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Liftoff ofMessenger on NASA 's
mission to Mercury.
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Our planetary neighbour, Mars,
is a cold, barren rock.
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Its rusted surface
covered in parched sand.
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But beneath the dust,
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the planet bares the scars
of a former life.
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Billions of years ago,
Mars was just like Earth.
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A world with a thick atmosphere that
supported oceans of water.
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But today, that world is gone.
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Mars lies dead...
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...while the Earth thrives.
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Why the two planets
had such different fates
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is a mystery that we've only just
begun to answer.
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00:03:09,640 --> 00:03:13,475
You see that pale red point of light
in the sky?
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Just there?
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That's Mars.
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Through a small telescope,
it appears almost Earth-like.
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Our sister world - polar ice caps
and dark surface markings
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that 19th-century astronomers
thought were vegetation,
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even canals bringing meltwater down from
the poles to arid equatorial cities.
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"Across the depths of space,
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"the inhabitants watched us
with envious eyes,"
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wrote HG Wells.
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We now know that there are no eyes
looking back at us.
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Mars is a frozen, arid desert world.
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But a fleet of spacecraft have revealed
that it hasn't always been that way.
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Mariner 4 successfully
launched on time
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for its historic 228-day journey to Mars.
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Picture information started to come in
on July 15th 1965.
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A revelation, comparable to Galileo's
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first view of the Moon
through a telescope.
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During its brief flyby,
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Mariner 4 gave us
our first close-up glimpses of Mars.
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When Mariner 9 was placed
into an orbit around Mars,
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it saw a planet blanketed
by a gigantic dust storm.
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In nearly a year of operation,
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they transmit more than 7,000 photographs.
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From orbit, Mariner 9
photographed 80% of the Martian surface.
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First of all, there are two eyes,
not only in colour but also in stereo
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and in the infrared part of the spectrum.
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It has a sense of touch,
it has a sense of hearing,
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but by far the most important feature
of the lander is its brain.
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The Viking programme took us
down to the ground for the first time...
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Touchdown, we have touchdown.
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- ...and revealed Mars...
- Perfect set-down.
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...like never before.
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And there's the first piece
of information coming in. Oh! Oh!
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The data gathered
over the last 50 years
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has allowed us to create detailed maps
of the Martian surface...
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...and begin to piece together its past.
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Maps of Mars are like storybooks -
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you can read the history of the planet
written across its surface,
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and the reason for that
is that there's virtually no erosion.
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There hasn't been for billions of years.
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So the scars of events
that happened even 4 billion years ago
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can still be seen.
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This is a type of map called
an elevation map.
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The colours correspond to difference
in heights on the surface.
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So blue means low,
and red and white are high.
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Now, this region here,
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which is much higher, on average,
than the rest of Mars,
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is called Tharsis,
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and it's covered in volcanoes,
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including the largest volcano
in the solar system, Olympus Mons.
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At the other side of Tharsis
is the great Valles Marineris,
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the Mariner Valley, and it is a canyon
that dwarfs anything we see on Earth.
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On the opposite side of the planet
is an impact basin called Hellas.
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The height difference
from the crater rim to the crater floor
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is nine kilometres.
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That means you could fit Everest
in the middle of there
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and look down on its summit.
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And the region surrounding the basin
reveals Mars's former life.
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The Hellas Basin is punched
into the oldest surviving terrain on Mars.
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It's called Noachis Terra,
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or the Land of Noah.
And that's a wonderfully evocative name,
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because its surface is sculpted
by flowing water.
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All across the earliest Martian surface,
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we've glimpsed traces of what appear to
have been lakes and rivers.
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And so a new generation of spacecraft
has been sent to Mars
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to investigate the existence of water...
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...and what happened to the planet
for it all to disappear...
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...lead by the most audacious Mars mission
ever attempted...
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Vehicle reports entry interface.
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We have two-way Doppler
and orbit around the planet Mars.
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...to land a one-tonne rover
on the Martian surface.
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Its final decent has become known
as the seven minutes of terror.
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Curiosity touched down in Gale Crater -
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a 150-kilometre-wide impact basin
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thought to have been home
to an ancient lake.
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The rover is
a $2.5 billion mobile chemistry lab...
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...designed to take samples
of the Martian surface
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and analyse its composition.
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As it explored the crater,
Curiosity saw pebbles,
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polished and rounded by running water
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in what had once been rivers and streams.
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Then, 61 days after landing,
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Curiosity identified the perfect spot
to begin its primary mission.
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In a sandy area of the crater
called the Rocknest,
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the rover took its first scoops
of Martian soil.
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Chemical analysis of the fine, dusty sand
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revealed something quite unexpected.
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Even though the surface of Mars
appears completely dry,
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2% of the soil is still made up of water.
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00:12:05,880 --> 00:12:12,070
Curiosity had found evidence of just
how wet a planet ancient Mars had been.
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00:12:22,320 --> 00:12:24,630
For hundreds of millions of years...
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...Mars was a water world.
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Rains fell.
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Rivers ran.
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And in the northern hemisphere,
water collected in a vast sea
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that covered a fifth
of the Martian surface.
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The Red Planet was once blue.
