
Life on Mars? Paper co-authored by LANL scientist says more terraforming research needed
After all, the Los Alamos National Laboratory researcher has dedicated her entire career to the Red Planet.
Lanza personally has been fascinated with Mars since seeing images taken of the surface during the 1997 Pathfinder mission. But she said the earlier Viking missions in the 1970s were a letdown to many, leading to a longtime lack of interest in Earth's rusty neighbor and an approximately two-decade gap before the next Mars mission.
'We saw a bunch of rocks,' Lanza said. 'That's not actually unexpected — that's what planets are made out of. But there was so much hype, I think, built up from 100 years of study of Mars as having canals, with these civilizations moving water. All of that was built up so much that when we actually saw the surface of Mars as it is, people couldn't help being disappointed.'
That's changed. Lanza, who recently co-authored a perspective paper on the potential to terraform Mars, said the fourth planet from the sun is going through a renaissance. Technological advances, Space X and Andy Weir's The Martian have returned Mars to the forefront of the public's imagination.
An idea popularized by astronomer and planetary scientist Carl Sagan in 1971 is having a renaissance as well: terraforming.
'Mars has been a lot more of a complex, dynamic place than we really gave it credit for when we first landed with Viking,' Lanza said. 'It's a place with a lot of resources. It's a place that I think we can, yet again, start to imagine ourselves going to and being there on the surface.'
Nina Lanza X post 2.jpg
Nina Lanza, a Los Alamos National Laboratory scientist who has dedicated her career to Mars, documents milestones in red planet research on her X account.
Her perspective paper, published in Nature Astronomy, asks two main questions: Can the currently inhospitable Mars be warmed enough for life? And, once that question is answered, another arises: Should it?
The paper makes a case for more terraforming research. But there's a long way to go before the red planet turns green.
Terraforming has, in the past, been relegated to the pages of novels. A 2018 study published in Nature Astronomy suggested there's not enough readily accessible carbon dioxide left on Mars to warm the planet sufficiently with greenhouse gases alone.
But Edwin Kite, associate professor of planetary science at the University of Chicago and another co-author on the perspective paper, said there's been technological advances in the past couple of years that have made terraforming seem more in reach.
'It hasn't been a goal in the past because it's been seen as science fiction,' Kite said. '… It's only in the last few years that there's been a big increase in our ability to move mass around the solar system, and these new warming efforts that make it seem like something we might actually do — as opposed to science fiction.'
A friendlier climate
New Mexico and Mars are both deserts, Lanza noted. Water scarcity is a big problem in the Southwest, but it pales in comparison to the lack of readily accessible water on Mars. The majority of the planet's water reserves are in its coldest parts, according to her paper.
Mars was likely once a warmer, wetter place, but that's not the case now. Cold, dry and radiation heavy, its surface is 'worse than the worst deserts on Earth,' Lanza said — more akin to the frozen desert of Antarctica.
New Mexico is 'like a tropical jungle compared to Mars,' she said.
Mars also has a thin atmosphere.
Nina Lanza X3.jpg
'Right now, Mars is not a great place to go if you're a human — or any kind of microscopic life. It's a really harsh environment,' Lanza said. '[But] you can make it less harsh, even if you can't recreate Earth.'
Kite said there's several potential ways to address these challenges and warm Mars. For example, in a 2024 article co-authored by Kite, researchers looked at using artificial aerosols made of materials readily available on the planet's surface, rather than greenhouse gases, and found it potentially could warm the planet more effectively.
The recent perspective paper also delves into using solar sails and other methods to potentially increase the planet's average global temperature by 'tens of degrees' over the course of several years.
Raising ethical questions
But 'can' and 'should' are two different words.
The paper delves into the ethics of terraforming — and putting humans on Mars in general.
'Indeed, any movement of humans beyond Earth raises ethical issues,' the paper states. 'It is a trope of science fiction that, even though humans have already restructured Earth's land surface, nitrogen cycle and so on at the planetary scale, attempts to do the same for other worlds will be seen as dysfunctional.'
