All language subtitles for The Planets (2019) - 01x02 - The Two Sisters - Earth & Mars.WEB.English.updated.Addic7ed.com

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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:03,580 --> 00:00:07,140 Lift off of Messenger on NASA'S mission to Mercury. 2 00:00:07,180 --> 00:00:08,940 [The Void by Muse] 3 00:00:08,980 --> 00:00:14,460 โ™ช They'll say no-one can see us 4 00:00:14,500 --> 00:00:20,900 โ™ช That we're estranged and all alone 5 00:00:22,420 --> 00:00:28,580 โ™ช They believe nothing can reach us 6 00:00:28,620 --> 00:00:32,440 โ™ช And pull us out of 7 00:00:32,480 --> 00:00:36,300 โ™ช The boundless gloom 8 00:00:36,340 --> 00:00:40,000 โ™ช They're wrong 9 00:00:40,040 --> 00:00:43,660 โ™ช They're wrong 10 00:00:43,700 --> 00:00:47,260 โ™ช They're wrong. โ™ช 11 00:01:06,900 --> 00:01:11,780 Our planetary neighbour, Mars, is a cold, barren rock. 12 00:01:15,540 --> 00:01:19,820 Its rusted surface covered in parched sand. 13 00:01:24,340 --> 00:01:26,060 But, beneath the dust, 14 00:01:26,100 --> 00:01:29,300 the planet bears the scars of a former life. 15 00:01:35,300 --> 00:01:39,180 Billions of years ago, Mars was just like Earth. 16 00:01:44,660 --> 00:01:47,300 A world with a thick atmosphere 17 00:01:47,340 --> 00:01:49,980 that supported oceans of water. 18 00:02:00,260 --> 00:02:03,100 But, today, that world is gone. 19 00:02:09,620 --> 00:02:12,780 Mars lies dead, 20 00:02:12,820 --> 00:02:15,540 while the Earth thrives. 21 00:02:19,460 --> 00:02:24,060 Why the two planets had such different fates is a mystery 22 00:02:24,100 --> 00:02:26,980 that we've only just begun to answer. 23 00:03:07,660 --> 00:03:11,780 You see that pale red point of light in the sky, 24 00:03:11,820 --> 00:03:13,300 just there? 25 00:03:13,340 --> 00:03:14,780 That's Mars. 26 00:03:14,820 --> 00:03:18,140 Through a small telescope, it appears almost Earth-like. 27 00:03:18,180 --> 00:03:22,060 Our sister world - polar ice caps and dark surface 28 00:03:22,100 --> 00:03:25,940 markings that 19th-century astronomers thought were vegetation, 29 00:03:25,980 --> 00:03:30,060 even canals bringing meltwater down from the poles 30 00:03:30,100 --> 00:03:32,620 to arid equatorial cities. 31 00:03:32,660 --> 00:03:35,140 Across the depths of space, 32 00:03:35,180 --> 00:03:41,140 the inhabitants watched us "with envious eyes", wrote HG Wells. 33 00:03:41,180 --> 00:03:44,300 We now know that there are no eyes looking back at us. 34 00:03:44,340 --> 00:03:47,760 Mars is a frozen, arid desert world. 35 00:03:47,800 --> 00:03:50,630 But a fleet of spacecraft have revealed 36 00:03:50,670 --> 00:03:53,500 that it hasn't always been that way. 37 00:03:56,300 --> 00:03:59,460 Mariner 4 was successfully launched on time 38 00:03:59,500 --> 00:04:02,660 for its historic 228-day journey to Mars. 39 00:04:03,900 --> 00:04:09,420 Picture information started to come in on July 15th, 1965. 40 00:04:10,820 --> 00:04:13,980 A revelation comparable to Galileo's first view 41 00:04:14,020 --> 00:04:16,700 of the moon through a telescope. 42 00:04:16,740 --> 00:04:18,460 During its brief flyby, 43 00:04:18,500 --> 00:04:22,580 Mariner 4 gave us our first close-up glimpses of Mars. 44 00:04:26,700 --> 00:04:30,660 When Mariner 9 was placed into an orbit around Mars, 45 00:04:30,700 --> 00:04:34,660 it saw a planet blanketed by a gigantic dust storm. 46 00:04:34,700 --> 00:04:36,740 In nearly a year of operation, 47 00:04:36,780 --> 00:04:39,900 they transmit more than 7,000 photographs. 48 00:04:39,940 --> 00:04:44,700 From orbit, Mariner 9 photographed 80% of the Martian surface. 49 00:04:45,860 --> 00:04:48,580 First of all, there are two eyes, not only in colour but also 50 00:04:48,620 --> 00:04:50,980 in stereo, and in the infrared part of the spectrum. 51 00:04:51,020 --> 00:04:53,340 It has a sense of touch, it has a sense of hearing, 52 00:04:53,380 --> 00:04:57,540 but by far the most important feature of the lander is its brain. 53 00:04:59,380 --> 00:05:02,260 The Viking programme took us down to the ground 54 00:05:02,300 --> 00:05:03,860 for the first time... 55 00:05:06,020 --> 00:05:07,900 Touchdown, we have touched down. 56 00:05:07,940 --> 00:05:09,780 ..and revealed Mars... 57 00:05:09,820 --> 00:05:11,440 Perfect set-down. 58 00:05:11,480 --> 00:05:13,060 ..like never before. 59 00:05:13,100 --> 00:05:15,900 There is the first piece of information coming in. 60 00:05:15,940 --> 00:05:17,900 Oh! Oh! 61 00:05:29,340 --> 00:05:33,700 The data gathered over the last 50 years has allowed us to create 62 00:05:33,740 --> 00:05:36,300 detailed maps of the Martian surface... 63 00:05:39,500 --> 00:05:42,500 ..and begin to piece together its past. 64 00:05:45,220 --> 00:05:47,580 Maps of Mars are like storybooks. 65 00:05:47,620 --> 00:05:50,060 You can read the history of the planet 66 00:05:50,100 --> 00:05:53,700 written across its surface, and the reason for that is that there's 67 00:05:53,740 --> 00:05:57,100 virtually no erosion, hasn't been for billions of years, 68 00:05:57,140 --> 00:06:01,780 so the scars of events that happened even four billion years ago 69 00:06:01,820 --> 00:06:03,580 can still be seen. 70 00:06:03,620 --> 00:06:07,100 This is a type of map called an elevation map. 71 00:06:07,140 --> 00:06:11,220 The colours correspond to difference in heights on the surface, 72 00:06:11,260 --> 00:06:13,300 so blue means low 73 00:06:13,340 --> 00:06:16,620 and red and whites are high. 74 00:06:16,660 --> 00:06:20,220 Now, this region here, which is much higher on average than the rest 75 00:06:20,260 --> 00:06:24,300 of Mars, is called Tharsis and it's covered in volcanoes, 76 00:06:24,340 --> 00:06:28,460 including the largest volcano in the solar system, Olympus Mons. 77 00:06:33,220 --> 00:06:37,780 At the other side of Tharsis is the great Valles Marineris, 78 00:06:37,820 --> 00:06:41,100 the Mariner Valley, and it is a canyon that dwarfs 79 00:06:41,140 --> 00:06:42,740 anything we see on Earth. 