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All the evidence suggests
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that there were large bodies
of standing water on Mars
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around 4 billion years ago,
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and the atmospheric pressure
was at least that of Earth today,
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perhaps even higher.
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Temperatures were around 25 degrees.
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So I could have sat on Mars
all those years ago,
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admittedly with a mask to breathe,
cos there was very little oxygen,
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but I could have sat there
and looked out over a view like that.
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So you don't have to imagine
what Mars was like in the past -
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you can experience it.
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It was pretty much like this.
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But within a billion years,
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all Mars's lakes and seas
had disappeared.
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In our solar system,
only one blue planet survives.
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Mars's sister - Earth.
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70% of our planet's surface
is covered by ocean.
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00:14:47,760 --> 00:14:50,719
Under the waves,
a million species thrive...
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...while, on land, the rains support
Earth's delicate ecosystems...
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...providing a home
for an abundance of life.
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But it hasn't always been this way.
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The early Earth was unrecognisable
from the planet we know today.
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Its atmosphere
thick with carbon dioxide.
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And its oceans acidic.
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00:15:58,640 --> 00:16:03,317
4 billion years ago,
Earth was a troubled, toxic world...
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...while Mars was flourishing.
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But both planets were about to be engulfed
by a cataclysm from space.
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To understand what happened,
we have to look beyond our own world.
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You can't read the deep history
of the Earth by looking at its surface,
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because our planet
is a geologically active world.
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The surface is constantly being re-shaped
by volcanic activity
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and weathering
and the actions of the oceans.
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But we have a companion,
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the Moon, which has been inactive
for many billions of years,
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00:17:04,840 --> 00:17:10,074
and so the history of events that happened
in this region of the solar system
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is written all over its surface.
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00:17:18,520 --> 00:17:21,752
The most distinctive feature
of the Moon's surface are its craters.
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It is literally covered
in a record of impacts from space.
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And that allows us to estimate
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the relative ages of different parts
of the Moon.
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00:17:31,480 --> 00:17:33,790
And quite simply,
if there are more craters,
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then that piece of the Moon
must be older -
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there's been more time
for the impacts to build up.
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But we can do better
than just measure the relative ages
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because we have rocks -
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the Moon rocks brought back
by the Apollo astronauts.
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Now, we can estimate the ages of rocks
very precisely
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by looking at the rates of decay
of radioactive elements inside them.
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They are like little stopwatches
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that start ticking
the moment the rocks are formed,
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in this case, by the impacts from space.
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So the Moon rocks allow us
to tie the number of craters
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in a particular region of the Moon
to an absolute age measured by the rocks.
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And this doesn't just allow us
to date impacts on the lunar surface.
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It means that craters can be used
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to read the histories of worlds
across the solar system.
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Including Mars.
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When we gathered all the data,
we discovered something surprising.
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There was a peak
in the crater formation rate
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about 3.8 to 3.9 billion years ago
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which signified a period
of intense violence in the solar system,
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and that is called
the Late Heavy Bombardment.
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Countless asteroids fragmented
in Mars's atmosphere,
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raining havoc across the planet.
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It's estimated that 53 tonnes of rock
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fell on every square metre of Mars.
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Over a third of the planet's surface
was obliterated...
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...and Mars was pushed to the
brink of death.
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Whilst the evidence
from the surface of the Moon
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tells us that the Late Heavy Bombardment
happened, it doesn't tell us why.
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For that, we have to resort
to computer models
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of the evolution of the solar system,
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and when we do that,
they point the finger at Neptune.
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00:21:24,480 --> 00:21:29,157
It's thought that Neptune migrated
outwards into the Kuiper Belt...
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...a region of icy, rocky objects orbiting
at the edge of the solar system.
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The resulting gravitational interactions
disrupted those orbits
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and sent many of the objects inwards
to the inner solar system,
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and that may have been the cause of the
Late Heavy Bombardment.
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Earth also suffered the onslaught.
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And for tens of millions of years,
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the fortunes of the two sister worlds
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hung in the balance.
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But just when conditions appeared
at their least promising...
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...Earth's most precious characteristic
emerged.
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Life.
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There is good evidence
that life was present on Earth
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around 3.8 billion years ago,
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00:23:05,680 --> 00:23:08,070
and discounting the, I think,
remote possibility
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that life began elsewhere
in the solar system
200
00:23:10,520 --> 00:23:13,957
and was transported to the Earth
on meteorites or comets,
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00:23:14,080 --> 00:23:17,551
that means that life must have begun here.
202
00:23:17,680 --> 00:23:22,277
So, somewhere on this planet,
there was a transition from geochemistry,
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the chemistry of Earth,
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00:23:24,200 --> 00:23:28,479
to biochemistry, the chemistry of life.
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00:23:43,600 --> 00:23:48,914
And whilst the precise details of how that
transition occurred remain a mystery...
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00:23:50,080 --> 00:23:55,235
...it's thought that in warm volcanic
pools or deep-sea hydrothermal vents,
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00:23:55,360 --> 00:23:57,079
conditions were right
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for the chemical building blocks of life
to form spontaneously.
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And that means that,
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if similar conditions were to be found
elsewhere in the solar system,
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it might be possible
that life began there, too.
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Ignition. And liftoff of the
Atlas V rocket with MRO...
