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Mars.
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A glowing red orb
in the night sky.
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A desert planet that could hold
signs of extraterrestrial life.
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A new frontier for the future
of humanity.
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For centuries, Mars has been
an enigma in the night sky,
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beckoning us
to unravel its mysteries.
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Now, as a new era
of space exploration begins,
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we have never been closer
to setting foot
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on its desolate surface.
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But what will we discover
when people are finally able
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to explore the Red Planet?
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And could we possibly find
evidence that life exists there?
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Well, that is what
we'll try and find out.
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Scientists and engineers
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working at NASA's
Jet Propulsion Laboratory...
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celebrate,
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as some 245 million miles away
from Earth,
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the Perseverance
Mars rover lands
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on the surface
of the Red Planet.
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I am a participating scientist
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on the Perseverance mission.
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Landing on Mars
is a really complex operation.
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We had been thinking about
this mission
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for a decade before landing,
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building the rover,
building the instruments,
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designing everything about it.
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It had been flying to Mars
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for just over seven
and a half months.
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To watch Perseverance being
lowered by a sky crane
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in the Mars atmosphere,
I-I was speechless.
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That incredible engineering
is so inspiring.
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Perseverance
is now on the surface of Mars,
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looking around for habitability,
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the potential for life,
minerals.
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And so Perseverance
is going to be
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a tremendously valuable
scientific enterprise.
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Many scientists
believe that the data being collected
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by Perseverance will be
a giant leap forward
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in our understanding of Mars.
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00:02:28,565 --> 00:02:31,057
But this mission is just
the latest chapter
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in humanity's long quest
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to unravel the secrets
of the Red Planet.
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In fact, our fixation with Mars
dates back thousands of years.
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Mars has
been an obsession since ancient times.
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And one could ask, why is Mars
such an obsession?
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I would suggest that it's sort
of a mysterious planet.
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It's a red planet.
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Red is a very important color
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for ancient
and indigenous cultures.
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It's the color of blood.
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It's a sacred color.
It's the color of life.
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It's the color of fearsomeness,
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the color of the warrior.
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It was just all really
tantalizing for ancient people.
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The Babylonians named the planet
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after Nergal, their god of war.
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Similarly, the Greeks
named the planet
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after their god of War Aries;
it was the star of Aries.
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00:03:31,377 --> 00:03:33,629
And of course,
the Romans called the planet
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after their god Mars.
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And Mars's astrological
significance
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is quite interesting
and revealing.
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The astrological symbol for Mars
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is a circle with an arrow
coming out of it.
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That's the modern symbol
for maleness, for masculinity,
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virility, warfare, solidity.
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So, as far back
as our history goes,
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it's clear that Mars always had
particular connotations
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built into human understandings
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of the planet's significance
right from the beginning.
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We have been fascinated
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with Mars for a long time
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because there's no planet we can
see as well as we can see Mars.
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Venus is obscured by clouds,
and everything else
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is too far away,
but Mars is there.
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Before we had telescopes
to be able to reveal
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anything on the surface,
it was the red dot in the sky.
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And it, actually,
if you observe it from Earth,
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seems to move backwards in
its orbit every once in a while.
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It confounded scientists, and
people were moved to study it.
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Although humanity's
fascination with Mars began in antiquity,
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the development of telescopes
ushered in a new era
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of investigation
of the Red Planet.
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In the 1600s,
here comes Galileo Galilei,
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a brilliant inventor,
scientist, artist.
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He builds an early telescope
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and starts looking
at the planets.
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And he's wondering,
why are these stars different?
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And this is really when it began
to become clear
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that these were places.
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They weren't deities,
they weren't stars.
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They were places.
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They were other rocky worlds
like Earth.
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And this was a revelation.
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Once human beings realized
that Mars was another planet,
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we were really curious now,
because we wanted to know,
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do we have neighbors
out there in space?
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We long had a suspicion
that it's gonna look like Earth,
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it's gonna feel like Earth,
and we hoped that it would be
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the kind of planet we might be
able to go to someday,
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and there might actually be
living things there.
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During the
second half of the 19th century,
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fascination with Mars
and the possibilities
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of life on Mars
really takes off.
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The American astronomer
Percival Lowell
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enthusiastically takes up
this search
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for evidence of civilization
on Mars.
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So he establishes
his own observatory,
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the Lowell Observatory
in Flagstaff, Arizona,
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carries out detailed examination
of the Martian surface,
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and then publishes
a number of books in 1895
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describing what he's seen.
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And this really strikes a chord.
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And then, of course, famously,
just a few years later in 1898,
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H.G. Wells writes
The War of the Worlds.
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Wells chooses Mars as the home
of the alien civilization
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that's going to be
invading Earth
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precisely because Mars
was already in the public eye.
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Mars has become synonymous
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with the idea of aliens
and sometimes alien invasion.
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We get movies like Mars Attacks!
And others.
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So, there is this idea
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that if there are other
life-forms out there,
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particularly in our own
solar system,
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Mars is where they might
come from.
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00:07:01,662 --> 00:07:05,081
The idea of
Martians invading our planet
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makes for entertaining
science fiction.
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00:07:07,418 --> 00:07:10,095
But scientists believe
they are closer than ever
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00:07:10,254 --> 00:07:14,174
to finding evidence that some
form of life did, in fact,
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00:07:14,267 --> 00:07:17,269
once exist on the Red Planet.
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00:07:17,353 --> 00:07:21,848
But why do experts think
that a barren planet like Mars
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could have, at one time,
given birth to life?
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00:07:27,196 --> 00:07:30,690
Imagine for the moment,
being a Martian explorer
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three to four billion years ago.
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What would we see?
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Instead of seeing
this dead planet with craters
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and-and gigantic
mountain ridges,
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we see riverbeds, oceans.
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We see a blue planet that looks
ripe for the creation of life.
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Today, Mars still
has a large amount of water ice
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just below the surface.
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And on Earth, wherever we find
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that kind of ice,
there is life in it.
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00:07:59,645 --> 00:08:02,722
So, it's quite likely
that if Mars, uh, generated life
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00:08:02,815 --> 00:08:05,391
four billion years ago,
it is still there today,
147
00:08:05,476 --> 00:08:08,069
and we almost certainly know
where to go looking for it.
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00:08:08,154 --> 00:08:11,239
And in fact, the Perseverance
rover that's on the surface now
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is looking at places on Mars
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where life might have been
in the past.
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00:08:16,487 --> 00:08:20,332
In their search
for evidence of life on Mars,
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NASA scientists have sent
the Perseverance rover
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to investigate a particular area
of the Red Planet
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that is known
as the Jezero crater.
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Jezero crater
was formed by a large impact
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00:08:34,013 --> 00:08:38,183
sometime around
3.8 or 3.9 billion years ago.
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Now, we know that at some point,
that this was a lake
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about the size of Lake Tahoe
in the Western United States.
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And so Jezero crater is great,
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because we know the right
ingredients are there
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to preserve ancient life.
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We know that there was
ancient water,
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and we know that Jezero crater
was ancient enough
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that it was active
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in the time when life
might have formed on Mars.
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00:09:04,618 --> 00:09:08,213
And so, because of that,
I am more optimistic
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that with Perseverance,
we might be able to find
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00:09:10,958 --> 00:09:12,467
some of these organic materials
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and some of the possible
evidence for ancient life.
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00:09:16,138 --> 00:09:19,224
Could NASA's Perseverance rover
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actually find evidence
of microscopic Martian life
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in the Jezero crater?
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We'll soon find out.
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But what will happen if we do
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discover signs of life on Mars?