80 00:06:47,220 --> 00:06:50,940 On the opposite side of the planet is an impact basin called Hellas. 81 00:06:54,100 --> 00:06:56,500 The height difference from the crater rim 82 00:06:56,540 --> 00:06:59,660 to the crater floor is 9km. 83 00:06:59,700 --> 00:07:02,940 That means you could fit Everest in the middle of there 84 00:07:02,980 --> 00:07:05,020 and look down on its summit. 85 00:07:09,060 --> 00:07:13,900 And the region surrounding the basin reveals Mars' former life. 86 00:07:17,580 --> 00:07:22,860 The Hellas basin is punched into the oldest-surviving terrain on Mars. 87 00:07:22,900 --> 00:07:25,100 It's called Noachis Terra 88 00:07:25,140 --> 00:07:27,540 or The Land Of Noah. 89 00:07:27,580 --> 00:07:31,740 And that's a wonderfully evocative name because its surface is sculpted 90 00:07:31,780 --> 00:07:33,300 by flowing water. 91 00:07:38,340 --> 00:07:42,900 All across the earliest Martian surface, we've glimpsed traces 92 00:07:42,940 --> 00:07:46,180 of what appear to have been lakes and rivers. 93 00:07:50,100 --> 00:07:54,540 And so a new generation of spacecraft has been sent to Mars, 94 00:07:54,580 --> 00:07:56,980 to investigate the existence of water... 95 00:07:59,900 --> 00:08:04,500 ..and what happened to the planet for it all to disappear. 96 00:08:14,820 --> 00:08:19,220 Led by the most audacious Mars mission ever attempted... 97 00:08:25,300 --> 00:08:28,780 We have two-way Doppler and orbit around the planet Mars. 98 00:08:30,660 --> 00:08:34,740 ..to land a one-tonne rover on the Martian surface. 99 00:08:46,460 --> 00:08:51,340 Its final descent has become known as the "seven minutes of terror". 100 00:09:54,500 --> 00:09:58,540 Curiosity touched down in Gale crater, 101 00:09:58,580 --> 00:10:02,420 a 150-kilometre-wide impact basin, 102 00:10:02,460 --> 00:10:05,060 thought to have been home to an ancient lake. 103 00:10:16,060 --> 00:10:20,820 The rover is a 2.5 billion mobile chemistry lab... 104 00:10:23,740 --> 00:10:26,700 ..designed to take samples of the Martian surface 105 00:10:26,740 --> 00:10:28,740 and analyse its composition. 106 00:10:40,700 --> 00:10:45,740 As it explored the crater, Curiosity saw pebbles polished 107 00:10:45,780 --> 00:10:47,860 and rounded by running water 108 00:10:47,900 --> 00:10:50,940 in what had once been rivers and streams. 109 00:11:00,100 --> 00:11:05,540 Then, 61 days after landing, Curiosity identified the perfect 110 00:11:05,580 --> 00:11:08,060 spot to begin its primary mission. 111 00:11:14,420 --> 00:11:18,080 In a sandy area of the crater called the Rocknest, 112 00:11:18,120 --> 00:11:21,780 the rover took its first scoops of Martian soil. 113 00:11:37,860 --> 00:11:41,700 Chemical analysis of the fine, dusty sand revealed 114 00:11:41,740 --> 00:11:43,820 something quite unexpected. 115 00:11:48,380 --> 00:11:51,820 Even though the surface of Mars appears completely dry, 116 00:11:51,860 --> 00:11:56,820 2% of the soil is still made up of water. 117 00:12:03,780 --> 00:12:07,860 Curiosity had found evidence of just how wet a planet 118 00:12:07,900 --> 00:12:09,900 ancient Mars had been. 119 00:12:19,980 --> 00:12:24,540 For hundreds of millions of years, 120 00:12:24,580 --> 00:12:27,220 Mars was a water world. 121 00:12:53,060 --> 00:12:55,440 Rains fell, 122 00:12:55,480 --> 00:12:57,820 rivers ran, 123 00:12:57,860 --> 00:13:00,020 and, in the northern hemisphere, 124 00:13:00,060 --> 00:13:02,180 water collected in a vast sea 125 00:13:02,220 --> 00:13:05,380 that covered a fifth of the Martian surface. 126 00:13:12,020 --> 00:13:15,940 The Red Planet was once blue. 127 00:13:26,540 --> 00:13:29,780 All the evidence suggests that there were large bodies 128 00:13:29,820 --> 00:13:33,020 of standing water on Mars around 4 billion years ago, 129 00:13:33,060 --> 00:13:37,420 and the atmospheric pressure was at least that of Earth today, 130 00:13:37,460 --> 00:13:38,780 perhaps even higher. 131 00:13:38,820 --> 00:13:44,420 Temperatures were around 25 degrees, so I could have sat on Mars 132 00:13:44,460 --> 00:13:47,340 all those years ago, admittedly with a mask to breathe, 133 00:13:47,380 --> 00:13:49,980 because there was very little oxygen, but I could have sat there 134 00:13:50,020 --> 00:13:53,180 and looked out over a view like that. 135 00:13:53,220 --> 00:13:58,700 So, you don't have to imagine what Mars was like in the past. 136 00:13:58,740 --> 00:14:00,700 You can experience it. 137 00:14:00,740 --> 00:14:02,860 It was pretty much like this. 138 00:14:10,860 --> 00:14:13,420 But, within a billion years, 139 00:14:13,460 --> 00:14:16,820 all Mars' lakes and seas had disappeared. 140 00:14:20,660 --> 00:14:24,980 In our solar system, only one blue planet survives... 141 00:14:27,220 --> 00:14:30,580 ..Mars' sister, Earth. 142 00:14:35,740 --> 00:14:39,940 70% of our planet's surface is covered by ocean. 143 00:14:45,580 --> 00:14:48,940 Under the waves, a million species thrive. 144 00:14:54,700 --> 00:14:58,980 While on land, the rains support Earth's delicate ecosystems... 145 00:15:06,020 --> 00:15:08,900 ..providing a home for an abundance of life. 146 00:15:14,420 --> 00:15:17,220 But it hasn't always been this way. 147 00:15:24,700 --> 00:15:28,780 The early Earth was unrecognisable from the planet we know today. 