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00:24:29,000 --> 00:24:33,711
...surveying for the deepest insights into
the mysterious evolution of Mars.
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00:24:35,840 --> 00:24:39,356
So, in 2005,
NASA embarked on a mission
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00:24:39,480 --> 00:24:44,396
to look for those
same environments on Mars.
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00:24:58,080 --> 00:24:59,230
For more than a decade,
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00:24:59,360 --> 00:25:04,435
the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter
has been our eyes on the Red Planet...
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00:25:10,720 --> 00:25:15,351
...sending back more data
than all the other Mars missions combined.
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00:25:22,000 --> 00:25:26,711
MRO has made more than 60,000 orbits,
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00:25:26,840 --> 00:25:30,675
mapping over 99% of the planet's surface.
221
00:25:36,640 --> 00:25:41,271
Its high-resolution cameras
have revealed Mars as never before...
222
00:25:42,760 --> 00:25:44,911
...discovering polar avalanches...
223
00:25:47,320 --> 00:25:49,312
...shifting sand dunes...
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00:25:52,880 --> 00:25:56,760
...and what could be seasonal
flows of sand
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or even liquid meltwater.
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00:26:04,240 --> 00:26:06,880
Then, in 2017,
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MRO turned its gaze to one
of the Red Planet's oldest features,
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00:26:13,360 --> 00:26:14,953
the Eridania Basin.
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00:26:19,720 --> 00:26:21,712
3.8 billion years ago,
230
00:26:21,840 --> 00:26:24,275
the basin was a vast sea...
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00:26:27,680 --> 00:26:32,277
...holding ten times more water than
the Great Lakes of North America.
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00:26:38,240 --> 00:26:42,393
And it was here that MRO found
the evidence it was looking for.
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00:26:45,000 --> 00:26:50,120
400-metre thick deposits of minerals
that, on Earth,
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00:26:50,240 --> 00:26:53,756
form in deep-sea hydrothermal vents.
235
00:27:00,160 --> 00:27:03,312
In the Eridania Basin,
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00:27:03,440 --> 00:27:06,638
MRO revealed that conditions on Mars
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00:27:06,760 --> 00:27:10,549
had once been ripe
for the emergence of life.
238
00:27:34,080 --> 00:27:36,515
We won't know for sure
whether life began -
239
00:27:36,640 --> 00:27:39,280
or even perhaps still exists - on Mars
240
00:27:39,400 --> 00:27:42,154
until we go there
and find physical evidence.
241
00:27:42,280 --> 00:27:46,320
So microbes buried deep below the soil
in oases of liquid water,
242
00:27:46,440 --> 00:27:48,750
or maybe microfossils.
243
00:27:48,880 --> 00:27:52,317
But what we do know is that when
life began here on Earth
244
00:27:52,440 --> 00:27:56,434
3.8 billion years ago,
the conditions on Mars were very similar.
245
00:27:56,560 --> 00:27:58,791
There were seas,
there was volcanic activity,
246
00:27:58,920 --> 00:28:03,073
there were even hydrothermal vent systems
on the floors of its oceans.
247
00:28:03,200 --> 00:28:04,919
So it is at least possible
248
00:28:05,040 --> 00:28:10,160
that Earth is not the only world
in the solar system where life began.
249
00:28:16,160 --> 00:28:20,871
The habitable conditions
during what's known as Mars's Noachian Era
250
00:28:21,000 --> 00:28:23,993
persisted for
hundreds of millions of years.
251
00:28:32,680 --> 00:28:39,120
But then prospects for life
on the Red Planet changed dramatically.
252
00:28:44,480 --> 00:28:46,278
Around 3.5 billion years ago,
253
00:28:46,400 --> 00:28:48,517
the Noachian Era drew to a close,
254
00:28:48,640 --> 00:28:53,317
and Mars entered a more frozen,
arid phase known as the Hesperian.
255
00:28:53,440 --> 00:28:57,593
The water that flowed freely
over the surface during the age of Noah
256
00:28:57,720 --> 00:29:02,158
became locked away
in giant reservoirs of ice.
257
00:29:02,280 --> 00:29:06,399
But around the same time,
Mars became more volcanically active,
258
00:29:06,520 --> 00:29:09,433
and the volcanic eruptions
and sub-surface lava flows
259
00:29:09,560 --> 00:29:11,677
occasionally melted the ice,
260
00:29:11,800 --> 00:29:14,440
leading to catastrophic flooding.
261
00:29:14,560 --> 00:29:17,632
They must have been
some of the most spectacular sights
262
00:29:17,760 --> 00:29:19,592
in the history of the solar system.
263
00:29:26,840 --> 00:29:29,992
As molten rock pushed upwards
through the crust,
264
00:29:30,120 --> 00:29:34,592
meltwater poured out onto the surface.
265
00:29:37,280 --> 00:29:40,796
It raged down
from the Southern Highlands...
266
00:29:44,640 --> 00:29:49,795
...until, in a place known
as Echus Chasma,
267
00:29:49,920 --> 00:29:53,675
it plunged over cliffs
four kilometres high...
268
00:30:03,400 --> 00:30:09,670
...creating the largest waterfall the
solar system has ever seen.
269
00:30:49,680 --> 00:30:54,118
Echus Chasma would have been like
no waterfall ever seen on Earth.