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It's a very exciting mission,
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because if we find evidence
for life on Mars,
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it means that when
the conditions are right,
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life can start,
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00:09:44,584 --> 00:09:46,743
and that means
it's all over the universe.
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00:09:46,836 --> 00:09:50,338
That changes our understanding
of what we are,
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are we alone,
where do we come from?
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So, that kind of revolutionary
possibility of understanding
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is worth a lot of exploration.
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00:10:00,758 --> 00:10:04,352
If the current missions succeed,
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and if there is life on Mars,
then, well,
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00:10:07,598 --> 00:10:10,933
it will be a different world
for all of us.
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00:10:11,018 --> 00:10:13,770
The implications of finding
evidence of life on Mars
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00:10:13,854 --> 00:10:16,948
are, frankly, staggering.
190
00:10:17,033 --> 00:10:20,026
But if it's true that Mars
was once a blue planet,
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teeming with microbial life,
then how did it turn
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00:10:24,865 --> 00:10:28,460
into the lifeless red desert
it is today?
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00:10:28,619 --> 00:10:32,464
There are those who believe
a clue may be found
194
00:10:32,623 --> 00:10:35,634
in an ancient cataclysm
that was so devastating
195
00:10:35,718 --> 00:10:39,763
it left a giant scar across
the surface of the planet.
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The United Arab Emirates
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becomes the first Arab nation
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to send a space vehicle
to the Red Planet.
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00:10:54,812 --> 00:10:58,239
The state-of-the-art
satellite, named Hope,
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00:10:58,324 --> 00:11:00,733
will spend two years
collecting information
201
00:11:00,826 --> 00:11:05,246
on how sunlight, dust
and temperature have affected
202
00:11:05,331 --> 00:11:08,333
the Martian atmosphere
in the past and present.
203
00:11:08,492 --> 00:11:11,661
Astronomers hope this mission
will bring answers
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00:11:11,745 --> 00:11:15,832
to one of the most enduring
mysteries of Mars:
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00:11:15,925 --> 00:11:20,253
how did it become
the Red Planet?
206
00:11:20,337 --> 00:11:22,839
When you look at Mars tonight,
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00:11:22,923 --> 00:11:26,434
in the night sky, for example,
you see this red dot.
208
00:11:26,519 --> 00:11:29,262
Why red? Ferric oxide.
209
00:11:29,355 --> 00:11:30,847
It's the Rusty Planet.
210
00:11:30,931 --> 00:11:32,941
It's iron rust.
211
00:11:33,025 --> 00:11:35,026
But it wasn't always that way.
212
00:11:35,185 --> 00:11:37,696
Billions of years ago,
it was very similar
213
00:11:37,780 --> 00:11:41,607
to what the Earth
looks like today.
214
00:11:41,701 --> 00:11:44,703
The data coming from
the Hope weather satellite
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00:11:44,862 --> 00:11:47,455
could be essential for us
to piece together
216
00:11:47,614 --> 00:11:49,198
this jigsaw puzzle.
217
00:11:49,283 --> 00:11:53,044
We had a lush planet,
a blue planet,
218
00:11:53,129 --> 00:11:55,455
teeming with the possibilities
of life.
219
00:11:55,548 --> 00:11:59,968
And then we have this dead,
barren planet of today.
220
00:12:00,127 --> 00:12:01,469
What happened in between?
221
00:12:01,554 --> 00:12:05,807
Scientists have
theorized that Mars was changed
222
00:12:05,891 --> 00:12:10,061
by some kind of massive
cataclysm in the distant past,
223
00:12:10,220 --> 00:12:13,473
causing it to become barren
and lifeless.
224
00:12:13,557 --> 00:12:15,984
But it's well-known
that Earth has endured
225
00:12:16,068 --> 00:12:18,153
numerous global catastrophes,
226
00:12:18,237 --> 00:12:21,406
and our planet is still
teeming with life.
227
00:12:21,490 --> 00:12:25,151
So, what was different
about Mars?
228
00:12:25,235 --> 00:12:26,995
Natural disasters happened
229
00:12:27,079 --> 00:12:29,330
rather regularly
on the planet Earth.
230
00:12:29,490 --> 00:12:32,417
We have volcanic activity,
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00:12:32,501 --> 00:12:34,919
gigantic earthquakes,
232
00:12:35,004 --> 00:12:39,090
meteor impacts
blanketing out the Sun,
233
00:12:39,175 --> 00:12:43,336
collapsing agriculture,
causing chaos.
234
00:12:43,420 --> 00:12:46,172
So, in other words,
planet-killing events.
235
00:12:46,256 --> 00:12:50,101
But we are here,
the Earth is teeming with life,
236
00:12:50,260 --> 00:12:54,764
and Mars turned out
to be a dead planet.
237
00:12:54,848 --> 00:12:56,941
We don't know for sure,
but we think the culprit
238
00:12:57,100 --> 00:13:00,612
is Mars has a very low
atmospheric density,
239
00:13:00,771 --> 00:13:03,439
only one percent
the atmospheric density
240
00:13:03,524 --> 00:13:05,608
found on the planet Earth.
241
00:13:05,692 --> 00:13:08,620
Mars once
had that dense atmosphere,
242
00:13:08,779 --> 00:13:11,289
but somewhere around
three billion years ago,
243
00:13:11,373 --> 00:13:13,875
that atmosphere
was stripped away.
244
00:13:13,959 --> 00:13:16,294
And as the atmosphere thinned,
245
00:13:16,453 --> 00:13:18,546
liquid water became
less and less stable
246
00:13:18,705 --> 00:13:19,872
and would have evaporated.
247
00:13:19,957 --> 00:13:22,875
So, if there was life on Mars,
248
00:13:22,968 --> 00:13:26,796
it lost one of the key
ingredients for habitability.
249
00:13:26,880 --> 00:13:30,049
We think
the atmosphere on Mars
250
00:13:30,133 --> 00:13:33,886
was initially eroded by impact.
251
00:13:33,971 --> 00:13:38,307
That is, meteorites, asteroids,
252
00:13:38,392 --> 00:13:40,977
physical impactors
on the Martian surface
253
00:13:41,070 --> 00:13:45,323
stripped away
the atmosphere of Mars.
254
00:13:46,742 --> 00:13:48,303
When you
look at Mars you realize
255
00:13:48,327 --> 00:13:51,746
that the northern hemisphere
looks more like plains,
256
00:13:51,905 --> 00:13:54,249
and it's very flat.
257
00:13:54,408 --> 00:13:58,253
But the southern hemisphere
of Mars is heavily cratered,
258
00:13:58,337 --> 00:14:02,081
and that suggests that there
are a lot of impacts there
259
00:14:02,165 --> 00:14:05,501
that could actually have
destroyed the atmosphere
260
00:14:05,594 --> 00:14:07,420
and everything else on Mars.
261
00:14:07,513 --> 00:14:11,257
Without the
atmosphere to preserve
262
00:14:11,350 --> 00:14:15,344
the integrity of the planet,
as the solar wind from the Sun
263
00:14:15,437 --> 00:14:18,690
hits Mars,
water would boil by itself,
264
00:14:18,774 --> 00:14:23,194
would vaporize by itself,
and be lost into outer space.
265
00:14:23,279 --> 00:14:26,439
And as a consequence,
liquid water
266
00:14:26,523 --> 00:14:29,525
cannot remain liquid
on the surface of Mars.
267
00:14:29,618 --> 00:14:34,789
Did ancient asteroid
impacts destroy the atmosphere of Mars?
268
00:14:34,874 --> 00:14:36,532
Perhaps.