148 00:15:37,140 --> 00:15:41,220 Its atmosphere thick with carbon dioxide. 149 00:15:48,420 --> 00:15:50,780 And its oceans acidic. 150 00:15:56,700 --> 00:16:00,940 Four billions years ago, Earth was a troubled, toxic world... 151 00:16:05,940 --> 00:16:08,820 ..while Mars was flourishing. 152 00:16:23,660 --> 00:16:26,740 But both planets were about to be engulfed 153 00:16:26,780 --> 00:16:28,780 by a cataclysm from space. 154 00:16:34,180 --> 00:16:36,700 To understand what happened, 155 00:16:36,740 --> 00:16:39,660 we have to look beyond our own world. 156 00:16:41,580 --> 00:16:44,500 You can't read the deep history of the Earth by looking 157 00:16:44,540 --> 00:16:49,040 at its surface because our planet is a geologically active world. 158 00:16:49,080 --> 00:16:53,540 The surface is constantly being reshaped by volcanic activity, 159 00:16:53,580 --> 00:16:58,740 weathering, and the actions of the oceans, but we have a companion, 160 00:16:58,780 --> 00:17:02,880 the moon, which has been inactive for many billions of years, 161 00:17:02,920 --> 00:17:07,020 and so the history of events that happened in this region 162 00:17:07,060 --> 00:17:10,900 of the solar system is written all over its surface. 163 00:17:16,380 --> 00:17:18,820 The most distinctive feature of the moon's surface 164 00:17:18,860 --> 00:17:23,140 are its craters - it is literally covered in a record of impacts 165 00:17:23,180 --> 00:17:27,460 from space, and that allows us to estimate the relative ages 166 00:17:27,500 --> 00:17:29,460 of different parts of the moon. 167 00:17:29,500 --> 00:17:31,680 Quite simply, if there are more craters, 168 00:17:31,720 --> 00:17:33,860 then that piece of the moon must be older. 169 00:17:33,900 --> 00:17:36,860 There's been more time for the impacts to build up. 170 00:17:36,900 --> 00:17:40,820 But we can do better than just measure the relative ages 171 00:17:40,860 --> 00:17:45,140 because we have rocks, the moon rocks brought back 172 00:17:45,180 --> 00:17:47,300 by the Apollo astronauts. 173 00:17:47,340 --> 00:17:50,680 We can estimate the ages of rocks very precisely by looking 174 00:17:50,720 --> 00:17:54,270 at the rates of decay of radioactive elements inside them. 175 00:17:54,310 --> 00:17:58,725 They're like little stopwatches that start ticking the moment 176 00:17:58,765 --> 00:18:03,180 the rocks are formed, in this case by the impacts from space. 177 00:18:03,220 --> 00:18:07,860 So, the moon rocks allow us to tie the number of craters 178 00:18:07,900 --> 00:18:10,380 in a particular region of the moon 179 00:18:10,420 --> 00:18:13,580 to an absolute age measured by the rocks. 180 00:18:23,020 --> 00:18:27,140 And this doesn't just allow us to date impacts on the lunar surface. 181 00:18:34,900 --> 00:18:36,620 It means that craters can be used 182 00:18:36,660 --> 00:18:39,780 to read the histories of worlds across the solar system. 183 00:18:45,260 --> 00:18:47,380 Including Mars. 184 00:18:53,220 --> 00:18:57,140 When we gathered all the data, we discovered something surprising. 185 00:18:57,180 --> 00:19:01,260 There was a peak in the crater formation rate, about 3.8 186 00:19:01,300 --> 00:19:03,220 to 3.9 billion years ago, 187 00:19:03,260 --> 00:19:08,300 which signified a period of intense violence in the solar system, 188 00:19:08,340 --> 00:19:11,780 and that is called the Late Heavy Bombardment. 189 00:19:39,020 --> 00:19:43,620 Countless asteroids fragmented in Mars' atmosphere, 190 00:19:43,660 --> 00:19:46,340 raining havoc across the planet. 191 00:20:21,860 --> 00:20:25,620 It's estimated that 53 tonnes of rock 192 00:20:25,660 --> 00:20:29,420 fell on every square metre of Mars. 193 00:20:39,860 --> 00:20:43,900 Over a third of the planet's surface was obliterated... 194 00:20:47,780 --> 00:20:50,980 ..and Mars was pushed to the brink of death. 195 00:21:03,660 --> 00:21:06,540 Whilst the evidence from the surface of the moon tells us 196 00:21:06,580 --> 00:21:10,060 that the Late Heavy Bombardment happened, it doesn't tell us why. 197 00:21:10,100 --> 00:21:13,580 For that, we have to resort to computer models of the evolution 198 00:21:13,620 --> 00:21:16,300 of the solar system, and, when we do that, 199 00:21:16,340 --> 00:21:18,660 they point the finger at Neptune. 200 00:21:22,340 --> 00:21:26,460 It's thought that Neptune migrated outwards into the Kuiper belt... 201 00:21:29,540 --> 00:21:31,940 ..a region of icy, rocky objects 202 00:21:31,980 --> 00:21:34,980 orbiting at the edge of the solar system. 203 00:21:38,740 --> 00:21:42,780 The resulting gravitational interactions disrupted those orbits 204 00:21:42,820 --> 00:21:46,660 and sent many of the objects inwards to the inner solar system, 205 00:21:46,700 --> 00:21:50,540 and that may have been the cause of the Late Heavy Bombardment. 206 00:22:01,780 --> 00:22:06,080 Earth also suffered the onslaught, 207 00:22:06,120 --> 00:22:10,380 and, for tens of millions of years, 208 00:22:10,420 --> 00:22:15,580 the fortunes of the two sister worlds hung in the balance. 209 00:22:40,420 --> 00:22:45,100 But, just when conditions appeared at their least promising, 210 00:22:45,140 --> 00:22:48,660 Earth's most precious characteristic emerged. 