270
00:30:54,240 --> 00:30:58,871
350 cubic kilometres of water
flowed over it.
271
00:30:59,000 --> 00:31:03,472
That's like a cube - 70 kilometres
by 70 kilometres by 70 kilometres.
272
00:31:03,600 --> 00:31:05,000
It all emptied into a canyon
273
00:31:05,120 --> 00:31:09,000
10 kilometres wide
and 100 kilometres long,
274
00:31:09,120 --> 00:31:11,999
and that happened in a few weeks.
275
00:31:20,480 --> 00:31:23,757
Once the flood subsided,
the water disappeared...
276
00:31:26,960 --> 00:31:31,512
...leaving the evidence of the falls
etched into the face of the planet.
277
00:31:39,960 --> 00:31:42,953
We don't know precisely why
the climate of Mars
278
00:31:43,080 --> 00:31:46,312
changed from warm and wet
to cold and arid.
279
00:31:46,440 --> 00:31:50,275
We're talking about events
that happened 3.5 billion years ago
280
00:31:50,400 --> 00:31:53,518
on a planet hundreds of millions
of kilometres away.
281
00:31:53,640 --> 00:31:56,075
So it is a hard problem.
282
00:31:56,200 --> 00:31:57,953
But we do strongly suspect
283
00:31:58,080 --> 00:32:01,039
that changes happening
on the planet's surface were driven,
284
00:32:01,160 --> 00:32:02,480
at least in part,
285
00:32:02,600 --> 00:32:05,434
by changes in the planet's interior.
286
00:32:12,520 --> 00:32:15,160
Deep within Mars's core,
287
00:32:15,280 --> 00:32:19,115
something was causing the planet to die,
288
00:32:19,240 --> 00:32:24,031
and the evidence can be found
in Mars's atmosphere.
289
00:32:24,160 --> 00:32:26,152
T minus ten, nine,
290
00:32:26,280 --> 00:32:30,240
eight, seven, six, five, four,
291
00:32:30,360 --> 00:32:33,558
three, two, one...
292
00:32:33,680 --> 00:32:35,114
Main engines start.
293
00:32:35,240 --> 00:32:39,792
Ignition.
And liftoff of the Atlas V with MAVEN,
294
00:32:39,920 --> 00:32:44,949
looking for clues about the evolution
of Mars through its atmosphere.
295
00:32:50,360 --> 00:32:52,158
In September 2014,
296
00:32:52,280 --> 00:32:56,718
NASA's MAVEN probe
made its final approach to the Red Planet.
297
00:33:11,480 --> 00:33:13,119
Its mission -
298
00:33:13,240 --> 00:33:16,950
to understand what drove
the planet's dramatic climate change.
299
00:33:30,200 --> 00:33:32,112
MAVEN is equipped
with an array of instruments
300
00:33:32,240 --> 00:33:35,836
designed to measure the behaviour
of the atoms and molecules
301
00:33:35,960 --> 00:33:37,440
in Mars's atmosphere.
302
00:34:29,480 --> 00:34:32,996
The spacecraft circles Mars
in an elliptical orbit...
303
00:34:41,240 --> 00:34:44,677
...allowing it to measure the full profile
304
00:34:44,800 --> 00:34:46,314
of the planet's upper atmosphere.
305
00:34:54,600 --> 00:34:59,436
At its lowest point, it's just
150 kilometres above the surface.
306
00:35:03,000 --> 00:35:06,676
At its highest,
a little over 6,000 kilometres.
307
00:35:10,400 --> 00:35:13,598
And it was at the very top
of Mars's atmosphere
308
00:35:13,720 --> 00:35:18,556
that MAVEN found the key to the mystery
of what happened to Mars.
309
00:35:24,360 --> 00:35:26,317
Detailed measurements revealed
310
00:35:26,440 --> 00:35:29,274
gas is being lost
from the Martian atmosphere,
311
00:35:29,400 --> 00:35:32,234
escaping to space
312
00:35:32,360 --> 00:35:35,910
at a rate of about two kilograms
every second.
313
00:35:41,200 --> 00:35:46,798
Over time, it's thought this gradual
stripping away of Mars's atmosphere
314
00:35:46,920 --> 00:35:50,960
has slowly thinned the insulating layer
surrounding the planet...
315
00:35:53,920 --> 00:35:57,357
...causing surface temperatures
to plummet.
316
00:36:15,160 --> 00:36:19,074
But what was it that caused Mars
to lose its atmosphere
317
00:36:19,200 --> 00:36:21,920
while Earth clung onto hers?
318
00:36:30,520 --> 00:36:35,276
150 million kilometres away
in that direction is the setting Sun -
319
00:36:35,400 --> 00:36:37,437
a giant nuclear fusion reactor.
320
00:36:37,560 --> 00:36:39,756
You could fit a million Earths inside it.
321
00:36:39,880 --> 00:36:44,318
Now, the surface temperature
is only around 6,000 degrees Celsius,
322
00:36:44,440 --> 00:36:46,671
but the Sun's atmosphere,
known as its corona,
323
00:36:46,800 --> 00:36:48,473
is at a million degrees.