269
00:14:36,625 --> 00:14:39,035
But some scientists suggest
there was
270
00:14:39,119 --> 00:14:42,455
an even more powerful disaster
that was responsible.
271
00:14:42,539 --> 00:14:45,550
And as evidence,
they point to a curious feature
272
00:14:45,634 --> 00:14:49,211
of the planet's surface
known as the Valles Marineris,
273
00:14:49,296 --> 00:14:54,350
or as many like to call it,
the scar on Mars.
274
00:15:18,250 --> 00:15:20,660
The Valles Marineris looks as if
275
00:15:20,753 --> 00:15:23,663
something just gouged
out of the surface of Mars.
276
00:15:23,747 --> 00:15:26,424
And the question is,
did it occur naturally?
277
00:15:26,508 --> 00:15:30,762
Because we don't really
understand what happened.
278
00:15:30,846 --> 00:15:34,849
One theory that
I've been exploring recently
279
00:15:34,934 --> 00:15:37,677
is that the Sun has
major solar outbursts
280
00:15:37,761 --> 00:15:41,522
that spread out
throughout the solar system
281
00:15:41,607 --> 00:15:44,776
traveling at very high speeds.
282
00:15:44,860 --> 00:15:48,112
Electrically
charged particles,
283
00:15:48,271 --> 00:15:51,616
protons, electrons,
other charged ions.
284
00:15:51,775 --> 00:15:55,536
And when these hit planets,
you can imagine them
285
00:15:55,621 --> 00:15:59,290
as huge lightning bolts, hitting
the surface of the planet.
286
00:15:59,375 --> 00:16:02,368
And this can gouge out
what look like canyons.
287
00:16:02,461 --> 00:16:06,205
And this may have been
a major contributing factor
288
00:16:06,289 --> 00:16:08,290
to the loss of the atmosphere.
289
00:16:08,375 --> 00:16:11,719
We have lots of
theories as to the geologic
290
00:16:11,804 --> 00:16:14,889
and atmospheric profile of Mars,
291
00:16:14,974 --> 00:16:17,058
but to be certain,
we have to go there
292
00:16:17,142 --> 00:16:20,052
and actually touch and feel
and analyze these things.
293
00:16:20,137 --> 00:16:22,722
From a distance,
from millions of miles away,
294
00:16:22,815 --> 00:16:26,308
we can only speculate
about what could be causing
295
00:16:26,393 --> 00:16:30,146
these unexplained
surface features on Mars.
296
00:16:30,239 --> 00:16:32,064
Will we ever know
what caused Mars
297
00:16:32,149 --> 00:16:34,242
to become so dry and desolate?
298
00:16:34,326 --> 00:16:36,152
Well, there are those
who believe
299
00:16:36,236 --> 00:16:38,654
that one way to learn more
about the past
300
00:16:38,739 --> 00:16:42,083
is by examining possible
evidence that the Red Planet
301
00:16:42,167 --> 00:16:45,670
was once home
to an ancient civilization.
302
00:16:51,176 --> 00:16:53,594
The Cydonia Institute,
303
00:16:53,679 --> 00:16:56,848
a group of researchers that
investigate strange formations
304
00:16:57,007 --> 00:17:00,092
on the surface of Mars
publishes a study
305
00:17:00,177 --> 00:17:05,023
analyzing satellite photographs
taken of the planet.
306
00:17:05,182 --> 00:17:07,683
The images show
what the researchers claim
307
00:17:07,776 --> 00:17:12,113
look like four
and five-sided pyramids
308
00:17:12,272 --> 00:17:15,700
and a series of curious mounds.
309
00:17:15,784 --> 00:17:18,527
This whole idea
for The Cydonia Institute
310
00:17:18,620 --> 00:17:22,448
started when NASA
announced in 1991
311
00:17:22,532 --> 00:17:25,543
that they were gonna return
to Mars with the Mars Observer.
312
00:17:27,370 --> 00:17:29,371
And over the last 30-some years
313
00:17:29,456 --> 00:17:32,625
of our group studying
NASA photographs,
314
00:17:32,709 --> 00:17:36,387
we have found
an enormous amount of evidence
315
00:17:36,472 --> 00:17:41,142
that led us to believe there are
artificial structures on Mars.
316
00:17:41,226 --> 00:17:43,144
What we're trying to do is get
317
00:17:43,228 --> 00:17:45,480
a preponderance of evidence
together
318
00:17:45,564 --> 00:17:48,399
so that we can prove the point
319
00:17:48,484 --> 00:17:51,152
that there's ruins
all over the planet.
320
00:17:51,236 --> 00:17:53,237
And just as you would
here on Earth,
321
00:17:53,322 --> 00:17:55,239
you're gonna look
for straight lines,
322
00:17:55,398 --> 00:17:59,494
parallel lines, circles,
squares, rectangles,
323
00:17:59,578 --> 00:18:01,153
things of this nature.
324
00:18:01,238 --> 00:18:03,081
And when you find them,
325
00:18:03,165 --> 00:18:05,083
then you can start
to zoom in on areas
326
00:18:05,242 --> 00:18:08,252
and look for even, uh,
stronger details.
327
00:18:10,339 --> 00:18:12,423
When the Perseverance landed,
328
00:18:12,508 --> 00:18:13,902
one of the first things
that I noticed
329
00:18:13,926 --> 00:18:16,335
was a conical pyramid
in the distance.
330
00:18:16,428 --> 00:18:19,430
The camera there took a
beautiful couple pictures of it.
331
00:18:19,589 --> 00:18:21,076
It doesn't make any sense
to me geologically
332
00:18:21,100 --> 00:18:22,424
how that could happen.
333
00:18:22,518 --> 00:18:25,261
That was one of the biggest
anomalies that was seen.
334
00:18:25,345 --> 00:18:27,522
We're still gonna get better
and better pictures,
335
00:18:27,606 --> 00:18:29,440
we're going to have
more to look at,
336
00:18:29,525 --> 00:18:33,277
as NASA releases all of these
images from Perseverance.
337
00:18:33,362 --> 00:18:36,272
But we haven't gotten there yet,
because the Perseverance,
338
00:18:36,356 --> 00:18:38,774
they landed in the middle
of a big lake.
339
00:18:38,859 --> 00:18:41,035
And I think the only thing
we're gonna find there
340
00:18:41,120 --> 00:18:44,539
is probably shells, things
from an aquatic environment.
341
00:18:44,623 --> 00:18:48,868
I think all of the ruins
that people are looking for,
342
00:18:48,952 --> 00:18:51,203
they're gonna be found once
they drive a little further,
343
00:18:51,296 --> 00:18:52,964
in the perimeter.
344
00:18:55,208 --> 00:18:59,470
Cities and
ruins on the surface of Mars?
345
00:18:59,555 --> 00:19:02,974
Could the remnants of
an ancient Martian civilization
346
00:19:03,133 --> 00:19:06,310
have really been hiding
in plain sight?
347
00:19:06,469 --> 00:19:09,471
It's a question that researchers
have pondered
348
00:19:09,556 --> 00:19:11,473
for more than four decades,
349
00:19:11,558 --> 00:19:14,059
ever since NASA sent
the first satellites
350
00:19:14,144 --> 00:19:17,146
into orbit
around the Red Planet.
351
00:19:17,239 --> 00:19:19,240
Mars has piqued the curiosity
352
00:19:19,324 --> 00:19:24,236
of scientists and the public
for millennia,
353
00:19:24,321 --> 00:19:26,215
but it really wasn't
until the dawn of the Space Age
354
00:19:26,239 --> 00:19:27,823
that we started getting an idea
355
00:19:27,908 --> 00:19:29,909
of what the planet
was really all about.