211 00:22:52,860 --> 00:22:54,300 Life. 212 00:22:57,460 --> 00:23:00,980 There is good evidence that life was present on Earth 213 00:23:01,020 --> 00:23:04,820 around 3.8 billion years ago, and discounting the - I think - 214 00:23:04,860 --> 00:23:07,340 remote possibility that life began elsewhere 215 00:23:07,380 --> 00:23:09,980 in the solar system and was transported to the Earth 216 00:23:10,020 --> 00:23:12,060 on meteorites or comets, 217 00:23:12,100 --> 00:23:15,540 that means that life must have begun here. 218 00:23:15,580 --> 00:23:18,740 So, somewhere on this planet there was a transition 219 00:23:18,780 --> 00:23:21,940 from geochemistry - the chemistry of Earth, 220 00:23:21,980 --> 00:23:25,140 to biochemistry - the chemistry of life. 221 00:23:41,180 --> 00:23:46,000 And whilst the precise details of how that transition occurred 222 00:23:46,040 --> 00:23:50,860 remain a mystery, it's thought that in warm volcanic pools 223 00:23:50,900 --> 00:23:55,180 or deep sea hydrothermal vents, conditions were right 224 00:23:55,220 --> 00:24:00,140 for the chemical building blocks of life to form spontaneously. 225 00:24:04,700 --> 00:24:07,380 And that means that if similar conditions 226 00:24:07,420 --> 00:24:10,560 were to be found elsewhere in the solar system, 227 00:24:10,600 --> 00:24:13,740 it might be possible that life began there too. 228 00:24:19,420 --> 00:24:25,060 Ignition, and lift off of the Atlas V rocket with MRO. 229 00:24:26,660 --> 00:24:28,800 Surveying for the deepest insights 230 00:24:28,840 --> 00:24:30,980 into the mysterious evolution of Mars. 231 00:24:33,620 --> 00:24:38,180 So, in 2005, NASA embarked on a mission to look 232 00:24:38,220 --> 00:24:42,260 for those same environments on Mars. 233 00:24:56,380 --> 00:24:59,900 For more than a decade, the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter 234 00:24:59,940 --> 00:25:02,700 has been our eyes on the Red Planet... 235 00:25:08,300 --> 00:25:10,660 ..sending back more data 236 00:25:10,700 --> 00:25:13,740 than all the other Mars missions combined. 237 00:25:19,900 --> 00:25:24,260 MRO has made more than 60,000 orbits, 238 00:25:24,300 --> 00:25:28,660 mapping over 99% of the planet's surface. 239 00:25:34,700 --> 00:25:40,380 Its high-resolution cameras have revealed Mars as never before, 240 00:25:40,420 --> 00:25:45,300 discovering polar avalanches, 241 00:25:45,340 --> 00:25:47,460 shifting sand dunes... 242 00:25:51,340 --> 00:25:57,380 ..and what could be seasonal flows of sand or even liquid meltwater. 243 00:26:02,100 --> 00:26:06,820 Then, in 2017, MRO turned its gaze 244 00:26:06,860 --> 00:26:10,860 to one of the Red Planet's oldest features, 245 00:26:10,900 --> 00:26:12,820 the Eridania Basin. 246 00:26:17,220 --> 00:26:22,100 3.8 billion years ago, the basin was a vast sea... 247 00:26:25,540 --> 00:26:27,620 ..holding ten times more water 248 00:26:27,660 --> 00:26:30,660 than the Great Lakes of North America. 249 00:26:36,100 --> 00:26:40,260 And it was here that MRO found the evidence it was looking for. 250 00:26:42,780 --> 00:26:48,580 400-metre-thick deposits of minerals that, on Earth, 251 00:26:48,620 --> 00:26:51,940 form in deep sea hydrothermal vents. 252 00:26:59,340 --> 00:27:04,420 In the Eridania Basin, MRO revealed that conditions on Mars 253 00:27:04,460 --> 00:27:07,700 had once been ripe for the emergence of life. 254 00:27:31,980 --> 00:27:36,500 We won't know for sure whether life began or even perhaps still exists 255 00:27:36,540 --> 00:27:40,140 on Mars until we go there and find physical evidence - 256 00:27:40,180 --> 00:27:44,580 so, microbes buried deep below the soil in oases of liquid water, 257 00:27:44,620 --> 00:27:48,320 or maybe microbe fossils - but what we do know is that, 258 00:27:48,360 --> 00:27:52,060 when life began here on Earth, 3.8 billion years ago, 259 00:27:52,100 --> 00:27:54,500 the conditions on Mars were very similar. 260 00:27:54,540 --> 00:27:56,900 There were seas, there was volcanic activity, 261 00:27:56,940 --> 00:28:01,060 there were even hydrothermal vent systems on the floors of its oceans. 262 00:28:01,100 --> 00:28:04,700 So, it is at least possible that Earth is not the only world 263 00:28:04,740 --> 00:28:07,380 in the solar system where life began. 264 00:28:14,060 --> 00:28:16,740 The habitable conditions during what's known 265 00:28:16,780 --> 00:28:21,980 as Mars' Noachian era persisted for hundreds of millions of years. 266 00:28:31,180 --> 00:28:36,180 But then, prospects for life on the Red Planet changed dramatically. 267 00:28:42,420 --> 00:28:46,660 Around 3.5 billion years ago, the Noachian era drew to a close 268 00:28:46,700 --> 00:28:51,160 and Mars entered a more frozen, arid phase, known as the Hesperian. 269 00:28:51,200 --> 00:28:55,660 The water that flowed freely over the surface during the age of Noah 270 00:28:55,700 --> 00:29:00,100 became locked away in giant reservoirs of ice. 271 00:29:00,140 --> 00:29:04,420 But, around the same time, Mars became more volcanically active, 272 00:29:04,460 --> 00:29:07,420 and the volcanic eruptions and sub-surface lava flows 273 00:29:07,460 --> 00:29:12,060 occasionally melted the ice, leading to catastrophic flooding. 274 00:29:12,100 --> 00:29:15,100 They must have been some of the most spectacular sights 275 00:29:15,140 --> 00:29:17,380 in the history of the solar system. 276 00:29:24,460 --> 00:29:28,500 As molten rock pushed upwards through the crust, 277 00:29:28,540 --> 00:29:31,740 meltwater poured out onto the surface. 278 00:29:35,740 --> 00:29:38,300 It raged down from the southern highlands... 279 00:29:42,900 --> 00:29:48,340 ..until, in a place known as Echus Casma, it plunged 280 00:29:48,380 --> 00:29:50,900 over cliffs 4km high... 281 00:30:01,020 --> 00:30:04,040 ..creating the largest waterfall 282 00:30:04,080 --> 00:30:07,100 the solar system has ever seen. 283 00:30:47,860 --> 00:30:52,100 Echus Casma would have been like no waterfall ever seen on Earth. 284 00:30:52,140 --> 00:30:56,660 350 cubic kilometres of water flowed over it. 285 00:30:56,700 --> 00:31:00,760 That's like a cube 70km by 70km by 70km. 286 00:31:00,800 --> 00:31:04,820 It all entered into a canyon 10km wide 287 00:31:04,860 --> 00:31:09,820 and 100km long, and that happened in a few weeks. 