324
00:36:48,600 --> 00:36:51,000
And that means it's in the form of
what's known as a plasma -
325
00:36:51,120 --> 00:36:53,680
a soup of electrically charged particles.
326
00:36:53,800 --> 00:36:56,440
Now, some of those particles
are moving around so fast
327
00:36:56,560 --> 00:36:57,755
that they can escape,
328
00:36:57,880 --> 00:37:01,032
and they stream away
in what's known as the solar wind.
329
00:37:01,160 --> 00:37:04,790
They reach the Earth travelling
at a few hundred kilometres per second,
330
00:37:04,920 --> 00:37:09,073
and if we weren't protected,
they would strip away our atmosphere.
331
00:37:18,640 --> 00:37:21,280
And when the Sun dips below the horizon...
332
00:37:23,800 --> 00:37:28,556
...there are times when that protective
force field is revealed.
333
00:37:48,000 --> 00:37:49,275
Just look at that!
334
00:37:50,480 --> 00:37:52,119
I mean, there is the aurora.
335
00:37:56,280 --> 00:37:59,990
It's the laws of nature,
all of them, written across the sky.
336
00:38:03,880 --> 00:38:07,237
Electrically charged particles
are being driven away from the Sun,
337
00:38:07,360 --> 00:38:12,230
ultimately from nuclear fusion reactions
in the core of a star.
338
00:38:12,360 --> 00:38:16,149
They're crossing the solar system,
hitting the Earths magnetic field,
339
00:38:16,280 --> 00:38:20,035
stretching it out
on the dark side of the planet.
340
00:38:20,160 --> 00:38:23,471
The field then snaps back
like an elastic band,
341
00:38:23,600 --> 00:38:27,958
accelerating all those charged particles
up and down the field lines
342
00:38:28,080 --> 00:38:33,109
to the poles, which is here,
in the skies over Iceland,
343
00:38:33,240 --> 00:38:37,951
and they hit nitrogen and oxygen molecules
in the atmosphere...
344
00:38:39,560 --> 00:38:41,552
And you're seeing quantum mechanics.
345
00:38:41,680 --> 00:38:43,194
They're exciting the molecules
346
00:38:43,320 --> 00:38:46,472
so that they emit light
in characteristic colours.
347
00:38:58,840 --> 00:39:02,754
And if you think about it,
this is the only time that we really see
348
00:39:02,880 --> 00:39:04,314
the Earth's magnetic field.
349
00:39:06,360 --> 00:39:09,592
It's one of the reasons why life on Earth
350
00:39:09,720 --> 00:39:12,519
has been able to persist
for 4 billion years.
351
00:39:15,000 --> 00:39:18,232
So, in a sense,
that's the reason that you exist.
352
00:39:23,640 --> 00:39:27,156
It's Earth's magnetic field
that protects our atmosphere
353
00:39:27,280 --> 00:39:29,795
from the ravages of the solar wind,
354
00:39:29,920 --> 00:39:34,870
and that protective shield has its origins
deep in the planet's interior.
355
00:39:37,520 --> 00:39:40,718
Thousands of kilometres down,
below my feet -
356
00:39:40,840 --> 00:39:42,797
actually below your feet now -
357
00:39:42,920 --> 00:39:44,513
is the Earth's outer core,
358
00:39:44,640 --> 00:39:47,678
which is a seething mass of molten iron.
359
00:39:47,800 --> 00:39:51,396
Now, convection currents
cause the molten iron to rise,
360
00:39:51,520 --> 00:39:55,673
then the Earth's rotation causes it
to spiral around.
361
00:39:55,800 --> 00:40:00,397
Now, a spiralling, circling flow of an
electrically conducting liquid
362
00:40:00,520 --> 00:40:02,239
is a dynamo.
363
00:40:02,360 --> 00:40:04,795
A dynamo generates a magnetic field,
364
00:40:04,920 --> 00:40:08,834
and the Earth's field rises up
not just to the surface here
365
00:40:08,960 --> 00:40:12,510
but out into space,
forming our protective shield.
366
00:40:12,640 --> 00:40:15,360
And that... what you see there.
367
00:40:22,640 --> 00:40:24,154
And just like Earth,
368
00:40:24,280 --> 00:40:28,194
ancient Mars was also shielded
from the Sun.
369
00:40:34,760 --> 00:40:37,753
Aurora once danced above its poles...
370
00:40:41,000 --> 00:40:45,836
...keeping guard over the
Martian atmosphere and seas below.
371
00:41:01,400 --> 00:41:07,954
But between 3.5 and 4 billion years ago,
Mars's dynamo switched off.
372
00:41:10,720 --> 00:41:14,270
The aurora surrounding the poles
slowly faded away,
373
00:41:14,400 --> 00:41:16,551
as the magnetic field diminished...
374
00:41:19,120 --> 00:41:23,512
...allowing the atmosphere
to be stripped away by the solar wind.
375
00:41:33,160 --> 00:41:36,915
Without protection,
seas evaporated,
376
00:41:37,040 --> 00:41:39,191
the surface froze,
377
00:41:39,320 --> 00:41:43,109
and Mars was transformed.
378
00:41:51,080 --> 00:41:54,960
At the same time,
the fortunes of Mars's sister world
379
00:41:55,080 --> 00:41:57,356
were about to take a very different turn.
