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TechMars

Look Who Else Is Seeking Life on Mars

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Reuters
Reuters
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By
Reuters
Reuters
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March 14, 2016, 7:32 AM ET
First Color Pictures Of Mars Rover Released
MARS - JANUARY 6: In this handout released by NASA, a portion of the first color image of Mars that was taken by the panoramic camera on the Mars Exploration Rover Spirit is seen January 6, 2003. The rover landed on Mars January 3 and sent it's first high resolution color image January 6. (Photo by NASA/Jet Propulsion Laboratory/ Cornell University via Getty Images)Photograph by Getty Images

Europe and Russia launched a spacecraft Monday in a joint mission to sniff out signs of life on Mars and bring humans a step closer to flying to the red planet themselves.

The craft, part of the ExoMars program, blasted off from the Baikonur spaceport in Kazakhstan on board a Proton rocket, starting a seven-month journey through space.

It carries an atmospheric probe that is to study trace gases such as methane—a chemical that on Earth is strongly tied to life—that previous Mars missions have detected in the planet’s atmosphere.

“Why are we so interested in Mars? We are trying to understand how life originated in our solar system,” Pascale Ehrenfreund, chair of German space agency DLR’s executive board, said at a launch event held by the European Space Agency.

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Scientists believe the methane could stem from micro-organisms, called methanogenes, that either became extinct millions of years ago and left gas frozen below the planet’s surface, or that some methane-producing organisms still survive.

Another explanation for the methane in Mars’ atmosphere could be that it is produced by geological phenomena, such as the oxidation of iron.

The spacecraft will deploy a lander that will test technologies needed for a rover due to follow in 2018, one step in overcoming the practical and technological challenges facing possible future human flights to Mars.

For more on Mars, watch:

“I’m sure in 20 years or 30 years the moment will come when humans will go to the planet,” said Thomas Reiter, director of Human Spaceflight and Robotic Exploration at the European agency.

Landing on Mars is a notoriously difficult task that has bedeviled nearly all of Russia’s previous efforts and has given NASA trouble as well. The United States currently has two operational rovers on Mars: Curiosity and Opportunity.

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