356
00:19:29,993 --> 00:19:34,079
Mariner 4 in 1965
flies past the planet,
357
00:19:34,164 --> 00:19:37,258
sends back 22 fuzzy photographs,
358
00:19:37,342 --> 00:19:40,011
and Mars looks
just like the Moon.
359
00:19:43,673 --> 00:19:45,174
And then we sent two spacecraft,
360
00:19:45,267 --> 00:19:48,436
Viking 1 and Viking 2, in 1976.
361
00:19:48,520 --> 00:19:51,314
So we got tens of thousands
of photographs from orbit.
362
00:19:53,525 --> 00:19:55,776
Since then, as we get
better-resolution photographs
363
00:19:55,936 --> 00:19:57,278
from the surface of Mars,
364
00:19:57,362 --> 00:20:01,357
people have thought they saw
all kinds of things there.
365
00:20:01,441 --> 00:20:03,451
There is a not insignificant
group of people
366
00:20:03,535 --> 00:20:05,513
that think that we've already
discovered life on Mars,
367
00:20:05,537 --> 00:20:06,862
that there are structures there,
368
00:20:06,955 --> 00:20:09,040
that there are buildings,
obelisks,
369
00:20:09,199 --> 00:20:11,792
some kind of indicator
of ancient cultures
370
00:20:11,952 --> 00:20:12,952
that is being covered up.
371
00:20:14,963 --> 00:20:16,789
You look at images of this,
372
00:20:16,882 --> 00:20:21,961
and people are spotting
all sorts of strange shapes
373
00:20:22,054 --> 00:20:24,463
and pyramids,
374
00:20:24,556 --> 00:20:27,299
structures of some kind,
on the Martian surface.
375
00:20:27,384 --> 00:20:31,562
Is it something left
by a lost civilization
376
00:20:31,721 --> 00:20:33,481
as maybe a-a monument
to themselves
377
00:20:33,565 --> 00:20:34,732
and their achievement?
378
00:20:36,643 --> 00:20:38,483
For some,
the most compelling evidence
379
00:20:38,561 --> 00:20:41,397
that an ancient civilization
once existed on Mars
380
00:20:41,481 --> 00:20:43,482
can be found in a photograph
381
00:20:43,566 --> 00:20:46,410
which shows what appears
to be a large structure,
382
00:20:46,569 --> 00:20:51,999
that has come to be known
as the Face on Mars.
383
00:20:52,158 --> 00:20:55,160
In Viking lander photographs,
384
00:20:55,245 --> 00:20:58,506
it was discovered that there
was this weird-looking structure
385
00:20:58,590 --> 00:21:00,424
that looks, for all the world,
386
00:21:00,583 --> 00:21:02,927
in the Viking photos,
like a face.
387
00:21:04,170 --> 00:21:05,530
Everything is proportional.
388
00:21:05,597 --> 00:21:08,757
The-the face is a mile
and a half, two miles long.
389
00:21:08,842 --> 00:21:10,843
The eyes are a quarter mile.
390
00:21:10,927 --> 00:21:12,845
The nose about a half a mile.
391
00:21:12,938 --> 00:21:16,181
So it's not a small structure,
it's a very large structure.
392
00:21:16,266 --> 00:21:17,942
I believe that the Face on Mars
393
00:21:18,101 --> 00:21:21,946
was created from, uh,
possibly an existing mesa.
394
00:21:22,030 --> 00:21:25,274
It's not just
the face, but on top of that,
395
00:21:25,358 --> 00:21:28,452
people saw what they called
the D&M Pyramid,
396
00:21:28,611 --> 00:21:31,447
which is this weird
five-sided structure
397
00:21:31,540 --> 00:21:34,709
that looks like
a five-sided pyramid.
398
00:21:34,793 --> 00:21:38,787
People were claiming this
had to be artificial structures.
399
00:21:38,872 --> 00:21:42,216
The D&M Pyramid
is a five-sided structure.
400
00:21:42,301 --> 00:21:45,553
The five faces have all this
very symmetrical geometry
401
00:21:45,637 --> 00:21:48,714
of 30 degrees, 60 degrees
and 90 degrees.
402
00:21:48,798 --> 00:21:51,050
It's just a remarkable
out-of-place artifact
403
00:21:51,134 --> 00:21:52,143
on the surface of Mars.
404
00:21:52,227 --> 00:21:55,054
What researchers
looking at this found
405
00:21:55,138 --> 00:21:57,973
is that because of
its exquisite geometry,
406
00:21:58,058 --> 00:22:01,560
there's no way that this
could be created naturally.
407
00:22:01,653 --> 00:22:05,239
Decades after the
famous photograph was taken,
408
00:22:05,324 --> 00:22:07,983
the Face on Mars
continues to inspire
409
00:22:08,068 --> 00:22:11,162
both fascination and debate.
410
00:22:11,246 --> 00:22:15,333
Many researchers believe it
and other curious formations
411
00:22:15,417 --> 00:22:19,745
on the Red Planet merit
further study and discussion.
412
00:22:19,838 --> 00:22:24,008
Some of this may
just be a trick of the light,
413
00:22:24,167 --> 00:22:26,761
funny-shaped rocks,
that sort of thing.
414
00:22:26,920 --> 00:22:29,671
But only one of these things
has got to be the real deal,
415
00:22:29,756 --> 00:22:33,008
and we're in game-changing
territory.
416
00:22:33,093 --> 00:22:36,929
Was there once an advanced
civilization on Mars?
417
00:22:37,013 --> 00:22:39,348
Some of the features
on the planet's surface
418
00:22:39,432 --> 00:22:41,600
definitely make you wonder.
419
00:22:41,684 --> 00:22:44,945
But there are those who claim
that we don't need
420
00:22:45,030 --> 00:22:47,189
to send probes
millions of miles away
421
00:22:47,273 --> 00:22:50,034
to search for signs
of Martian life.
422
00:22:50,193 --> 00:22:53,028
They believe
that Martian life-forms
423
00:22:53,113 --> 00:22:55,706
have already traveled here
to Earth.
424
00:23:02,872 --> 00:23:05,383
President
Bill Clinton announces
425
00:23:05,467 --> 00:23:07,960
that NASA scientists have made
a remarkable discovery.
426
00:23:08,053 --> 00:23:09,220
Good afternoon.
427
00:23:09,304 --> 00:23:10,888
The scientists examined
428
00:23:11,047 --> 00:23:13,724
an ancient Martian rock
that fell to Earth
429
00:23:13,809 --> 00:23:16,802
as a meteorite
in the distant past
430
00:23:16,895 --> 00:23:20,305
and found evidence which
suggests that the meteorite
431
00:23:20,399 --> 00:23:25,811
once contained microscopic
Martian life inside it.
432
00:23:25,895 --> 00:23:28,981
More than four billion
years ago,
433
00:23:29,065 --> 00:23:31,066
this piece of rock was formed
434
00:23:31,151 --> 00:23:33,577
as a part of the original crust
of Mars.
435
00:23:33,662 --> 00:23:36,989
After billions of years,
it broke from the surface
436
00:23:37,082 --> 00:23:39,667
and began a 16-million-year
journey through space
437
00:23:39,751 --> 00:23:41,335
that would end here on Earth.
438
00:23:41,420 --> 00:23:44,913
It speaks of the possibility
of life.
439
00:23:44,998 --> 00:23:47,666
If this discovery is confirmed,
440
00:23:47,759 --> 00:23:50,002
it will surely be one of
the most stunning insights
441
00:23:50,095 --> 00:23:54,014
into our universe that science
has ever uncovered.