380
00:42:01,720 --> 00:42:03,598
For the next billion years or so,
381
00:42:03,720 --> 00:42:07,714
Earth was indistinguishable
from the landscapes of early Mars -
382
00:42:07,840 --> 00:42:11,072
barren continents surrounded by ocean.
383
00:42:11,200 --> 00:42:12,680
But in Earth's oceans,
384
00:42:12,800 --> 00:42:15,872
life was beginning to transform
the planet.
385
00:42:19,480 --> 00:42:23,918
Primitive algae started to neutralise
the ocean's acidity
386
00:42:24,040 --> 00:42:30,196
and replace the dense red fog of Earth's
methane-rich atmosphere with oxygen.
387
00:42:33,520 --> 00:42:35,512
Around 600 million years ago,
388
00:42:35,640 --> 00:42:37,472
that oxygen-rich atmosphere
389
00:42:37,600 --> 00:42:40,434
allowed complex life
to evolve in the oceans,
390
00:42:40,560 --> 00:42:41,994
colonise the land,
391
00:42:42,120 --> 00:42:47,115
and ultimately produce this almost
infinitely rich living world today
392
00:42:47,240 --> 00:42:50,472
of which we are a part.
393
00:43:01,120 --> 00:43:05,080
While Mars died, Earth flourished.
394
00:43:11,440 --> 00:43:16,515
To understand why the two sisters
had such different destinies,
395
00:43:16,640 --> 00:43:21,999
you have to go right back
to the time the planets were forming.
396
00:43:27,200 --> 00:43:29,078
When Mars and Earth were born,
397
00:43:29,200 --> 00:43:33,752
the solar system was a chaotic vortex
of gas and rock.
398
00:43:38,440 --> 00:43:41,080
Material clumped together and grew...
399
00:43:42,480 --> 00:43:44,790
...only to be smashed apart.
400
00:43:52,160 --> 00:43:55,517
Over time, some of the objects became
large enough to survive
401
00:43:55,640 --> 00:43:59,077
at least the smaller impacts
and continue to grow,
402
00:43:59,200 --> 00:44:02,477
including the embryonic planets
Earth and Mars.
403
00:44:11,480 --> 00:44:15,156
But there was one crucial difference
between the young planets.
404
00:44:22,560 --> 00:44:25,120
Mars formed
in a region of the solar system
405
00:44:25,240 --> 00:44:27,800
with considerably less rocky material...
406
00:44:29,200 --> 00:44:32,432
...and that had a profound impact
on the planet's growth.
407
00:44:37,920 --> 00:44:40,310
Mars is a significantly smaller world -
408
00:44:40,440 --> 00:44:42,830
it's about half
the diameter of the Earth -
409
00:44:42,960 --> 00:44:44,952
and that makes all the difference.
410
00:44:45,080 --> 00:44:47,993
Although the details
are not yet fully understood,
411
00:44:48,120 --> 00:44:50,760
it seems clear that Mars's smaller size
412
00:44:50,880 --> 00:44:54,794
meant that its dynamo switched off
many billions of years ago.
413
00:44:58,480 --> 00:45:02,952
Being smaller meant Mars's core cooled
more quickly than Earth's.
414
00:45:05,840 --> 00:45:10,710
And this is certainly part of the reason
why Mars lost its magnetic field.
415
00:45:17,880 --> 00:45:20,839
Even though the planet is further away
from the Sun than we are,
416
00:45:20,960 --> 00:45:25,989
that meant that the solar wind stripped
away its atmosphere, and Mars died.
417
00:45:26,120 --> 00:45:31,320
So even though Earth and Mars
are so similar in so many ways,
418
00:45:31,440 --> 00:45:35,195
the difference in position and size
in the solar system
419
00:45:35,320 --> 00:45:37,789
lead to very different fates.
420
00:45:48,200 --> 00:45:51,989
Long ago, two sister worlds were born.
421
00:45:57,000 --> 00:46:01,119
In childhood, Mars was warm and wet...
422
00:46:05,600 --> 00:46:10,470
...whilst the Earth
was inhospitable and toxic.
423
00:46:18,560 --> 00:46:23,635
Both young planets survived the violence
of the Late Heavy Bombardment...
424
00:46:25,600 --> 00:46:28,559
...emerging as mature worlds...
425
00:46:30,080 --> 00:46:34,632
...primed with all
the ingredients for life.
426
00:46:43,080 --> 00:46:47,518
But deep inside,
the smaller of the two was dying.
427
00:46:54,160 --> 00:46:56,197
Mars's seas dried up.
428
00:47:08,520 --> 00:47:11,592
And as the planet's interior cooled,
429
00:47:11,720 --> 00:47:15,396
one by one, her fires went out.
430
00:47:20,080 --> 00:47:24,233
Olympus Mons, the largest volcano
in the solar system,
431
00:47:24,360 --> 00:47:28,036
last erupted around 25 million years ago.
432
00:47:36,960 --> 00:47:39,873
As the lava turned to stone,
433
00:47:40,000 --> 00:47:43,391
Mars was frozen in time.
434
00:47:58,200 --> 00:48:04,436
And so, today, her surface lies rusted
and gathering dust.
435
00:48:12,360 --> 00:48:16,149
But that might not be
the end of Mars's story.