288 00:31:18,340 --> 00:31:21,660 Once the flood subsided, the water disappeared... 289 00:31:24,660 --> 00:31:29,020 ..leaving the evidence of the falls etched into the face of the planet. 290 00:31:37,700 --> 00:31:41,540 We don't know precisely why the climate of Mars changed 291 00:31:41,580 --> 00:31:44,260 from warm and wet to cold and arid. 292 00:31:44,300 --> 00:31:46,660 We're talking about events that happened 293 00:31:46,700 --> 00:31:50,180 three and a half billion years ago on a planet hundreds of millions 294 00:31:50,220 --> 00:31:54,260 of kilometres away, so it is a hard problem. 295 00:31:54,300 --> 00:31:57,540 But we do strongly suspect that changes happening 296 00:31:57,580 --> 00:31:59,780 on the planet's surface were driven 297 00:31:59,820 --> 00:32:03,100 at least in part by changes in the planet's interior. 298 00:32:10,340 --> 00:32:12,460 Deep within Mars' core, 299 00:32:12,500 --> 00:32:15,820 something was causing the planet to die... 300 00:32:17,260 --> 00:32:22,180 ..and the evidence can be found in Mars' atmosphere. 301 00:32:22,220 --> 00:32:27,260 T-minus ten, nine, eight, seven, six, 302 00:32:27,300 --> 00:32:29,700 five, four, three, 303 00:32:29,740 --> 00:32:31,540 two, one. 304 00:32:31,580 --> 00:32:35,540 Main engine start, ignition, and lift-off 305 00:32:35,580 --> 00:32:38,140 of the Atlas V with MAVEN, 306 00:32:38,180 --> 00:32:41,020 looking for clues about the evolution of Mars 307 00:32:41,060 --> 00:32:42,700 through its atmosphere. 308 00:32:48,260 --> 00:32:52,380 In September 2014, NASA'S MAVEN probe made its final 309 00:32:52,420 --> 00:32:54,660 approach to the Red Planet. 310 00:33:09,380 --> 00:33:13,260 Its mission - to understand what drove the planet's 311 00:33:13,300 --> 00:33:14,980 dramatic climate change. 312 00:33:27,460 --> 00:33:31,260 MAVEN is equipped with an array of instruments designed to measure 313 00:33:31,300 --> 00:33:35,620 the behaviour of the atoms and molecules in Mars' atmosphere. 314 00:34:27,300 --> 00:34:30,900 The spacecraft circles Mars in an elliptical orbit... 315 00:34:39,900 --> 00:34:42,180 ..allowing it to measure the full profile 316 00:34:42,220 --> 00:34:44,460 of the planet's upper atmosphere. 317 00:34:52,860 --> 00:34:54,380 At its lowest point, 318 00:34:54,420 --> 00:34:57,820 it's just 150km above the surface. 319 00:35:00,860 --> 00:35:04,180 At its highest, a little over 6,000 kilometres. 320 00:35:08,460 --> 00:35:12,740 And it was at the very top of Mars' atmosphere that MAVEN found 321 00:35:12,780 --> 00:35:16,180 the key to the mystery of what happened to Mars. 322 00:35:22,220 --> 00:35:25,820 Detailed measurements revealed gas is being lost 323 00:35:25,860 --> 00:35:28,100 from the Martian atmosphere, 324 00:35:28,140 --> 00:35:30,500 escaping to space 325 00:35:30,540 --> 00:35:33,940 at a rate of about two kilograms every second. 326 00:35:38,820 --> 00:35:44,340 Over time, it's thought this gradual stripping away of Mars' atmosphere 327 00:35:44,380 --> 00:35:48,980 has slowly thinned the insulating layer surrounding the planet... 328 00:35:51,780 --> 00:35:54,740 ..causing surface temperatures to plummet. 329 00:36:12,940 --> 00:36:17,140 But what was it that caused Mars to lose its atmosphere 330 00:36:17,180 --> 00:36:19,820 while Earth clung on to hers? 331 00:36:28,380 --> 00:36:32,700 150 million kilometres away in that direction is the setting sun, 332 00:36:32,740 --> 00:36:35,540 a giant nuclear fusion reactor. 333 00:36:35,580 --> 00:36:37,740 You can fit one million Earths inside it. 334 00:36:37,780 --> 00:36:39,740 Now, the surface temperature 335 00:36:39,780 --> 00:36:42,340 is only around 6,000 degrees Celsius, 336 00:36:42,380 --> 00:36:44,860 but the sun's atmosphere, known as its corona, 337 00:36:44,900 --> 00:36:46,420 is at one million degrees. 338 00:36:46,460 --> 00:36:49,700 And that means it's in the form of what's known as a plasma, a soup 339 00:36:49,740 --> 00:36:51,900 of electrically charged particles. 340 00:36:51,940 --> 00:36:55,780 Some of those particles are moving around so fast that they can escape, 341 00:36:55,820 --> 00:36:58,980 and they stream away in what's known as the solar wind. 342 00:36:59,020 --> 00:37:02,620 They reach the Earth travelling at a few hundred kilometres per second. 343 00:37:02,660 --> 00:37:06,260 And, if we weren't protected, they would strip away our atmosphere. 344 00:37:16,220 --> 00:37:19,060 And when the sun dips below the horizon... 345 00:37:21,500 --> 00:37:26,340 ..there are times when that protective force field is revealed. 346 00:37:45,580 --> 00:37:47,540 Just look at that! 347 00:37:47,580 --> 00:37:49,900 I mean, there is the aurora. 348 00:37:54,180 --> 00:37:57,860 It's the laws of nature, all of them, written across the sky. 349 00:38:01,740 --> 00:38:05,960 Electrically-charged particles have been driven away from the sun, 350 00:38:06,000 --> 00:38:10,180 ultimately from nuclear fusion reactions in the core of a star. 351 00:38:10,220 --> 00:38:14,220 They're crossing the solar system, hitting the Earth's magnetic field, 352 00:38:14,260 --> 00:38:18,020 stretching it out on the dark side of the planet. 353 00:38:18,060 --> 00:38:21,780 The field then snaps back like an elastic band, 354 00:38:21,820 --> 00:38:25,440 accelerating all of those charged particles up and down 355 00:38:25,480 --> 00:38:29,100 the field lines to the poles, which is here in the skies 356 00:38:29,140 --> 00:38:32,780 over Iceland, and they hit nitrogen 357 00:38:32,820 --> 00:38:35,860 and oxygen molecules in the atmosphere. 