NASA scientists announced Monday that they discovered what seems to be a
highly oxidizing chemical called perchlorate after analyzing two soil samples the Phoenix spacecraft dug
from the surface of Mars. The chemically reactive salt in the Martian soil is a
common component of rocket fuels, explosives and some medicines.
The unexpected discovery appears to be incompatible, because if further
analysis really confirms it as a perchlorate compound it indicates that the soil
of the planet may be very similar to that on Earth, said Peter Smith, scientist
with the University of Arizona, in Tucson,
who is leading the Phoenix
mission.
Nevertheless, Smith said in his announcement that "further analysis has
revealed un-Earthlike aspects of the soil chemistry," as quoted by the San
Francisco Chronicle.
And whether the element really is perchlorate or in which of its many
compounds it exists in the Martian soil has not yet been concluded, said Smith.
The Phoenix science team would not hypothesize
on whether the salt is naturally part of the Martian soil or whether it might
have contaminated the soil exactly around the module when Phoenix landed smoothly on the arctic plains
of Mars on May 25, slowed by its 12 hydrazine retro-rockets in a blast of gas
for a safe upright touch down. Yet, hydrazine is not linked to perchlorate.
A teleconference will be held today by NASA officials and the scientists to
discuss steps the Phoenix team has taken over the past month to pin down the
identity of the perchlorate and why an experiment conducted on Sunday by one of
its mechanisms revealed no evidence of the chemical straight above an ice blanket
that was scrubbed from soil near the spacecraft.
According to Smith, two samples of the chemical have now been analyzed and
detected on Mars by Wet Chemistry Lab, the spacecraft's miniaturized part of a
more elaborate series of Phoenix instruments called MECA — Microscopy,
Electrochemistry and Conductivity Analyzer.
A previous measurement of surface soil by another Phoenix instrument called TEGA — Thermal and
Evolved Gas Analyzer — "was consistent with but not conclusive of the
presence of perchlorate," Smith said.
On Earth, perchlorates are used in many types of explosives — including the
rockets that propel astronauts into orbit aboard the space shuttles. They are
also regularly used in fireworks making, in blowing caps and even in medicine
as part of a combination treatment for hyperthyroidism.
In addition, it is a dangerous toxic left over from many American chemical
plants contributing to the serious pollution of the environment. Because the
Environmental Protection Agency refuses to fix safety standards for
perchlorates present in drinking water and milk, the Congress is now in a conflict
with the EPA.