Much of that swirls around a lingering question left unanswered by David Bowie: Is there, or has there ever been, life on Mars?
If there is, researchers argue, that totally changes the discussion about terraforming.
While the planet appears dead on the surface, Kite said, there could be life lurking in the deep subsurface.
And Lanza said rocks studied with Mars rovers have displayed 'fascinating chemistry' that could be an indicator of ancient life on Mars.
'If we had seen it on Earth, it wouldn't be a question to us that this was formed by life,' Lanza said. 'But because it's on Mars, it requires much, much larger burden of proof.'
In some ways, the perspective paper is a call to action: More research is needed.
Such research could also inform our knowledge of Earth, Lanza said, noting the planet's changing climate. Mars has gone through its own climate change, becoming drier and colder; terraforming would be yet another change.
The surface is also much more ancient than Earth's, Lanza said, allowing for a more complete geologic record.
But, while similar, Mars and Earth have fundamental differences, Lanza said. Terraforming could make them more similar, but Mars will never become a copy of Earth.
'Earth is unique, Mars is unique, and Mars will continue to be unique,' Lanza said. 'Planets are never going to be identical.'
Nina Lanza X2.jpg
Stalled sample mission
Evidence of life could be in samples of matter collected on the planet's surface, which NASA had planned to return to Earth for study.
The Mars rover Perseverance has been collecting samples, but they might not make it to Earth. An early proposed budget report said costly missions like Mars Sample Return, described as 'grossly over budget,' should be terminated. The need for research on samples would be fulfilled by human missions to Mars, the report stated.
It's not the first time the high cost of the mission has raised eyebrows. An independent September 2023 report expressed concerns over an 'unrealistic budget and schedule expectations.'
The mission was unlikely to meet proposed timelines, the report said, and the proposed fiscal year 2024 budget wouldn't be enough to get the program off the ground.
However, the value of the samples is high, the report stated. The return would 'revolutionize' the understanding of the inner solar system and answer 'one of the most important scientific questions we can answer' — whether there is, or was, life off of Earth.
But NASA struggled to communicate the importance of the mission to the public, the report stated.
Last year, then-NASA Administrator Bill Nelson said the agency was working on a plan to address the issues.
'Mars Sample Return will be one of the most complex missions NASA has ever undertaken. The bottom line is, an $11 billion budget is too expensive, and a 2040 return date is too far away,' Nelson said in an August news release. 'Safely landing and collecting the samples, launching a rocket with the samples off another planet — which has never been done before — and safely transporting the samples more than 33 million miles back to Earth is no small task. We need to look outside the box to find a way ahead that is both affordable and returns samples in a reasonable timeframe.'
Nina Lanza X1.jpg
Lanza said the Mars Sample Return mission is critical. She doesn't see human missions as an alternative — the human presence can disrupt the planet's landscape, potentially obscuring any record of ancient or current life.
The samples can also help protect humans, and their equipment, on future Mars missions, she said. She pointed to lunar regolith, sharp dust on the moon that can be damaging to breathe.
'Understanding what Mars is made out of and how it might pose any particular hazards to health, that's really important if you're going to send people into that hazard,' Lanza said.
Kite had a different perspective. Although the samples have been 'judiciously chosen,' he said, they won't answer every question about Mars — and the high cost makes it unlikely other sample return missions will be approved.
'Even if it had been pursued, it would have been the last sample return, because taxpayers would never sign off on a second one that was very expensive,' Kite said. '… Making it that expensive is a very eggs-in-one-basket approach, because it seems that your first bunch of samples will answer all questions about Mars.'
