press release on March 18, 2025.

2025 EarthSky lunar calendar is available now. A unique and beautiful poster-sized calendar with phases of the moon for every night of the year. Get yours today!

A rare pinwheel star

Astronomers discovered Wolf-Rayet 104 back in 1999. It is a rare pinwheel star system due to the huge spiral formation of dust circling a pair of stars. Scientists now suspect it’s actually a triple system, with a third much more distant star connected by gravity. But the pinwheel effect is created by the two main stars. The first of the two is a Wolf-Rayet star. Those stars are hot, bright and massive. Its stellar wind, similar to our sun’s solar wind, is rich in carbon. The other star, an OB star, is even more massive, and its solar wind is mostly hydrogen.

The stellar winds are huge streams of charged particles, or plasmas, flowing out from each star. As the two stars orbit each other, their stellar winds collide, forming hydrocarbon dust. That dust rotates in a giant pinwheel shape around the stars, and it glows brightly in infrared.

Is Wolf-Rayet 104 a pinwheel death star?

As it happens, Wolf-Rayet 104’s orientation is such that the pinwheel looks face-on to us. That adds to its beauty, but it also concerned astronomers. Why? It meant the rotational poles of the two stars might be aimed right toward us. Astronomers expect that one or both of the stars will likely explode in a supernova at some point in the future. That explosion could be powerful enough to produce a gamma-ray burst (GRB). And if that pole on the star was indeed oriented toward us, then the gamma-ray burst would come right toward our solar system, endangering life on Earth.

But based on the new study, however, it appears that’s not be the case. Hill explained:

Our view of the pinwheel dust spiral from Earth absolutely looks face-on (spinning in the plane of the sky), and it seemed like a pretty safe assumption that the two stars are orbiting the same way. When I started this project, I thought the main focus would be the colliding winds and a face-on orbit was a given. Instead, I found something very unexpected. The orbit is tilted at least 30 or 40 degrees out of the plane of the sky.

Another surprising mystery

That 30 to 40 degrees is a healthy margin, meaning any gamma-ray burst would most likely miss us. But why is the dust spiral so tilted relative to the orbits of the stars? That is another mystery researchers will now have to solve. As Hill surmised:

This is such a great example of how, with astronomy, we often begin a study and the universe surprises us with mysteries we didn’t expect. We may answer some questions but create more. In the end, that is sometimes how we learn more about physics and the universe we live in. In this case, WR 104 is not done surprising us yet!

Bottom line: A new study from the Keck Observatory confirms two massive stars in the pinwheel death star won’t send a gamma-ray burst toward Earth after all.

Source: Is WR 104 a face-on, colliding-wind binary?

Via W. M. Keck Observatory

Read more: Spiral arms around a star, made by a giant planet

Read more: Keck Planet Finder begins search for other Earths

The post Famous, rare ‘pinwheel death star’ isn’t a threat after all first appeared on EarthSky.



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