358 00:38:37,380 --> 00:38:40,780 And you're seeing quantum mechanics - they're exciting the 359 00:38:40,820 --> 00:38:44,220 molecules so that they emit light in characteristic colours. 360 00:38:56,860 --> 00:38:59,760 And, if you think about it, this is the only time 361 00:38:59,800 --> 00:39:02,700 that we really see the Earth's magnetic field. 362 00:39:04,060 --> 00:39:06,980 It's one of the reasons why life on Earth 363 00:39:07,020 --> 00:39:10,180 has been able to persist for four billion years. 364 00:39:13,060 --> 00:39:16,300 In a sense, that's the reason that you exist. 365 00:39:21,540 --> 00:39:25,180 It's Earth's magnetic field that protects our atmosphere 366 00:39:25,220 --> 00:39:28,180 from the ravages of the solar wind, 367 00:39:28,220 --> 00:39:31,460 and that protective shield has its origins deep 368 00:39:31,500 --> 00:39:33,260 in the planet's interior. 369 00:39:35,460 --> 00:39:38,820 Thousands of kilometres down below my feet, 370 00:39:38,860 --> 00:39:42,420 actually below your feet now, is the Earth's outer core, 371 00:39:42,460 --> 00:39:45,660 which is a seething mass of molten iron. 372 00:39:45,700 --> 00:39:49,660 Convection currents cause the molten iron to rise, 373 00:39:49,700 --> 00:39:53,700 and then the Earth's rotation causes it to spiral around. 374 00:39:53,740 --> 00:39:56,140 Now, a spiralling, circling flow 375 00:39:56,180 --> 00:39:59,900 of an electrically conducting liquid is a dynamo. 376 00:39:59,940 --> 00:40:04,700 A dynamo generates a magnetic field and the Earth's field rises up, 377 00:40:04,740 --> 00:40:08,340 not just to the surface here, but out into space, 378 00:40:08,380 --> 00:40:10,800 forming our protective shield. 379 00:40:10,840 --> 00:40:13,260 And that is what you see there. 380 00:40:20,260 --> 00:40:22,420 And just like Earth, 381 00:40:22,460 --> 00:40:26,060 ancient Mars was also shielded from the sun. 382 00:40:32,460 --> 00:40:35,300 Aurora once danced above its poles... 383 00:40:38,460 --> 00:40:43,460 ..keeping guard over the Martian atmosphere and seas below. 384 00:40:59,180 --> 00:41:02,860 But between 3.5 and 4 billion years ago, 385 00:41:02,900 --> 00:41:05,460 Mars' dynamo switched off. 386 00:41:08,420 --> 00:41:12,460 The aurora surrounding the poles slowly faded away 387 00:41:12,500 --> 00:41:14,580 as the magnetic field diminished... 388 00:41:17,180 --> 00:41:20,140 ..allowing the atmosphere to be stripped away 389 00:41:20,180 --> 00:41:21,780 by the solar wind. 390 00:41:31,580 --> 00:41:36,980 Without protection, seas evaporated, the surface froze, 391 00:41:37,020 --> 00:41:40,460 and Mars was transformed. 392 00:41:48,940 --> 00:41:52,900 At the same time, the fortunes of Mars' sister world 393 00:41:52,940 --> 00:41:55,340 were about to take a very different turn. 394 00:41:59,740 --> 00:42:03,460 For the next billion years or so, Earth was indistinguishable 395 00:42:03,500 --> 00:42:06,260 from those landscapes of early Mars- 396 00:42:06,300 --> 00:42:09,020 barren continents surrounded by ocean. 397 00:42:09,060 --> 00:42:13,660 But in Earth's oceans, life was beginning to transform the planet. 398 00:42:17,380 --> 00:42:21,480 Primitive algae started to neutralise the ocean's acidity 399 00:42:21,520 --> 00:42:25,620 and replace the dense red fog of Earth's methane-rich 400 00:42:25,660 --> 00:42:27,780 atmosphere with oxygen. 401 00:42:31,380 --> 00:42:35,900 Around 600 million years ago, that oxygen-rich atmosphere allowed 402 00:42:35,940 --> 00:42:40,100 complex life to evolve in the oceans, colonise the land, 403 00:42:40,140 --> 00:42:44,700 and ultimately produce this almost-infinitely rich living world 404 00:42:44,740 --> 00:42:47,060 today, of which we are a part. 405 00:42:58,940 --> 00:43:02,900 While Mars died, Earth flourished. 406 00:43:09,220 --> 00:43:14,060 To understand why the two sisters had such different destinies, 407 00:43:14,100 --> 00:43:16,580 you have to go right back 408 00:43:16,620 --> 00:43:20,140 to the time the planets were forming. 409 00:43:25,060 --> 00:43:27,220 When Mars and Earth were born, 410 00:43:27,260 --> 00:43:31,380 the solar system was a chaotic vortex of gas and rock. 411 00:43:36,060 --> 00:43:42,140 Material clumped together and grew, only to be smashed apart. 412 00:43:50,380 --> 00:43:53,740 Over time, some of the objects became large enough to survive 413 00:43:53,780 --> 00:43:57,100 at least the smaller impacts, and continued to grow, 414 00:43:57,140 --> 00:44:00,580 including the embryonic planets Earth and Mars. 415 00:44:09,340 --> 00:44:13,860 But there was one crucial difference between the young planets. 416 00:44:20,460 --> 00:44:23,340 Mars formed in a region of the solar system 417 00:44:23,380 --> 00:44:26,060 with considerably less rocky material. 418 00:44:27,100 --> 00:44:30,340 And that had a profound impact on the planet's growth. 419 00:44:35,900 --> 00:44:39,740 Mars is a significantly smaller world - it's about half the diameter 420 00:44:39,780 --> 00:44:42,880 of the Earth, and that makes all the difference. 421 00:44:42,920 --> 00:44:45,980 Although the details are not yet fully understood, 422 00:44:46,020 --> 00:44:50,380 it seems clear that Mars' smaller size meant that its dynamo switched 423 00:44:50,420 --> 00:44:52,740 off many billions of years ago. 424 00:44:56,380 --> 00:45:00,780 Being smaller meant Mars' core cooled more quickly than Earth's. 425 00:45:03,540 --> 00:45:06,740 And this is certainly part of the reason why Mars 426 00:45:06,780 --> 00:45:08,540 lost its magnetic field. 