442
00:23:54,099 --> 00:23:56,600
Its implications
are as far-reaching
443
00:23:56,685 --> 00:23:59,178
and awe-inspiring
as can be imagined.
444
00:23:59,271 --> 00:24:02,857
This asteroid,
called the Allan Hills asteroid,
445
00:24:02,941 --> 00:24:04,525
was found in Antarctica.
446
00:24:04,684 --> 00:24:06,685
It proved really valuable
447
00:24:06,778 --> 00:24:08,414
because we've never been able
to bring samples back,
448
00:24:08,438 --> 00:24:10,939
but now we have
this piece of Mars to study
449
00:24:11,024 --> 00:24:13,451
in a lab on Earth,
which is really important,
450
00:24:13,535 --> 00:24:15,527
because as our instruments
get better,
451
00:24:15,612 --> 00:24:18,030
we can continue to study it
and learn more.
452
00:24:18,114 --> 00:24:19,684
So when they
crack the meteorite open,
453
00:24:19,708 --> 00:24:21,033
they looked inside,
454
00:24:21,126 --> 00:24:25,204
and they saw what looked
like fossilized life-forms.
455
00:24:25,288 --> 00:24:27,882
They look like little tiny worms
456
00:24:28,041 --> 00:24:32,211
and other bits of potentially
fossilized biological matter.
457
00:24:32,295 --> 00:24:34,129
And these were really small.
458
00:24:34,214 --> 00:24:36,192
They were smaller than
even a single-celled creature
459
00:24:36,216 --> 00:24:37,391
would be on Earth.
460
00:24:37,476 --> 00:24:39,551
But they looked like life-forms.
461
00:24:39,636 --> 00:24:41,947
And there are other indicators,
in terms of the composition
462
00:24:41,971 --> 00:24:43,898
and the makeup
and the distribution of them,
463
00:24:43,982 --> 00:24:46,043
that led them to think
that they might be life-forms.
464
00:24:46,067 --> 00:24:48,319
It was so remarkable-looking,
465
00:24:48,403 --> 00:24:50,479
that it merited
an announcement to the public,
466
00:24:50,563 --> 00:24:52,481
and it caused a major stir.
467
00:24:52,565 --> 00:24:54,825
Allan Hills meteorite
468
00:24:54,984 --> 00:24:58,412
really changed
the field of astrobiology.
469
00:24:58,497 --> 00:25:01,156
There was a bunch
of lines of evidence
470
00:25:01,241 --> 00:25:03,575
that appeared to us
to suggest the possibility
471
00:25:03,668 --> 00:25:08,497
that this had something
to do with primitive life.
472
00:25:08,590 --> 00:25:10,674
According to experts,
473
00:25:10,833 --> 00:25:13,260
it's possible that
the Allan Hills meteorite
474
00:25:13,345 --> 00:25:17,181
actually brought microscopic
evidence of Martian life
475
00:25:17,265 --> 00:25:19,925
to our planet
when it landed here.
476
00:25:20,009 --> 00:25:22,928
And the idea that any form
of life can travel
477
00:25:23,021 --> 00:25:26,524
from Mars to Earth has caused
many scientists to consider
478
00:25:26,683 --> 00:25:29,935
an even more profound
possibility:
479
00:25:30,028 --> 00:25:36,358
what if life on Earth
was seeded from Mars?
480
00:25:36,442 --> 00:25:40,621
There's an idea in the field of
astrobiology called panspermia,
481
00:25:40,705 --> 00:25:42,873
and the essence of the idea
is this:
482
00:25:42,958 --> 00:25:45,033
four billion years ago,
there may have been life
483
00:25:45,118 --> 00:25:47,035
on Mars... microbial...
But something.
484
00:25:47,120 --> 00:25:50,130
A rock slams into Mars,
you know, some asteroid,
485
00:25:50,215 --> 00:25:53,384
it kicks up a big clod
of Martian dirt.
486
00:25:53,468 --> 00:25:55,803
Some of it gets kicked up
fast enough
487
00:25:55,887 --> 00:25:59,298
to just leave Mars altogether,
wanders around the solar system,
488
00:25:59,391 --> 00:26:02,384
but some of it, by chance,
would fall on the Earth
489
00:26:02,468 --> 00:26:04,562
and might infect the Earth.
490
00:26:06,898 --> 00:26:10,058
The panspermia
theory cannot be dismissed.
491
00:26:10,151 --> 00:26:12,820
And one reason is as follows.
492
00:26:12,904 --> 00:26:16,991
In the early Earth, we were hit
by meteors and asteroids.
493
00:26:17,075 --> 00:26:21,829
In fact, it turns out that
almost 300 meteorites from Mars
494
00:26:21,913 --> 00:26:23,822
have been identified.
495
00:26:23,906 --> 00:26:28,410
This means that perhaps DNA
may ride on these meteorites
496
00:26:28,503 --> 00:26:30,838
as it goes
from planet to planet.
497
00:26:30,922 --> 00:26:35,083
So if, for example, life
were to start on Mars first,
498
00:26:35,168 --> 00:26:38,762
and a rock carrying Martian DNA
499
00:26:38,847 --> 00:26:41,757
were to land
on the planet Earth,
500
00:26:41,850 --> 00:26:44,602
then boom,
life gets off the ground.
501
00:26:44,686 --> 00:26:48,272
So, one theory
is that if you want
502
00:26:48,356 --> 00:26:52,184
to see a Martian,
look in the mirror tonight.
503
00:26:52,268 --> 00:26:56,280
Has life migrated
possibly from Mars to Earth?
504
00:26:56,364 --> 00:26:57,448
It's possible.
505
00:26:57,607 --> 00:26:59,775
We can't say yes,
we can't say no, yet.
506
00:26:59,859 --> 00:27:02,369
Any Mars scientist you talk to,
507
00:27:02,454 --> 00:27:04,863
any planetary geologist
will tell you,
508
00:27:04,956 --> 00:27:07,783
they would love to have
that dinosaur bone moment,
509
00:27:07,867 --> 00:27:10,035
they would love
for the rover to roll up
510
00:27:10,119 --> 00:27:14,206
and find a giant fossilized
femur, or even something alive.
511
00:27:14,290 --> 00:27:17,134
We may find these things
someday.
512
00:27:17,218 --> 00:27:19,386
But we're not gonna know
until we get there
513
00:27:19,471 --> 00:27:21,713
and find life on Mars,
514
00:27:21,806 --> 00:27:24,800
and are able to look at it,
get some DNA out of it
515
00:27:24,884 --> 00:27:26,802
and figure out if it ended up
on Earth,
516
00:27:26,886 --> 00:27:29,554
or if it's something
completely alien to us.
517
00:27:29,639 --> 00:27:32,900
If scientists
are someday able to confirm
518
00:27:32,984 --> 00:27:35,819
that life came
from Mars to Earth,
519
00:27:35,904 --> 00:27:38,647
then it begs the question,
520
00:27:38,731 --> 00:27:44,328
what would such a discovery
mean to humanity?
521
00:27:44,487 --> 00:27:46,405
Mars might hold the key
to understanding
522
00:27:46,489 --> 00:27:47,989
the origin of life.
523
00:27:48,074 --> 00:27:51,335
It has a lot of potential
to help us understand
524
00:27:51,494 --> 00:27:55,005
where we fit
in the biggest-scale picture
525
00:27:55,090 --> 00:27:59,259
of the universe
and the history of the Earth,
526
00:27:59,344 --> 00:28:02,846
because we want to understand
the history of this planet.
527
00:28:02,931 --> 00:28:08,093
How did we get to a place
where humans were here?