He added, 'I don't think that's likely.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CNET
14 hours ago
- CNET
Nearly 500 Starlink Satellites Have Incinerated in Earth's Atmosphere So Far This Year
According to a filing with the Federal Communications Commission on Tuesday, 472 Starlink satellites burned up in the atmosphere between December 2024 and May 2025, as SpaceX deorbited around 6% of its active fleet. Starlink satellites are built to last around five years. After that, they're steered into the Earth's atmosphere to burn up. SpaceX, the rocket company owned by Tesla and X CEO Elon Musk, launched the first Starlink satellites in 2019, which means we're now seeing its first full-scale deorbiting. More than 1.4 million homes use Starlink's internet service in the US, and in many rural areas, the technology has been an absolute gamechanger. But scientists have raised concerns about the unintended consequences that come with such an unprecedented rise in the number of satellites in the sky. Of the roughly 10,000 active objects in low-Earth orbit -- around 1,200 miles from the Earth's surface or closer -- more than 7,750 belong to Starlink, according to data collected by Jonathan McDowell, an astrophysicist who tracks satellite launches. SpaceX submits voluntary reports to the FCC twice a year on the state of its satellite constellation. At the December check-in, only 73 satellites had been deorbited in the previous six-month period. That massive increase could have serious impacts here on Earth. Scientists have increasingly found metals from spacecraft in the stratosphere, and on rare occasions, space debris has even made it to the ground. SpaceX revealed last summer (PDF) that a 5.5-pound piece of aluminum from a Starlink satellite was found on a farm in Saskatchewan, Canada. Locating local internet providers "As usual, humanity is doing a new experiment with our environment. We're doing something that nature hasn't done before," McDowell told CNET. SpaceX insists the deorbiting process is safe, putting the risk of a human casualty (PDF) at "less than 1 in 100 million" for its current V2 satellites. "SpaceX satellites exceed industry standards for demisability, with no calculable risk to life on the ground, coupled with targeted reentry of satellites over unpopulated regions of the globe," says SpaceX's filing. Representatives for SpaceX did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Climate scientists concerned about burning satellites With Starlink's first satellite launches only recently deorbiting in significant numbers, we're still in uncharted territory when it comes to mapping the climate impacts. SpaceX already has permission from the FCC to launch 12,000 satellites and has as many as 42,000 planned in the future, according to One study funded by NASA and published in Geophysical Research Letters in June last year found that a 550-pound satellite releases about 66 pounds of aluminum oxide nanoparticles when it burns up in the atmosphere. These nanoparticles have increased eightfold from 2016 to 2022, and the current Starlink satellites weigh 1,760 pounds each. Separate samples taken by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration found "aluminum and exotic metals" in 10% of particle debris in the stratosphere. They projected that figure could grow to 50% "based on the number of satellites being launched into low-Earth orbit." But what effect these metals will have is still an open question. "My impression from talking to the various groups that are doing this kind of research is that if you had to bet, you might bet that the research will come out saying that we're still at least an order of magnitude below what would cause a big problem," McDowell said. It is concerning enough, however, that a group of scientists wrote an open letter to the FCC (PDF) in October last year asking it to pause new satellite launches due to "damaging gasses and metals in our atmosphere." There are currently over 12,000 active satellites in orbit, 7,751 of which belong to Starlink. But we're likely just at the beginning of the satellite race -- a 2020 article published in Nature predicted that 100,000 satellites in the sky by 2030 is "not just feasible but quite likely." "This is part of the bigger story of how space activity has increased to the point that we are having an impact that we haven't had before on the environment," McDowell said. "We're at a stage where a lot of things that it used to be completely valid to just ignore and go, 'Too small to worry about' -- now they're big enough that we need to look at them."