427 00:45:15,500 --> 00:45:18,940 Even though the planet is further away from the sun than we are, 428 00:45:18,980 --> 00:45:22,060 that meant that the solar wind stripped away its atmosphere 429 00:45:22,100 --> 00:45:23,980 and Mars died. 430 00:45:24,020 --> 00:45:29,220 So, even though Earth and Mars are so similar in so many ways, 431 00:45:29,260 --> 00:45:33,180 the difference in position and size in the solar system 432 00:45:33,220 --> 00:45:35,620 led to very different fates. 433 00:45:46,260 --> 00:45:50,020 Long ago, two sister worlds were born. 434 00:45:54,700 --> 00:45:58,380 In childhood, Mars was warm and wet... 435 00:46:03,860 --> 00:46:07,980 ..whilst the Earth was inhospitable and toxic. 436 00:46:16,100 --> 00:46:18,940 Both young planets survived the violence 437 00:46:18,980 --> 00:46:23,220 of the Late Heavy Bombardment, 438 00:46:23,260 --> 00:46:27,460 emerging as mature worlds, 439 00:46:27,500 --> 00:46:31,420 primed with all the ingredients for life. 440 00:46:40,860 --> 00:46:45,660 But deep inside, the smaller of the two was dying. 441 00:46:52,140 --> 00:46:54,340 Mars' seas dried up. 442 00:47:06,380 --> 00:47:12,980 And as the planet's interior cooled, one by one her fires went out. 443 00:47:17,820 --> 00:47:22,260 Olympus Mons, the largest volcano in the solar system, 444 00:47:22,300 --> 00:47:25,700 last erupted around 25 million years ago. 445 00:47:34,780 --> 00:47:38,020 As the lava turned to stone, 446 00:47:38,060 --> 00:47:41,300 Mars was frozen in time. 447 00:47:55,820 --> 00:48:02,420 And so, today, her surface lies rusted and gathering dust. 448 00:48:10,020 --> 00:48:13,500 But that might not be the end of Mars' story. 449 00:48:21,460 --> 00:48:25,900 Because the next generation of spacecraft are already on their way. 450 00:48:34,420 --> 00:48:38,740 NASA Orion - currently in advanced testing. 451 00:49:09,020 --> 00:49:11,660 ESA ExoMars - 452 00:49:11,700 --> 00:49:16,100 a fleet of spacecraft designed to search for signs of life. 453 00:49:26,220 --> 00:49:30,540 And the most ambitious private space mission ever conceived. 454 00:49:41,580 --> 00:49:47,300 A launch vehicle developed to take humans to the surface of Mars. 455 00:50:04,780 --> 00:50:07,700 Mars is, in a sense, a failed world, 456 00:50:07,740 --> 00:50:12,540 a faded ember etched with the memories of a more enticing past, 457 00:50:12,580 --> 00:50:16,840 but there may have been, and may still be, life on Mars. 458 00:50:16,880 --> 00:50:21,100 And the discovery of a second genesis in our solar system 459 00:50:21,140 --> 00:50:25,780 would have profound philosophical, scientific and cultural consequences 460 00:50:25,820 --> 00:50:28,940 because it would mean there is a sense of inevitability 461 00:50:28,980 --> 00:50:30,740 about the origin of life, 462 00:50:30,780 --> 00:50:33,140 and that would mean that the universe 463 00:50:33,180 --> 00:50:37,460 is most likely teeming with life - that we are not alone. 464 00:50:42,980 --> 00:50:46,980 But equally importantly, I think, is the role that a planet 465 00:50:47,020 --> 00:50:50,900 with a history like Mars could play in our future. 466 00:50:50,940 --> 00:50:55,380 Mars is rich in resources, it has vast reservoirs of frozen 467 00:50:55,420 --> 00:50:57,820 water below the surface, and minerals - 468 00:50:57,860 --> 00:51:01,540 iron, nitrogen, carbon, oxygen - all the things 469 00:51:01,580 --> 00:51:03,740 you need to support a civilisation. 470 00:51:05,900 --> 00:51:08,580 And that's why I think that, in my lifetime, 471 00:51:08,620 --> 00:51:12,660 there will be Martians, but the Martians will be us. 472 00:51:12,700 --> 00:51:15,780 We will go to Mars and make it our home, 473 00:51:15,820 --> 00:51:19,300 and that old red world will become our first step 474 00:51:19,340 --> 00:51:22,860 beyond the cradle, and out to the stars. 475 00:51:55,060 --> 00:51:57,900 Mars really captures 476 00:51:57,940 --> 00:52:00,740 our imagination, 477 00:52:00,780 --> 00:52:03,820 partly because it's so close. 478 00:52:03,860 --> 00:52:08,540 I think people are really interested in Mars because it actually 479 00:52:08,580 --> 00:52:10,740 is so similar to Earth. 480 00:52:10,780 --> 00:52:15,620 It's close by, it's easy to travel there with robots 481 00:52:15,660 --> 00:52:19,480 and space missions, and so we've done a lot of exploration. 482 00:52:19,520 --> 00:52:23,340 And, every time you go and look, you discover something new. 483 00:52:27,260 --> 00:52:31,780 NASA Curiosity launched on the 26th of November, 2011. 484 00:52:34,780 --> 00:52:37,420 But the biggest obstacle facing the mission team 485 00:52:37,460 --> 00:52:39,060 wasn't leaving the Earth. 486 00:52:42,620 --> 00:52:44,260 Mars has a unique set of challenges 487 00:52:44,300 --> 00:52:46,860 compared to other places we go with spacecraft. 488 00:52:46,900 --> 00:52:50,700 Mars has an atmosphere but it's thin, so it's not enough 489 00:52:50,740 --> 00:52:51,860 to really slow you down, 490 00:52:51,900 --> 00:52:54,820 but it is enough to actually burn you up as you're trying to land. 491 00:52:57,420 --> 00:53:00,420 Curiosity reached the top of the Martian atmosphere, 492 00:53:00,460 --> 00:53:03,020 travelling at 20,000km per hour. 493 00:53:05,900 --> 00:53:08,480 Curiosity is a big rover. It weighs a metric ton, 494 00:53:08,520 --> 00:53:11,060 and so landing that required every trick in the book 495 00:53:11,100 --> 00:53:13,620 of how we've learned to land on Mars with previous missions. 