436
00:48:23,160 --> 00:48:28,599
Because the next generation of spacecraft
are already on their way.
437
00:48:35,680 --> 00:48:38,832
NASA Orion -
438
00:48:38,960 --> 00:48:41,475
currently in advanced testing.
439
00:49:11,200 --> 00:49:13,999
ESA Exomars -
440
00:49:14,120 --> 00:49:18,876
a fleet of spacecraft
designed to search for signs of life.
441
00:49:27,800 --> 00:49:33,194
And the most ambitious
private space mission ever conceived.
442
00:49:43,000 --> 00:49:49,520
A launch vehicle developed to take humans
to the surface of Mars.
443
00:50:06,920 --> 00:50:09,480
Mars is, in a sense, a failed world,
444
00:50:09,600 --> 00:50:14,231
a faded ember etched with the memories
of a more enticing past,
445
00:50:14,360 --> 00:50:19,515
but there have been - and may still be -
life on Mars,
446
00:50:19,640 --> 00:50:23,270
and the discovery of a second genesis
in our solar system
447
00:50:23,400 --> 00:50:27,838
would have profound philosophical,
scientific and cultural consequences,
448
00:50:27,960 --> 00:50:33,160
because it would mean there is a sense
of inevitability about the origin of life.
449
00:50:33,280 --> 00:50:37,274
And that would mean that the universe
is most likely teeming with life,
450
00:50:37,400 --> 00:50:39,790
that we are not alone.
451
00:50:44,840 --> 00:50:47,435
But equally importantly, I think,
452
00:50:47,560 --> 00:50:52,954
is the role that a planet with a history
like Mars could play in our future.
453
00:50:53,080 --> 00:50:54,912
Mars is rich in resources.
454
00:50:55,040 --> 00:50:58,670
It has vast reservoirs of frozen water
below the surface
455
00:50:58,800 --> 00:51:02,760
and minerals - iron, nitrogen,
carbon, oxygen -
456
00:51:02,880 --> 00:51:05,918
all the things you need
to support a civilisation.
457
00:51:08,040 --> 00:51:12,000
And that's why I think that,
in my lifetime, there will be Martians.
458
00:51:12,120 --> 00:51:14,476
But the Martians will be us.
459
00:51:14,600 --> 00:51:17,798
We will go to Mars and make it our home,
460
00:51:17,920 --> 00:51:22,153
and that old red world will become
our first step beyond the cradle
461
00:51:22,280 --> 00:51:24,920
and out to the stars.
462
00:51:56,680 --> 00:52:02,711
Mars really captures our imagination,
463
00:52:02,840 --> 00:52:05,878
partly because it's so close.
464
00:52:06,000 --> 00:52:08,799
I think people are really interested
in Mars
465
00:52:08,920 --> 00:52:12,914
because it actually is so similar
to Earth.
466
00:52:13,040 --> 00:52:18,991
It's close by, it's easy to travel there
with robots and space missions,
467
00:52:19,120 --> 00:52:21,874
and so we've done a lot of exploration,
468
00:52:22,000 --> 00:52:25,596
and every time you go and look,
you discover something new.
469
00:52:29,680 --> 00:52:33,913
NASA Curiosity launched
on 26th November 2011.
470
00:52:36,880 --> 00:52:41,557
But the biggest obstacle facing
the mission team wasn't leaving the Earth.
471
00:52:44,720 --> 00:52:46,313
Mars has a unique set of challenges
472
00:52:46,440 --> 00:52:48,716
compared to other places
we go with spacecraft.
473
00:52:48,840 --> 00:52:51,275
Mars has an atmosphere, but it's thin,
474
00:52:51,400 --> 00:52:53,915
so it's not enough
to really slow you down,
475
00:52:54,040 --> 00:52:56,874
but it is enough to actually burn you up
as you're trying to land.
476
00:52:59,480 --> 00:53:02,279
Curiosity reached
the top of the Martian atmosphere
477
00:53:02,400 --> 00:53:06,030
travelling at 20,000 kilometres per hour.
478
00:53:08,240 --> 00:53:11,995
Curiosity is a big rover - it weighs
a metric tonne - and so landing that
479
00:53:12,120 --> 00:53:14,216
required every trick in the book
of how we've learned to land on Mars
480
00:53:14,240 --> 00:53:15,674
with previous missions.
481
00:53:18,520 --> 00:53:21,672
To land safely,
the rover had to be slowed
482
00:53:21,800 --> 00:53:24,360
to less than four kilometres per hour.
483
00:53:32,960 --> 00:53:35,136
You end up arriving at
Mars going really fast,
484
00:53:35,160 --> 00:53:36,719
so you actually have to slow down,
485
00:53:36,840 --> 00:53:39,435
and we do that using a heat shield,
486
00:53:39,560 --> 00:53:42,712
which burns off a lot of energy
and creates a lot of heat,
487
00:53:42,840 --> 00:53:46,470
so you have to absorb that somehow
and not damage the spacecraft.
488
00:53:46,600 --> 00:53:48,273
Then a parachute comes out.
489
00:53:52,200 --> 00:53:55,159
The biggest parachute
we've ever used in a planetary mission.