Yahoo
15 hours ago
- Yahoo
Climate satellite MethaneSAT backed by Bezos and Google fails in space after just 1 year
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. One of the most advanced satellites for tracking harmful greenhouse gas emissions has died in space. MethaneSAT, built and operated by the nonprofit Environmental Defense Fund (EDF), was launched in March of 2024 as part of SpaceX's Transporter-10 mission. The spacecraft was designed to pinpoint methane hotspots across the globe — specifically, those created by oil and gas production — and provide freely accessible data analytics about specific emission sources. Now, after a year of collecting that data, the satellite is no longer operational. "On Friday, June 20, the MethaneSAT mission operations lost contact with MethaneSAT. After pursuing all options to restore communications, we learned this morning that the satellite has lost power, and that it is likely not recoverable," EDF said in a statement on Tuesday (July 1). Though invisible, methane is one of the most potent greenhouse gases. Methane molecules absorb infrared radiation very efficiently, trapping 20 to 30 times more heat in Earth's atmosphere when compared to carbon dioxide. Fossil fuel production and industrial waste are some of the highest human-related contributors of methane into the atmosphere. That methane then hovers in Earth's troposphere — about five to nine miles (eight to 15 kilometers) in altitude — like a warm coat around the planet. RELATED STORIES: — Climate change has pushed Earth into 'uncharted territory': report — Tiny satellites use AI to sniff for methane leaks on the ground (photos) — How methane studies on Earth could inform the search for alien life in our solar system MethaneSAT was designed as a sort of check against commercial climate measurements in order to help policymakers independently verify industry emissions reports. "MethaneSAT is specifically designed to catalyze methane reductions by creating unprecedented transparency," the mission's website states. EDF lists 10 mission partners credited with bringing the $88 million satellite to fruition, including BAE Systems, Harvard University, the New Zealand Space Agency, Bezos Earth Fund, Google and more. Though MethaneSAT is now out of service, mission operators say they're still committed to turning the data they were able to collect into actionable results. "We will continue to process data that we have retrieved from the satellite and will be releasing additional scenes of global oil and gas production region-scale emissions over the coming months," EDT officials said. "To solve the climate challenge requires bold action and risk-taking and this satellite was at the leading edge of science, technology and advocacy. "
Yahoo
15 hours ago
- Yahoo
SpaceX double launch lights up Florida sky, but most Volusia beachgoers don't notice
NEW SMYRNA BEACH — SpaceX kicked off July with a doubleheader. On Tuesday, July 1, the aerospace company launched a weather satellite for the European Space Agency just shortly after 5 p.m. Later, in the early morning hours of Wednesday, July 2, SpaceX launched a Falcon 9 for a record-breaking Starlink mission. However, the launches have become so frequent — with 10 rockets launched in June alone — that most people along New Smyrna Beach on Tuesday were unaware. Robert and Kiersten Smyth were celebrating a baby gender reveal when they noticed the burning light in the sky. 'We had no idea,' said Keirsten Smyth, 37. 'We are taking it as a sign of good luck. I was just hoping it cleared so it could be a fully beautiful weather day and perfect launch.' The Smyths, visiting from Texas, celebrated the gender reveal with a plane that towed a sign that read, 'Baby Smyth is a…' Then, the plane let out a blue powder, signaling a boy. It is the couple's first baby. 'It was exciting. It was very exciting,' she said. 'And it happened to come on our party day, so it just made it feel even more special.' However, some beachgoers barely looked up. Athena Padilla, 42, was one of many beachgoers enjoying the sun and sand of New Smyrna Beach when rocket lifted off. 'We were sitting here,' Padilla said. 'We thought we were listening to airplanes. We were like, 'Where are the airplanes?' but we saw smoke in the sky too. Didn't correlate it (to a launch) at all.' Other beachgoers were poring over books or walking the opposite way and didn't notice anything. One beachgoer who did watch the launch, Maybrie Chapman, 15, said it wasn't her first time. Chapman watched a couple of launches while visiting her grandmother in Flagler County and around New Smyrna Beach, she said. 'It was cool,' Chapman said of a launch she previously watched. 'There was a lot of people watching.' The first blastoff happened at 5:04 p.m. Tuesday as part of the Meteosat Third Generation program, according to Thales Group. The cargo on the Falcon 9 rocket, the MTG-S1, was a satellite designed to map Earth's atmosphere in 3D. The second launch occurred at 2:28 a.m. early Wednesday. It also set a record for the Falcon 9 first stage booster, which has now successfully taken off and landed 29 times, reusing the booster each time, according to SpaceX. This article originally appeared on The Daytona Beach News-Journal: Volusia beachgoers barely notice SpaceX launch