2022-09-07Zeitschriftenartikel
Biosignature stability in space enables their use for life detection on Mars
Baqué, Mickael
Backhaus, Theresa
Meeßen, Joachim
Hanke, Franziska
Böttger, Ute
Ramkissoon, Nisha
Olsson-Francis, Karen
Baumgärtner, michael
Billi, Daniela
Cassaro, Alessia
de la Torre Noetzel, Rosa
Demets, René
Edwards, Howell
Ehrenfreund, Pascale
Elsaesser, Andreas
Foing, Bernard
Foucher, Frédéric
Huwe, Björn
Joshi, Jasmin
Kozyrovska, Natalla
Lasch, Peter
Lee, Natuschka
Leuko, Stefan
Onofri, Silvano
Ott, Sieglinde
Pacelli, Claudia
Rabbow, Elke
Rothschild, Lynn
Schulze-Makuch, Dirk
Selbmann, Laura
Zucconi, Laura
de Vera, Jean-Pierre P.
Two rover missions to Mars aim to detect biomolecules as a sign of extinct or extant life with, among other instruments, Raman spectrometers. However, there are many unknowns about the stability of Raman-detectable biomolecules in the martian environment, clouding the interpretation of the results. To quantify Raman-detectable biomolecule stability, we exposed seven biomolecules for 469 days to a simulated martian environment outside the International Space Station. Ultraviolet radiation (UVR) strongly changed the Raman spectra signals, but only minor change was observed when samples were shielded from UVR. These findings provide support for Mars mission operations searching for biosignatures in the subsurface. This experiment demonstrates the detectability of biomolecules by Raman spectroscopy in Mars regolith analogs after space exposure and lays the groundwork for a consolidated space-proven database of spectroscopy biosignatures in targeted environments.
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