528
00:28:08,177 --> 00:28:10,429
Science is based on things
that are testable,
529
00:28:10,513 --> 00:28:14,599
falsifiable, reproduceable,
and as Carl Sagan once said,
530
00:28:14,684 --> 00:28:18,028
"Remarkable claims
require remarkable proof."
531
00:28:18,113 --> 00:28:21,690
But if, if we have one solid
piece of evidence
532
00:28:21,774 --> 00:28:24,443
that Mars seeded the Earth,
533
00:28:24,536 --> 00:28:27,621
that would force historians
of science to rewrite
534
00:28:27,706 --> 00:28:33,043
all the science textbooks and
change our role in the universe.
535
00:28:35,213 --> 00:28:41,051
Did life originate on Mars
and then evolve on Earth?
536
00:28:41,136 --> 00:28:45,055
If scientists really believe
that it could be possible,
537
00:28:45,214 --> 00:28:48,800
then perhaps one day,
we'll find the proof here.
538
00:28:48,885 --> 00:28:53,647
Or maybe it will be revealed
when astronauts
539
00:28:53,732 --> 00:28:57,568
set foot on the Red Planet
itself.
540
00:29:03,908 --> 00:29:07,736
NASA announces a
series of bold new technologies
541
00:29:07,820 --> 00:29:10,247
they are actively developing
to help astronauts
542
00:29:10,331 --> 00:29:12,249
eventually reach Mars,
543
00:29:12,408 --> 00:29:15,327
including cutting-edge
propulsion systems,
544
00:29:15,411 --> 00:29:20,090
next-generation space suits
and nuclear fission generators.
545
00:29:21,593 --> 00:29:24,678
This is such an exciting time
to be working on Mars.
546
00:29:24,763 --> 00:29:27,264
There is unprecedented interest.
547
00:29:27,423 --> 00:29:29,600
There are more government
space agencies
548
00:29:29,759 --> 00:29:33,187
and scientists
around the world working
549
00:29:33,271 --> 00:29:36,774
towards space exploration than
there have ever been before.
550
00:29:38,026 --> 00:29:40,861
We have new rockets,
551
00:29:40,945 --> 00:29:42,771
different instruments,
552
00:29:42,855 --> 00:29:44,842
and we're at a time when
technology is getting closer
553
00:29:44,866 --> 00:29:47,526
to sending people to Mars.
554
00:29:47,619 --> 00:29:51,112
It's-it's really fun.
It's really exciting.
555
00:29:51,197 --> 00:29:53,791
In addition to NASA,
556
00:29:53,875 --> 00:29:56,543
numerous space agencies
from around the world
557
00:29:56,702 --> 00:29:59,204
have also stepped up their
efforts to send people to Mars.
558
00:29:59,288 --> 00:30:02,382
There are many who believe
that this increase in activity
559
00:30:02,467 --> 00:30:05,710
echoes the Space Race
from the 1960s,
560
00:30:05,804 --> 00:30:09,473
when humanity strived
to land men on the Moon
561
00:30:09,557 --> 00:30:10,724
for the first time.
562
00:30:10,809 --> 00:30:12,634
July 20th, 1969,
563
00:30:12,718 --> 00:30:15,229
Apollo 11 lands on the Moon,
564
00:30:15,313 --> 00:30:20,818
and this is one of the proudest
moments in human history.
565
00:30:20,902 --> 00:30:23,645
That's one small step for man,
566
00:30:23,729 --> 00:30:26,323
one giant leap for mankind.
567
00:30:26,407 --> 00:30:30,160
Two men down on the surface,
600 million people
568
00:30:30,245 --> 00:30:31,745
watching around the world,
569
00:30:31,830 --> 00:30:35,499
more listening to their radios,
people can barely believe it.
570
00:30:35,658 --> 00:30:38,410
They stayed on the Moon's
surface for a day,
571
00:30:38,503 --> 00:30:40,838
they achieved all their goals,
and it was just
572
00:30:40,922 --> 00:30:43,748
a watershed moment
in Western civilization.
573
00:30:43,833 --> 00:30:45,917
And the next big question
574
00:30:46,010 --> 00:30:49,921
is what are we gonna do
after the Apollo landings?
575
00:30:50,006 --> 00:30:52,015
Wernher von Braun,
the famed rocket scientist
576
00:30:52,174 --> 00:30:54,593
of German origins,
published a book
577
00:30:54,686 --> 00:30:56,928
called The Mars Project,
where he actually laid out
578
00:30:57,021 --> 00:31:00,691
the first real technically
accurate engineering plan
579
00:31:00,775 --> 00:31:02,359
on how we could do this.
580
00:31:02,443 --> 00:31:05,103
And they wanted to do it
by the mid-1980s.
581
00:31:05,196 --> 00:31:07,865
But by the time Richard Nixon
came into the office,
582
00:31:07,949 --> 00:31:09,950
we realized it was gonna be
a much bigger job
583
00:31:10,034 --> 00:31:12,444
to send humans to Mars
than we thought.
584
00:31:12,528 --> 00:31:16,707
But we continued to think about
it, and it continues today.
585
00:31:16,866 --> 00:31:18,427
We want to go beyond to Mars
and find out
586
00:31:18,451 --> 00:31:20,544
what's happening on that world,
587
00:31:20,703 --> 00:31:22,880
because a human being can do
in about 15 minutes
588
00:31:23,039 --> 00:31:25,373
what it takes a robot
six months to do.
589
00:31:25,458 --> 00:31:27,208
So you have to send people.
590
00:31:27,293 --> 00:31:31,889
It's not just NASA
and other space agencies
591
00:31:31,973 --> 00:31:35,216
that have their sights
set on Mars.
592
00:31:35,301 --> 00:31:37,636
Ordinary people
are also quite eager
593
00:31:37,720 --> 00:31:40,138
to travel to the Red Planet.
594
00:31:40,231 --> 00:31:43,308
In fact, when it was announced
in March of 2020
595
00:31:43,401 --> 00:31:46,820
that NASA would begin recruiting
a new generation of astronauts
596
00:31:46,905 --> 00:31:49,489
for its first-ever
manned mission to Mars,
597
00:31:49,574 --> 00:31:54,486
200,000 people
submitted applications.
598
00:31:54,570 --> 00:31:59,074
I think it's the nature of
human beings to try to expand further.
599
00:31:59,158 --> 00:32:03,078
There's a sense of exploration,
of-of being an explorer,
600
00:32:03,171 --> 00:32:05,339
of being the first to go
somewhere,
601
00:32:05,423 --> 00:32:07,758
and that really motivates
a lot of people.
602
00:32:07,917 --> 00:32:09,843
This is a great time
in space exploration.
603
00:32:09,928 --> 00:32:12,095
We're at a time
when we have pictures of Mars
604
00:32:12,180 --> 00:32:13,922
in our living rooms.
605
00:32:14,006 --> 00:32:15,826
We have pictures of Mars
on our computer screens.
606
00:32:15,850 --> 00:32:20,345
We're seeing that-that, yes,
we can reach out to Mars.
607
00:32:20,429 --> 00:32:22,439
We can see it, we can touch it.
We're so close.
608
00:32:22,523 --> 00:32:24,349
And that's really exciting
to see.
609
00:32:24,442 --> 00:32:27,519
One member of
the new generation of explorers
610
00:32:27,603 --> 00:32:29,938
that is hoping to be selected
to go to Mars
611
00:32:30,031 --> 00:32:33,191
is 20-year-old Alyssa Carson.
