Skip to main content

Mars subsurface holds potential for microbial life, study suggests

The Perseverance rover is currently heading across Mars to search for evidence that there was once microbial life living there. Now, new research suggests that the area beneath the planet’s surface, called the subsurface, might be potentially hospitable for life.

Even though much of life as we know it relies directly or indirectly on sunlight, there are environments in which life can flourish even without sunlight. On our planet, these ecosystems can be found in deep caves or at the bottom of the ocean around thermal vents. Researchers believe that the Martian subsurface could be similarly habitable for microorganisms.

Recommended Videos

This is similar to a phenomenon found on Earth, where bacteria can survive underground without sunlight thanks to chemical reactions between rocks and water such as radiolysis where radioactive elements react with water to produce hydrogen and oxygen.

To understand what the Martian subsurface is made of, researchers can look at meteorites that have landed on Earth from Mars and analyze their composition. The researchers in the new study found evidence of radioactive elements in Mars meteorites, as well as rocks with large enough pores to trap water.  That means there is evidence that subsurface rocks could provide a home for bacteria if they were in contact with water.

“The big implication here for subsurface exploration science is that wherever you have groundwater on Mars, there’s a good chance that you have enough chemical energy to support subsurface microbial life,” said lead author of the study Jesse Tarnas, a postdoctoral researcher at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory and Brown University, in a statement. “We don’t know whether life ever got started beneath the surface of Mars, but if it did, we think there would be ample energy there to sustain it right up to today.”

This opens up a new opportunity for research in the search for life, by digging down beneath the Mars surface.

“The subsurface is one of the frontiers in Mars exploration,” Brown University professor Jack Mustard said. “We’ve investigated the atmosphere, mapped the surface with different wavelengths of light, and landed on the surface in half-a-dozen places, and that work continues to tell us so much about the planet’s past. But if we want to think about the possibility of present-day life, the subsurface is absolutely going to be where the action is.”

Georgina Torbet
Georgina has been the space writer at Digital Trends space writer for six years, covering human space exploration, planetary…
NASA’s Mars rover reveals what it’s grateful for this Thanksgiving
NASA's Curiosity rover on Mars.

It’s not just people who are sharing what they’re grateful for during Thanksgiving today -- Mars rovers are, too.

In a post on X, NASA’s Curiosity rover, which landed on Mars in 2012, shared a message saying: “These stunning views of the Red Planet are a reminder of how vast and mysterious our universe is. What are you grateful for this Thanksgiving?”

Read more
Check out this incredible panorama of Mars taken by Curiosity
NASA’s Curiosity captured this panorama using its Mastcam while heading west away from Gediz Vallis channel on Nov. 2, 2024, the 4,352nd Martian day, or sol, of the mission. The Mars rover’s tracks across the rocky terrain are visible at right.

The Curiosity rover has been on Mars since 2012, and in that time it has driven more than 20 miles -- which might not sound like a lot, but is a long distance for a rover traveling at slow, careful speeds that are somewhat less than the average garden snail. The rover has now reached the end of an area it has been exploring for the past year -- a channel called Gediz Vallis -- but before it moved on, the rover snapped a series of images of the area, which you can explore in this NASA panorama:

Key features are marked on the panorama, including the route along which the rover will exit the channel, as well as the tracks that lead back to show the direction the rover came in. In the far distance you can see the rim of the Gale Crater, which is the larger area that Curiosity is exploring, and the Pinnacle Ridge, which is formed from a mound of debris that scientists are still studying.

Read more
Planetary defense mission Hera blasts off toward Mars
Hera will perform a swingby of Mars in March 2025 as a way of gathering extra momentum on its way to the Didymos binary asteroid system. The spacecraft will fly within the orbits of both Martian moons Deimos and Phobos, and perform science observations of the former body and the planet's surface, in synergy with the UAE's Hope orbiter and gathering preparatory data for JAXA-DLR's MMX Martian Moons eXploration mission due to be launched in 2026.

The European Space Agency (ESA)'s planetary defense mission, Hera, has completed the first major maneuver of its journey following its launch in October. The spacecraft has burned its thrusters to put it on a course toward Mars, which it should reach to perform a gravity assist flyby in 2025.

The mission is a follow-up to NASA's DART mission, which deliberately crashed into an asteroid in 2022. DART was testing to see whether impacting a spacecraft into an asteroid could alter its trajectory, which it succeeded in doing. The idea is that if an asteroid should ever threaten Earth, space agencies could send a spacecraft to crash into it and knock it off course.

Read more