496 00:53:16,700 --> 00:53:19,740 To land safely, the rover had to be slowed 497 00:53:19,780 --> 00:53:22,100 to less than 4km per hour. 498 00:53:30,020 --> 00:53:32,420 You end up arriving at Mars going really fast, 499 00:53:32,460 --> 00:53:34,900 so you actually have to slow down, 500 00:53:34,940 --> 00:53:37,340 and we do that using a heat shield, 501 00:53:37,380 --> 00:53:40,740 which burns off a lot of energy and creates a lot of heat, 502 00:53:40,780 --> 00:53:43,780 so you have to absorb that somehow and not damage the spacecraft. 503 00:53:43,820 --> 00:53:45,900 Then a parachute comes out. 504 00:53:49,980 --> 00:53:52,820 The biggest parachute we've ever used in a planetary mission. 505 00:53:55,100 --> 00:53:57,860 And that even doesn't slow Curiosity down enough, 506 00:53:57,900 --> 00:54:01,220 because Mars' atmosphere is quite thin, so then rockets carry 507 00:54:01,260 --> 00:54:04,060 the spacecraft and guide the spacecraft to the surface. 508 00:54:10,060 --> 00:54:13,060 There's nothing you can do at that point to ensure its success 509 00:54:13,100 --> 00:54:14,660 or prevent its crashing... 510 00:54:16,820 --> 00:54:20,020 ..and yet you've invested so much in the outcome. 511 00:54:22,580 --> 00:54:26,460 All I could do was sort of curl up in a ball and wait for the 512 00:54:26,500 --> 00:54:28,900 green light that Curiosity was safely on Mars. 513 00:54:32,380 --> 00:54:36,260 Seven years and 2.5 billion in the making, 514 00:54:36,300 --> 00:54:38,820 Curiosity finally touched down 515 00:54:38,860 --> 00:54:43,940 at 6.32 Universal Time, on the 6th of August, 2012. 516 00:54:49,180 --> 00:54:51,700 I was sitting in the control room watching the engineers, 517 00:54:51,740 --> 00:54:54,860 who were actually monitoring the signals coming in from Curiosity, 518 00:54:54,900 --> 00:54:57,620 and so they were reading out the data that they were getting 519 00:54:57,660 --> 00:55:00,540 and they detected the wheels touching the soil. 520 00:55:00,580 --> 00:55:03,540 Then a few seconds went by when cables had to be cut 521 00:55:03,580 --> 00:55:05,740 and the rocket jet pack had to fly away. 522 00:55:07,060 --> 00:55:09,820 And, only then, they understood that Curiosity was safe 523 00:55:09,860 --> 00:55:13,300 on the ground, and the whole room just erupted in celebration. 524 00:55:18,220 --> 00:55:22,660 Since it landed, Curiosity has been exploring Gale Crater 525 00:55:22,700 --> 00:55:24,380 for more than six years. 526 00:55:27,780 --> 00:55:32,180 Curiosity is a roving laboratory. 527 00:55:32,220 --> 00:55:37,380 We actually collect samples by scooping it or by drilling, 528 00:55:37,420 --> 00:55:39,860 or just by sucking in some of the atmospheric gas. 529 00:55:42,020 --> 00:55:46,780 And it's that type of data that allows us to pick apart 530 00:55:46,820 --> 00:55:48,900 the story that those things hold. 531 00:55:51,540 --> 00:55:57,020 In 2015, we made our first identification of organic molecules 532 00:55:57,060 --> 00:55:59,340 that we think were coming from the Martian materials. 533 00:56:00,700 --> 00:56:03,340 And that is a turning point for us. 534 00:56:06,580 --> 00:56:09,020 What we found in those rocks 535 00:56:09,060 --> 00:56:11,960 is what we expected of natural organic matter. 536 00:56:12,000 --> 00:56:14,900 It's what you would expect to find on Earth. 537 00:56:17,780 --> 00:56:21,660 Finding the organic matter is the clue to searching for life. 538 00:56:24,220 --> 00:56:27,200 What everybody wants to know is whether or not Mars 539 00:56:27,240 --> 00:56:30,220 once had life, and the short answer is - we don't know. 540 00:56:31,820 --> 00:56:34,220 The somewhat longer answer is - 541 00:56:34,260 --> 00:56:38,700 we see all the signs of materials that could have supported life. 542 00:56:38,740 --> 00:56:41,260 We have evidence for lots of water early on. 543 00:56:43,140 --> 00:56:47,060 We see the nutrients, we see carbon, we see oxygen, 544 00:56:47,100 --> 00:56:49,280 we see nitrogen, we see phosphorus, 545 00:56:49,320 --> 00:56:51,460 we see all the stuff that life needs 546 00:56:51,500 --> 00:56:55,860 in order to reproduce and survive as simple microorganisms. 547 00:57:00,100 --> 00:57:03,820 For me personally, I find it might actually 548 00:57:03,860 --> 00:57:06,720 be more surprising if we never found evidence of life on Mars. 549 00:57:06,760 --> 00:57:09,620 Everything we've found suggests that Mars was such a friendly, 550 00:57:09,660 --> 00:57:12,540 supportive place for life in its early history, 551 00:57:12,580 --> 00:57:16,300 and there should be a lot of planets like that around other stars, 552 00:57:16,340 --> 00:57:18,220 and lots of life in the universe. 553 00:57:18,260 --> 00:57:21,500 So, maybe we're getting to the point where it'll be more surprising 554 00:57:21,540 --> 00:57:23,540 if we never find other life. 555 00:57:29,740 --> 00:57:33,860 And so, thanks to Curiosity's discoveries, the latest wave 556 00:57:33,900 --> 00:57:37,500 of spacecraft might finally answer the question - 557 00:57:37,540 --> 00:57:40,180 has there ever been life on Mars? 558 00:57:46,380 --> 00:57:47,700 Next time... 559 00:57:49,980 --> 00:57:52,900 ..we enter the realm of the gas giants... 560 00:57:55,740 --> 00:58:00,420 ..to discover how the largest and oldest of the planets 561 00:58:00,460 --> 00:58:02,940 sculpted the entire solar system. 562 00:58:08,260 --> 00:58:11,020 Jupiter, the godfather. 563 00:58:17,580 --> 00:58:20,820 Journey through our solar system with this free poster produced 564 00:58:20,860 --> 00:58:25,380 by the Open University, and discover more about its planets and moons. 565 00:58:27,100 --> 00:58:29,860 Order your free copy by calling... 566 00:58:33,740 --> 00:58:37,020 ..or go to... 567 00:58:39,980 --> 00:58:42,500 ..and follow the links to the Open University. 48616

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