612
00:32:33,275 --> 00:32:35,786
She is so driven to be
among the first humans
613
00:32:35,870 --> 00:32:38,029
to set foot on the Red Planet
that she's been
614
00:32:38,114 --> 00:32:42,367
preparing for such a mission
her entire life.
615
00:32:42,460 --> 00:32:45,203
Mars has kind of always
been my ultimate goal, uh,
616
00:32:45,296 --> 00:32:47,288
mainly just because
of the curiosity of it,
617
00:32:47,373 --> 00:32:48,966
you know, what is on Mars,
618
00:32:49,125 --> 00:32:50,801
no one's been there before,
why not go?
619
00:32:52,303 --> 00:32:55,714
So I started out by going
to all the NASA space camps,
620
00:32:55,807 --> 00:32:58,725
I then joined a citizen science
research organization.
621
00:32:58,810 --> 00:33:03,563
And with them, I've been
able to do g-force trainings,
622
00:33:03,648 --> 00:33:05,148
microgravity flights.
623
00:33:05,233 --> 00:33:07,308
Success.
624
00:33:07,393 --> 00:33:12,147
Water survival training,
space suit evaluations.
625
00:33:12,231 --> 00:33:14,324
But, you know, I definitely
would say that the thing
626
00:33:14,483 --> 00:33:16,043
that I'm most proud of
is the experience
627
00:33:16,077 --> 00:33:17,902
of being on the NASA
MER 10 panel
628
00:33:17,996 --> 00:33:21,915
with PhDs, scientists,
just so many amazing people.
629
00:33:22,000 --> 00:33:23,500
I almost really can't explain
630
00:33:23,659 --> 00:33:25,827
why I have such a passion
and drive for it.
631
00:33:25,920 --> 00:33:27,587
If the only option
was a one-way trip,
632
00:33:27,672 --> 00:33:29,006
then I would still want to go.
633
00:33:30,258 --> 00:33:31,568
When are we gonna go to Mars?
634
00:33:31,592 --> 00:33:33,501
I get that question a lot.
635
00:33:33,586 --> 00:33:35,072
You know, people who are
in the rocket business say,
636
00:33:35,096 --> 00:33:37,681
"Well, certainly
within ten years,
637
00:33:37,840 --> 00:33:39,850
we could send somebody
to the Red Planet."
638
00:33:40,009 --> 00:33:41,760
And you might say,
but why do that, right?
639
00:33:41,853 --> 00:33:43,020
It's dangerous,
640
00:33:43,104 --> 00:33:45,188
uh, getting them there,
bringing them back.
641
00:33:45,347 --> 00:33:46,834
There are all sorts
of technical problems,
642
00:33:46,858 --> 00:33:48,191
not the least of which
643
00:33:48,276 --> 00:33:51,352
is the fact that the Sun
occasionally burps
644
00:33:51,437 --> 00:33:54,865
high-speed particles into space,
and those particles
645
00:33:54,949 --> 00:33:57,692
would zip right through
the skin of any rocket
646
00:33:57,785 --> 00:33:59,337
and give everybody inside
instant cancer,
647
00:33:59,361 --> 00:34:00,537
that kind of thing.
648
00:34:00,621 --> 00:34:02,421
I mean, these are,
these are serious problems.
649
00:34:02,457 --> 00:34:05,542
Why are so many people
650
00:34:05,626 --> 00:34:08,036
willing to put their life
on the line
651
00:34:08,120 --> 00:34:10,547
for a perilous journey to Mars?
652
00:34:10,631 --> 00:34:12,874
Well, there are those
who believe
653
00:34:12,958 --> 00:34:15,376
that we are motivated
to go to Mars
654
00:34:15,470 --> 00:34:18,472
because there is a profound
connection
655
00:34:18,556 --> 00:34:21,892
between humans
and the Red Planet.
656
00:34:21,976 --> 00:34:23,718
And that evidence
of this connection
657
00:34:23,803 --> 00:34:26,980
can be found in the human body.
658
00:34:27,139 --> 00:34:30,558
The human body
produces a good fat and bad fat,
659
00:34:30,643 --> 00:34:35,155
and the good fat,
it turns out, we produce more of
660
00:34:35,239 --> 00:34:38,483
if we're held at an average
temperature of 67 degrees
661
00:34:38,567 --> 00:34:43,163
or a little bit lower than that
on a regular basis.
662
00:34:43,247 --> 00:34:46,666
I find that
an interesting correlation
663
00:34:46,751 --> 00:34:49,836
that the temperature
in the summertime on Mars
664
00:34:49,995 --> 00:34:52,247
is 67 degrees Fahrenheit.
665
00:34:52,331 --> 00:34:55,008
Does that suggest that humanity
666
00:34:55,167 --> 00:34:59,003
is more suited to be healthy on
Mars than they are on Earth?
667
00:34:59,097 --> 00:35:00,097
I don't know.
668
00:35:02,174 --> 00:35:04,092
There are other aspects of Mars
669
00:35:04,176 --> 00:35:06,603
that is interesting
with the human physiology.
670
00:35:06,687 --> 00:35:10,524
When astronauts spend a long
period of time in microgravity,
671
00:35:10,608 --> 00:35:14,602
their internal
biorhythm clock resets,
672
00:35:14,687 --> 00:35:17,856
not to a day that's as long
as a day on Earth,
673
00:35:17,940 --> 00:35:21,109
but in fact it resets
precisely to the time
674
00:35:21,193 --> 00:35:24,112
a day is on Mars,
which is a little bit different
675
00:35:24,196 --> 00:35:25,288
by a few minutes.
676
00:35:25,373 --> 00:35:26,698
Why does this happen?
677
00:35:26,791 --> 00:35:30,535
Is it telling us that there's
something in our DNA,
678
00:35:30,619 --> 00:35:33,872
in our genetic code
that is more suitable
679
00:35:33,956 --> 00:35:36,967
for Mars than it is for Earth?
680
00:35:37,126 --> 00:35:39,136
We don't know,
but that is a possibility.
681
00:36:09,667 --> 00:36:12,836
Could it really be possible
that Mars is in our DNA?
682
00:36:12,920 --> 00:36:14,171
And that by going there,
683
00:36:14,330 --> 00:36:15,964
we would actually be
returning home?
684
00:36:18,167 --> 00:36:21,085
There are many
who believe it's true,
685
00:36:21,170 --> 00:36:24,756
and feel so strongly that
humanity's future lies on Mars
686
00:36:24,840 --> 00:36:26,493
that they're investing
everything they've got
687
00:36:26,517 --> 00:36:27,976
to get us back there.
688
00:36:34,767 --> 00:36:36,776
On the 60th anniversary
689
00:36:36,936 --> 00:36:39,437
of the United States'
first-ever manned spaceflight,
690
00:36:39,521 --> 00:36:41,773
aerospace company SpaceX,
691
00:36:41,857 --> 00:36:44,367
founded by billionaire
Elon Musk,
692
00:36:44,526 --> 00:36:47,946
successfully completes
the ninth test flight
693
00:36:48,039 --> 00:36:51,208
of its prototype launch vehicle.
694
00:36:51,367 --> 00:36:55,295
Code-named Starship,
the reusable transport
695
00:36:55,379 --> 00:36:57,881
is the latest advance
in a new space race
696
00:36:58,040 --> 00:37:01,793
funded by private entrepreneurs
competing to see
697
00:37:01,886 --> 00:37:06,214
who will be the first
to send humans to Mars.
698
00:37:06,307 --> 00:37:09,717
Elon Musk
envisions sending perhaps
699
00:37:09,810 --> 00:37:12,387
a million colonists
to the Red Planet.
700
00:37:12,471 --> 00:37:14,564
Is that possible?