490
00:53:57,560 --> 00:53:59,950
And that even doesn't slow Curiosity
down enough,
491
00:54:00,080 --> 00:54:01,616
because Mars's atmosphere
is quite thin,
492
00:54:01,640 --> 00:54:03,871
so then rockets carry the spacecraft
493
00:54:04,000 --> 00:54:05,957
and guide the spacecraft
to the surface.
494
00:54:12,200 --> 00:54:14,920
There's nothing you can do
at that point to ensure its success
495
00:54:15,040 --> 00:54:16,679
or prevent its crashing.
496
00:54:19,200 --> 00:54:21,920
And yet, you've invested so much
in the outcome.
497
00:54:24,720 --> 00:54:26,518
All I could do
was sort of curl up in a ball
498
00:54:26,640 --> 00:54:31,192
and wait for the green light
that Curiosity was safely on Mars.
499
00:54:34,080 --> 00:54:37,835
Seven years
and $2.5 billion in the making,
500
00:54:37,960 --> 00:54:41,271
Curiosity finally touched down
501
00:54:41,400 --> 00:54:46,111
at 6:32 Universal Time
on 6th August 2012.
502
00:54:51,200 --> 00:54:52,634
I was sitting in the control room,
503
00:54:52,760 --> 00:54:54,797
watching the engineers
who were actually monitoring
504
00:54:54,920 --> 00:54:56,593
the signals coming in from Curiosity,
505
00:54:56,720 --> 00:54:59,633
and so they were reading out
the data that they were getting,
506
00:54:59,760 --> 00:55:02,594
and they detected
the wheels touching the soil.
507
00:55:02,720 --> 00:55:05,872
Then a few seconds went by
when cables had to be cut
508
00:55:06,000 --> 00:55:07,600
and the rocket jet pack had to fly away.
509
00:55:09,120 --> 00:55:12,557
And only then they understood
that Curiosity was safe on the ground,
510
00:55:12,680 --> 00:55:16,276
and the whole room
just erupted in celebration.
511
00:55:20,600 --> 00:55:21,875
Since it landed,
512
00:55:22,000 --> 00:55:26,119
Curiosity has been exploring
Gale Crater for more than six years.
513
00:55:30,080 --> 00:55:34,040
Curiosity is a roving laboratory.
514
00:55:34,160 --> 00:55:39,189
We actually collect samples by scooping it
or by drilling
515
00:55:39,320 --> 00:55:42,040
or just by sucking in
some of the atmospheric gas.
516
00:55:44,160 --> 00:55:47,790
And it's that type of data that allow us
517
00:55:47,920 --> 00:55:51,391
to peck apart the story
that those things hold.
518
00:55:53,680 --> 00:55:58,197
In 2015, we made our first identification
of organic molecules
519
00:55:58,320 --> 00:56:01,597
that we think were coming
from the Martian materials.
520
00:56:03,120 --> 00:56:05,555
And that is a turning point for us.
521
00:56:08,880 --> 00:56:11,270
What we found in those rocks
522
00:56:11,400 --> 00:56:14,757
is what we expected
of natural organic matter.
523
00:56:14,880 --> 00:56:17,076
It's what you would expect to find
on Earth.
524
00:56:20,000 --> 00:56:24,153
Finding the organic matter
is the clue to searching for life.
525
00:56:26,400 --> 00:56:29,757
What everybody wants to know
is whether or not Mars once had life,
526
00:56:29,880 --> 00:56:32,395
and the short answer is,
we don't know.
527
00:56:33,800 --> 00:56:35,519
The somewhat longer answer is,
528
00:56:35,640 --> 00:56:40,510
we see all the signs of materials
that could have supported life.
529
00:56:40,640 --> 00:56:43,678
We have evidence
for lots of water early on.
530
00:56:45,360 --> 00:56:46,589
We see the nutrients.
531
00:56:46,720 --> 00:56:49,076
We see carbon. We see oxygen.
532
00:56:49,200 --> 00:56:51,954
We see nitrogen. We see phosphorus.
533
00:56:52,080 --> 00:56:56,199
We see all the stuff that life needs
in order to reproduce and survive
534
00:56:56,320 --> 00:56:57,993
as simple microorganisms.
535
00:57:02,040 --> 00:57:03,713
For me, personally,
536
00:57:03,840 --> 00:57:06,480
I find it might actually be
more surprising
537
00:57:06,600 --> 00:57:08,592
if we never found evidence
of life on Mars.
538
00:57:08,720 --> 00:57:10,200
Everything we've found suggests
539
00:57:10,320 --> 00:57:14,473
that Mars was such a friendly, supportive
place for life in its early history,
540
00:57:14,600 --> 00:57:18,276
and there should be a lot of planets
like that around other stars
541
00:57:18,400 --> 00:57:20,278
and lots of life in the universe.
542
00:57:20,400 --> 00:57:23,359
So maybe we're getting to the point
where it'll be more surprising
543
00:57:23,480 --> 00:57:25,995
if we never find other life.
544
00:57:31,880 --> 00:57:34,634
And so,
thanks to Curiosity's discoveries,
545
00:57:34,760 --> 00:57:39,471
the latest wave of spacecraft
might finally answer the question,
546
00:57:39,600 --> 00:57:42,115
has there ever been life on Mars?
47293
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