701
00:37:14,723 --> 00:37:17,892
Well, from an engineering
point of view, yes,
702
00:37:17,977 --> 00:37:20,403
we have the technology.
703
00:37:20,562 --> 00:37:22,730
It's just a question
of assembling the resources.
704
00:37:22,815 --> 00:37:26,150
But then the bigger question is,
who's gonna pay for it?
705
00:37:26,244 --> 00:37:29,988
And that's why we're entering
the second golden age
706
00:37:30,081 --> 00:37:31,581
of space exploration.
707
00:37:31,740 --> 00:37:32,832
Things are changing.
708
00:37:32,992 --> 00:37:35,410
Silicon Valley billionaires
709
00:37:35,494 --> 00:37:38,838
are funding their own fleet
of rockets,
710
00:37:38,998 --> 00:37:43,927
paid for not by taxpayer's dime,
paid for by their own funds.
711
00:37:44,086 --> 00:37:47,347
Elon Musk is in competition
with Jeff Bezos,
712
00:37:47,431 --> 00:37:49,766
the richest man on the planet,
713
00:37:49,925 --> 00:37:54,688
who has funded his own
private spaceport in Texas
714
00:37:54,772 --> 00:37:56,764
with a fleet of rockets.
715
00:37:56,849 --> 00:37:59,609
Recently, SpaceX announced plans
716
00:37:59,768 --> 00:38:02,862
to begin the colonization
of Mars by the year 2026,
717
00:38:02,947 --> 00:38:05,273
with the goal
of establishing a permanent,
718
00:38:05,366 --> 00:38:08,109
self-sustaining city
on the Red Planet
719
00:38:08,193 --> 00:38:11,112
by the end of the 21st century.
720
00:38:11,196 --> 00:38:14,866
But what would motivate
a billionaire like Elon Musk
721
00:38:14,959 --> 00:38:19,787
to gamble his massive wealth
on such a risky endeavor?
722
00:38:19,880 --> 00:38:22,206
Elon Musk is gonna go to Mars.
723
00:38:22,291 --> 00:38:24,301
He's motivated to do so,
and the question is,
724
00:38:24,460 --> 00:38:27,462
d-does he see, like, the next
big amount of money there?
725
00:38:27,546 --> 00:38:32,475
There's likely oil on Mars,
methane on Mars,
726
00:38:32,560 --> 00:38:35,386
there's very likely minerals,
rare earth elements
727
00:38:35,479 --> 00:38:37,388
that are very expensive,
728
00:38:37,473 --> 00:38:41,318
and could create
a huge economic engine.
729
00:38:41,477 --> 00:38:44,479
But I'm not so sure
that that's his pure motivation.
730
00:38:44,572 --> 00:38:47,565
He also seems to be motivated
731
00:38:47,658 --> 00:38:49,576
by the survivability of humanity
732
00:38:49,660 --> 00:38:51,911
by spreading out to the planets
and the stars.
733
00:38:53,322 --> 00:38:55,999
Elon Musk
had a dream as a child.
734
00:38:56,083 --> 00:38:58,743
He read the Foundation
science fiction series
735
00:38:58,827 --> 00:39:02,663
by Isaac Asimov, which talked
about a galactic civilization.
736
00:39:02,748 --> 00:39:05,759
So, he thought to himself,
"Why not this
737
00:39:05,843 --> 00:39:07,844
"be the destiny for humanity,
738
00:39:07,928 --> 00:39:11,348
to become
a multi-planet species?"
739
00:39:48,803 --> 00:39:51,546
Will our journey
to Mars be a mission of survival
740
00:39:51,630 --> 00:39:53,390
or exploration?
741
00:39:53,549 --> 00:39:55,383
Only time will tell.
742
00:39:55,467 --> 00:39:56,976
But one thing is certain.
743
00:39:57,136 --> 00:39:59,303
Despite the inherent danger
involved
744
00:39:59,388 --> 00:40:01,055
with traveling to Mars,
745
00:40:01,148 --> 00:40:04,058
human beings are compelled
to learn more about
746
00:40:04,151 --> 00:40:07,812
and get closer
to the Red Planet.
747
00:40:07,896 --> 00:40:09,072
We've been exploring Mars
748
00:40:09,231 --> 00:40:11,408
basically since the beginning
of the Space Age,
749
00:40:11,567 --> 00:40:13,901
and we've had a near-constant
presence on Mars,
750
00:40:13,994 --> 00:40:16,579
on the surface,
since the late 1990s,
751
00:40:16,664 --> 00:40:18,915
but we still don't know
too much about the planet.
752
00:40:18,999 --> 00:40:22,743
We've only gone
with these rovers and landers
753
00:40:22,837 --> 00:40:25,079
that look
for very specific things,
754
00:40:25,164 --> 00:40:27,331
whether it's looking at geology
or looking at chemistry
755
00:40:27,425 --> 00:40:28,675
or looking at the atmosphere.
756
00:40:28,834 --> 00:40:31,094
Believe it or not,
757
00:40:31,253 --> 00:40:34,922
we have only scratched
the surface of Mars.
758
00:40:35,007 --> 00:40:37,934
We've never been
to the ice caps.
759
00:40:38,018 --> 00:40:41,679
We don't know their state,
we don't know their consistency.
760
00:40:41,763 --> 00:40:44,607
It's a big mystery,
the polar ice caps.
761
00:40:44,692 --> 00:40:46,572
And also, Mars has some
of the biggest mountains
762
00:40:46,602 --> 00:40:49,353
and the biggest volcanos
in the solar system.
763
00:40:49,438 --> 00:40:51,856
We have never visited them.
764
00:40:51,949 --> 00:40:56,611
And so for all these reasons,
Mars is still a hidden universe.
765
00:40:56,704 --> 00:40:59,789
Exploring Mars is so exciting
766
00:40:59,874 --> 00:41:02,950
because there are so many
mysteries left to solve.
767
00:41:03,043 --> 00:41:06,287
Each rover mission,
each satellite observation
768
00:41:06,380 --> 00:41:10,541
gives us one more
little puzzle piece.
769
00:41:10,626 --> 00:41:14,220
All of these developments
are-are absolutely thrilling.
770
00:41:14,305 --> 00:41:17,632
Human beings, as a species,
771
00:41:17,725 --> 00:41:19,467
seem to want to go
beyond the next horizon.
772
00:41:19,560 --> 00:41:21,469
They want to crest
that next mountain,
773
00:41:21,562 --> 00:41:24,305
they want to go
over that next ocean.
774
00:41:24,389 --> 00:41:26,733
We're building
these remarkable rockets,
775
00:41:26,817 --> 00:41:29,977
these incredible spacecraft
to go to Mars.
776
00:41:30,070 --> 00:41:32,563
Once we get there,
this is going to be a moment
777
00:41:32,656 --> 00:41:34,824
that's pivotal in human history.
778
00:41:36,994 --> 00:41:38,495
So, what do you think?
779
00:41:38,654 --> 00:41:42,073
Could there have been
life on Mars in the past?
780
00:41:42,166 --> 00:41:45,409
And will our destiny lead us
to travel there in the future?
781
00:41:45,494 --> 00:41:49,330
Well, while we may be
surprisingly close
782
00:41:49,414 --> 00:41:51,424
to uncovering
the Red Planet's secrets,
783
00:41:51,509 --> 00:41:54,761
until we can explore
the surface firsthand,
784
00:41:54,845 --> 00:41:59,840
the mysteries of Mars
will remain unexplained.
785
00:41:59,934 --> 00:42:02,185
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785
00:42:03,305 --> 00:43:03,768
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